China Unveils World’s First ‘Biomimetic AI Robot’ Capable of Human-Like Walking
Not metal, not cartoonish, and definitely not trying to hide its identity.
China’s humanoid robotics race took a striking turn in late January when DroidUp unveiled Moya, a humanoid it calls the world’s first fully biomimetic embodied intelligent robot.
The robot was presented during the opening of DroidUp’s new headquarters and showroom at Zhangjiang Robotics Valley in Shanghai. Moya quickly became the center of attention, both at the event and online.
Standing 1.65 meters tall and weighing approximately 32 kilograms, the humanoid is built with proportions close to those of an adult human. DroidUp noted that the robot’s walking posture reaches 92% accuracy compared to human movement.
Unlike many humanoid robots built for factories or labs, Moya’s movements are deliberately slow, smooth, and socially oriented. Another detail that caught attention: Moya maintains a body temperature between 32 °C and 36 °C, intended to make interactions feel more natural.
Embodied AI at the core
DroidUp describes Moya as an example of embodied AI: systems that do not just compute but also perceive, reason, and act in the physical world.
Footage published by the South China Morning Post (SCMP) shows the robot displaying subtle facial movements, often described as micro-expressions, which are usually absent in traditional robots. These small cues — nodding, smiling, eye movement and eye contact, facial shifts, posture — are central to DroidUp’s effort to make long-term human–robot interaction feel less mechanical.
The company has shared limited technical details, but reports from RoboHorizon, cited by Interesting Engineering, suggest Moya is built on a platform referred to as a “Walker 3” chassis.
Public reaction, especially on Chinese social media, has been a classic case of the uncanny valley. Reports note that while some are fascinated, others find Moya’s realistic expressions and movements unsettling.
Where DroidUp sees Moya being used
DroidUp is not positioning Moya as a household gadget or an industrial worker.
According to SCMP, the company envisions the humanoid being deployed in healthcare, education, and commercial environments, where appearance, body language, and sustained interaction matter more than speed or strength.
Moya is expected to enter the market in late 2026, with a reported starting price of around 1.2 million yuan (about $173,000), based on figures cited in SCMP video coverage.
A different path for humanoid robots
Globally, humanoid robotics is splitting into clear camps. Some companies avoid realism altogether, opting for cartoon-like designs. Others lean into visibly mechanical forms suited for factories. DroidUp has chosen a riskier route, pushing straight toward human likeness.
Whether Moya’s near-human appearance becomes a strength or a stumbling block remains to be seen. For now, its debut has already done something significant: it has pushed the conversation beyond what robots can do, and toward how comfortable humans are when machines begin to look and act almost like one of us.
Also read: Robots handling jobs too dangerous for humans show where automation is already replacing risk with machines.
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