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Chinese Humanoid Robot Wins Boxing Match Against Human

12

Just as we thought some professions were safe from technology taking over, a humanoid robot has stepped into a boxing ring.

While this might sound like science fiction, the recent match between a human reporter and the Unitree G1 robot showed just how far robotics technology has come.

The fight took place during a visit to Chinese robotics company Unitree Robotics, where the company’s compact humanoid G1 robot went head-to-head with Supercar Blondie journalist Sergi Galiano. The tech demo produced entertaining footage showcasing the capabilities of modern human-like robotics.​

While the match may have been staged for demonstration, the technology behind it is very real.

A bot built for movement

Standing about 4 ft 2 in (1.27 m) tall and weighing roughly 77 lbs (35 kg), the G1 is designed to be lightweight and agile, prioritizing mobility and flexibility. So, while significantly smaller than most human competitors, it makes up for it with speed and precision.

The flexibility features don’t stop there: the robot boasts 43 degrees of joint freedom, enabling complex movements such as running, jumping, and, apparently, boxing combinations. That level of articulation helps explain how it can throw punches, maintain balance, and recover quickly after movement.

The G1 isn’t just your average tin-can robot; its design takes its abilities to the next level with an advanced sensor suite that includes depth cameras and 3D LiDAR, enabling it to understand its surroundings and react accordingly.

In the fight against Galiano, the robot’s quick reactions proved difficult to manage, even for a human fighter with a clear height advantage. Instead, the smaller size made it difficult to predict the G1’s movements, and the robot landed several body shots before delivering a final blow that knocked its competitor off balance and onto the mat.

Image: Supercar Blondie

The robot was declared the winner, with footage that circulated online demonstrating real progress in robotic coordination and control.

Not just a gimmick

The human-versus-robot match wasn’t an isolated experiment.

In 2025, the China Media Group World Robot Competition – Mecha Fighting Series held what organizers described as the world’s first organized humanoid robot boxing tournament. The event featured robots performing kicks, punches, and recovery maneuvers, guided in real time by operators, combining AI-assisted movement with human strategy.

Competitions like these showcase the machines’ combat capabilities, yes, but also engineering fundamentals such as mechanical coordination, structural durability, and AI-assisted decision-making. Robots had to demonstrate they could regain balance after falls, react quickly to commands, and maintain stability under physical stress.

These events give engineers the opportunity to stress-test hardware, and are part of China’s push to commercialize humanoid robotics. Industry projections suggest the country’s humanoid robot sector could grow into a market worth roughly $120 billion by 2030, with potential applications ranging from manufacturing to service jobs.

A showcase of both progress and limitations

Robot sporting events have become part showcase for China’s ambitions in artificial intelligence and embodied robotics, and part proving ground. At the 2025 World Humanoid Robot Games in Beijing, robots competed in combat sports as well as in running, football, and even dance competitions.

While some robots wowed audiences with their athletic abilities, others revealed ongoing challenges. Experts note that real-world environments remain a major hurdle. Unlike software AI models trained on massive digital datasets, robots must learn to operate in complex physical spaces where data is harder to collect, and variability is much higher.

There are also questions about safety and practical deployment. Some machines struggled with balance, and many still lack the fine motor skills needed for everyday tasks like handling tools or manipulating delicate objects. While robots can perform choreographed or supervised tasks, it seems safely operating in homes or unpredictable environments seems to remain some distance away.

Competition beyond the ring

These spectacles serve multiple purposes. They generate public interest, attract investment, and provide testing grounds for technologies that could eventually be used in elder care, logistics, or hazardous industrial work.

Image: Supercar Blondie

They also reflect intensifying global competition in robotics. American companies such as Tesla and Boston Dynamics are still widely viewed as leaders in advanced robotics research, and Chinese companies like Unitree are closing the gap, aided by strong domestic supply chains and government support.

Where this could lead

For now, a robot knocking down a human in a boxing match is mostly a viral-video moment.

But the underlying technology points toward more serious applications. These demonstrations of balance, coordination, and motion control that enable a robot to box hint at a future in which humanoid robots may train alongside humans, assist with physical tasks, or even serve as training partners in sports.

As Galiano himself joked after the match, sparring with robots could one day become normal. While the match itself may have been playful, it offered a real glimpse into the future of robotics. If robots can already spar with humans today, it may not be long before they’re working alongside them in much more meaningful ways.

Also read: China’s Unitree Robotics aims to ship up to 20,000 humanoid robots in 2026 as commercial deployment starts to move beyond viral demos.

The post Chinese Humanoid Robot Wins Boxing Match Against Human appeared first on eWEEK.

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