Inside a Therabot Session
A Therabot session is designed to be simple: place the device, choose the settings, and let it apply controlled rolling pressure while it moves along the leg.

Start with placement
A session begins by opening Therabot around the leg and positioning it where you want the massage path to begin. The device is designed to surround the limb rather than sit on top of it, which helps it create consistent contact from multiple sides.
That ring shape is part of what makes the experience feel different from handheld tools. Once it is in place, the user is not trying to hold an angle or push into the muscle manually.
Choose the session
From the app, the user can choose the pressure, speed, location, duration, and mode. The basic idea is straightforward: pick what feels appropriate for the moment, then let the device work within those settings.
Different modes can create different styles of massage. A simple looping mode can move between two endpoints. A hold mode can stay in one location. A pulse mode can repeat squeeze-and-release cycles. The point is not to overwhelm the user with complexity; it is to give enough control to make the session feel intentional.
The ring tightens and the rollers engage
Once the session starts, the ring closes into position and the rollers begin applying pressure. This is the moment where Therabot should feel most clearly different from vibration-based tools. The pressure is physical, rolling, and controlled.
The device is designed to keep regulating as it moves. Legs are not perfect cylinders. Muscle shape, contour, and position change along the path, so the robot has to adjust instead of assuming one static fit.
The session should feel predictable
A good Therabot session should not feel like the robot is improvising wildly. It should feel steady: pressure, motion, speed, and boundaries should be understandable. The user should always be able to stop, adjust, or change the session.
That predictability is part of the premium experience. People are more likely to relax when they understand what the device is doing and know they remain in control.
After the session
After a session, the user should have a clear sense of what worked: the pressure level, the route, the speed, and the mode. Over time, that creates a personal recovery routine instead of a one-off gadget experience.
Therabot’s long-term opportunity is making consistent massage easier at home. Not louder. Not more complicated. Just easier to use regularly.

