One Bot. Five Ways to Use It.

Therabot’s five massage modes are designed to make hands-free leg massage feel simple: choose the style of pressure and movement that matches the moment, then let the robot do the work.

Five Therabot massage modes: Universal, Airplane, Myofascial, Trigger, and Pulse

One of the easiest ways to understand Therabot is this: it is not one fixed massage pattern. It is a hands-free massage robot with multiple ways to apply rolling pressure, movement, and hold patterns across the leg.

That matters because tired legs do not always need the same thing. Some days you want an easy daily roll. Some days your legs feel heavy. Other days there is one specific tight area you want to hold, pulse, or work through more slowly.

The five core massage modes

Universal: roll daily

Universal mode is the everyday mode. The user chooses the area of the leg they want to massage, and Therabot moves between those points with controlled rolling pressure. It is the mode for a simple, repeatable leg massage routine: put it on, choose the path, and let it work.

Airplane: heavy legs

Airplane mode is built for the “heavy legs” feeling. It uses directional pressure logic so the up-pass and down-pass can feel different. In plain English: Therabot can move one way with a stronger pressure profile and return with a lighter one, creating a more intentional session than a simple back-and-forth loop.

Myofascial: deep fascia

Myofascial mode is designed for slower, more focused rolling pressure. Instead of feeling like a quick pass over the leg, the goal is a deeper, more deliberate style of movement that gives the tissue time under pressure. It is not about intensity for its own sake; it is about controlled pressure that feels steady and purposeful.

Trigger: hold a knot

Trigger mode is for a specific spot. Rather than continuously traveling, Therabot can hold pressure where the user wants it. That makes it useful when one area feels like it needs attention and the user does not want to manually hold a massage gun, lean into a ball, or keep repositioning a tool.

Pulse: squeeze and release

Pulse mode adds rhythm. Instead of simply holding pressure, Therabot can repeat a squeeze-and-release pattern at the chosen location or area. For some users, that rhythmic pressure can feel more comfortable than a static hold and more targeted than a continuous roll.

Why modes matter

The value of modes is not complexity. The value is making the right session easier to start. The user should not need to understand massage theory or build a custom program from scratch every time. They should be able to choose the kind of experience they want and let the product translate that into movement, pressure, and timing.

That is also why Therabot’s long-term direction includes AI-guided massage. A user may eventually be able to say what feels tight, what kind of day they had, or what they want the session to feel like — and the system can help choose or adjust the right mode. The foundation, though, is still simple: five clear ways to use one robot.

One product, different recovery moments

Universal is for daily rolling. Airplane is for heavy legs. Myofascial is for deeper, slower work. Trigger is for holding one spot. Pulse is for rhythmic squeeze and release. Together, they turn Therabot from a single-purpose gadget into a flexible hands-free massage system.

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Therabot is designed as a wellness and recovery product. It is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any medical condition. If you have a medical condition or concerns about massage or compression, talk with a qualified clinician before use.