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Unlimited Tomorrow

HardwareRhinebeck, New York, USAFounded 2014· One of 1708 Hardware companies tracked by AMPulse

A medical technology company that develops and manufactures high-tech, ultra-personalized bionic prosthetic arms and haptic VR gloves at a fraction of the cost of traditional devices.

CEO / Founder
Easton LaChappelle
Team Size
11-50
Stage
Active
Total Funding
$15.5M
Latest Round
Series A
Key Investors
Prime Movers Lab, Tony Robbins, Idealab, Singularity University, Harmonix Fund

Technology & Products

Key Products

["TrueLimb® Bionic Arm (Flagship product)","TrueLimb for Kids (Specifically designed for pediatric growth and durability)","Remote 3D Scanning & Fitting Software (Proprietary app-based solution)","Customizable Haptic Feedback Sockets","Tactra Haptic Glove (VR/AR force-feedback glove)"]

Technological Advantage

Combines multi-sensor muscle control (dozens of sensors vs. the industry standard of two) with AI-driven control logic and high-resolution 3D printing to create highly functional, lightweight, and low-cost prosthetics. Also applies 8+ years of micro-engineering R&D to haptic interfaces with 22 micro-motors per glove for force-feedback in VR.

Differentiation

Value Proposition

Provides affordable ($8,000 vs. $80,000+), lightweight, and visually life-like bionic limbs through a remote, direct-to-consumer process that eliminates the need for multiple clinical visits. Also offers Tactra haptic gloves for VR/AR with force-feedback technology at accessible price points.

How They Differentiate

Unlimited Tomorrow utilizes a completely remote, direct-to-consumer model that eliminates clinical visits. Its 'TrueLimb' is 3D-printed as a mirror image of the user's sound limb and costs roughly 1/10th of traditional high-end bionics ($8,000 vs. $80,000+). The company also leverages its micro-engineering R&D to create Tactra haptic gloves for VR with 22 micro-motors and zero learning curve.

Market & Competition

Target Customers

Individuals with upper limb differences (congenital or amputees), including pediatric and adult patients, as well as clinical partners and hospitals.

Industry Verticals

["Medical Devices","Prosthetics & Orthotics","Healthcare","Additive Manufacturing (3D Printing)","Virtual Reality","Gaming","Defense","Education"]

Competitors

Open Bionics, Ottobock, Össur

Growth & Milestones

Growth Metrics

The company has grown to over 30 employees and significantly expanded its manufacturing capacity through a strategic partnership with ABCorp for 3D printing production.

Major Milestones

["Launched flagship product TrueLimb® in 2020","Raised $10M Series A led by Prime Movers Lab in February 2022","Partnered with Siemens Caring Hands to provide bionic arms to victims of the war in Ukraine in 2022","Founder Easton LaChappelle named to Forbes 30 Under 30 in Healthcare (2021)"]

Notable Customers

Siemens Caring Hands, Singularity Group, Individual pediatric and adult amputees globally

Why this company matters

Unlimited Tomorrow occupies a distinctive position in the prosthetic industry by combining polymer additive manufacturing with a direct-to-consumer remote fitting model. Traditional high-end bionic arms cost over $80,000 and require multiple in-person clinical visits, creating a significant access gap. The company addresses this by offering its TrueLimb bionic arm for roughly $8,000, targeting both pediatric and adult users who are often priced out of advanced prosthetics.

The core technology relies on a proprietary smartphone-based 3D scanning app that allows users to capture their residual limb remotely. This scan is used to design a mirror-image prosthetic of the user's sound limb, which is then 3D-printed using polymer AM. The device integrates dozens of surface sensors—far more than the industry standard of two—combined with AI-driven control logic to enable multi-sensor muscle control and customizable haptic feedback sockets. The result is a lightweight, visually life-like bionic limb produced without the need for multiple clinical visits.

Target customers include individuals with upper limb differences, both congenital and from amputation, as well as clinical partners and hospitals. Notable collaborations include a partnership with Siemens Caring Hands to provide prosthetics to victims of the war in Ukraine, and a strategic manufacturing relationship with ABCorp to scale 3D printing production. The company has raised $15.5 million from investors including Prime Movers Lab, Tony Robbins, and Idealab, and was founded in 2014 by Easton LaChappelle, who began building robotic arms as a teenager and later interned at NASA's Johnson Space Center.

Unlimited Tomorrow's primary competitive risk lies in scaling production while maintaining the customization and low cost that define its value proposition. Competitors such as Open Bionics, Ottobock, and Össur offer alternative bionic solutions, but none combine remote scanning, polymer 3D printing, and a direct-to-consumer model at a comparable price point. The company's ability to expand its pediatric offering and sustain its philanthropic partnerships will be key to defending its niche in the medical AM market.