The inaugural World Humanoid Robot Games (WHRG) roared into life yesterday evening at the iconic National Speed Skating Oval – the “Ice Ribbon” from the 2022 Winter Olympics. (See video below.)
A dazzling opening ceremony saw humanoid robots break into hip-hop dance routines, martial arts displays, and live musical performances on keyboards, guitars, and drums.
One robot even scored a soccer goal; another fell but got back up unaided, while a model bot tumbled off the stage and had to be carried by staff – underscoring both the spectacle and the still-evolving nature of the technology.
More than 500 humanoid robots from 280 teams across 16 countries, including the US, Germany, Brazil, and Japan, will compete through August 17 across a wide spectrum of challenges – sports like soccer, running, boxing, table tennis, and track events, as well as scenario-based tasks like medicine sorting, cleaning services, and industrial handling.
The event is a high-profile push by Chinese authorities to accelerate robotics innovation, backed by over US$20 billion in government subsidies and plans for a 1 trillion Yuan ($137 billion) fund supporting AI and robotics startups.
Unitree’s role: Hardware backbone and competitor
Unitree Robotics is officially participating in WHRG. Available coverage confirms this: Unitree, in collaboration with the Beijing Institute for General Artificial Intelligence (BIGAI), is entering several key events – including solo dance, hotel cleaning, and guest reception, showcasing a cutting-edge “clone system” for closed-loop teleoperation of the full humanoid body across long tasks.
Moreover, multiple teams at the event appear to be using Unitree hardware, though often running their own independent software – a detail that align with your observation that many of the humanoids seem to be Unitree models.
Early competition results confirm Unitree’s hardware prowess: the Unitree H1 series reportedly clinched first place in the 1500 m track final, Group 1, finishing in 7 minutes and 10 seconds.
Why it matters
- Robots turning real-world tasks into sport: From athletic disciplines to practical services and performance art, the Games stress-test navigation, perception, adaptability, and decision-making – skills essential for future service, entertainment, and industrial robots.
- Global tech collaboration: WHRG has attracted massive media attention – 97 overseas outlets and 282 reporters are covering the event – spotlighting the growing international embrace of robotics.
- Public engagement and industry momentum: Experts view events like these not just as spectacle but as pivotal moments for industry advancement.
Morgan Stanley analysts see widespread public interest as a driver for China’s leadership in humanoid robotics. Booster Robotics notes that sports competitions help refine AI-driven perception and control for broader applications.