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Unitree’s H1 robot wins 1,500 metre race as China hosts world’s first humanoid games

More than 500 humanoid robots in 280 teams from 16 countries – including Japan, Germany and the US – were expected to compete in 26 sports

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Humanoid robots take part in a test 100 metre run ahead of the World Humanoid Robot Games in Beijing on Thursday. Photo: Reuters
Ben Jiangin Beijing

China is hosting the world’s first-ever humanoid games, featuring contests that pit machines against each other in events such as basketball and kickboxing, as the country puts on a display of its ambitions in the rapidly growing sector.

Human-shaped bipedal robots from companies such as Unitree Robotics and X-Humanoid kicked off the event – officially known as the World Humanoid Robot Games – by competing in a 1,500-metre run in Beijing on Friday.

Chinese robotics darling Unitree, based in Hangzhou, was the clear winner in the first race, with its H1 humanoid securing first and third places.

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Beijing-based X-Humanoid’s Tien Kung Ultra, which won the world’s first half-marathon featuring both human and robot runners in April, came in second.

The H1, priced at 650,000 yuan (US$90,526), was the same model that performed the Chinese folk dance Yangge at this year’s Spring Festival Gala, alongside a troupe of human dancers.

Humanoids play football during the World Humanoid Robot Games in Beijing on Friday. Photo: EPA
Humanoids play football during the World Humanoid Robot Games in Beijing on Friday. Photo: EPA

Unitree founder and CEO Wang Xingxing told local news portal Phoenix News that the performance of its H1 robots in the 1,500-metre race was “meaningful”, as the model was the first humanoid the company ever made.

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