When we evaluate robotic dog toys, we look past the marketing reels and focus on what actually keeps a dog engaged when nobody is home. We weigh motion patterns, battery runtime, material toughness, and how each toy holds up against a determined chewer, because a motorized toy that cracks open is more liability than enrichment. In our evaluation we found that the best robotic toys give a dog something unpredictable to chase without leaving small, swallowable parts behind. We recommend matching the toy to your dog’s size and chew style, supervising the first several sessions, and treating any toy with internal electronics as supervised enrichment rather than an all-day babysitter. What we like most are toys that recover on their own after a nudge and survive repeated paw and mouth contact.

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