Children scream after Disney Olaf robot ‘collapses’ at Disneyland Paris
If you’re having a bad day, at least you’re not an AI-powered Olaf robot.
Disney’s animatronic of the Frozen character was described when it debuted last December as a ‘new chapter’ in the studio’s technology.
Yet the three-foot-tall bot, which uses machine learning to walk around, recently died. Well, according to social media users.
Footage posted by the Magic Tour Club TikTok account shows the snow-bot blinking and waving at Disneyland Paris-goers when it suddenly froze.
A second later, it fell backwards, whacking its head on concrete and its carrot nose snapping off yesterday. People can be heard screaming in horror at the sight.
The video shows park staff rushing to the autonomous robot’s aid, popping the nose back on before carrying it (him?) away.
The user said: ‘Olaf just melted… literally ????☀️We didn’t expect THIS to happen at Disneyland Paris.
‘Someone get this snowman an ice bath ASAP.’
Metro understands that Olaf’s condition is stable at the time of publication. Disney has been approached for comment.
‘There is literally no funnier way I could’ve imagined this’
The clip captures how 2026 is treating us all so far, with one user calling the moment a ‘generational GIF’.
A user said: ‘You’re laughing? Olaf died and you’re laughing?’
‘The natural comedic timing of this is the best evidence I’ve ever seen for god existing,’ said another.
A third user on X said: ‘There is literally no funnier way I could’ve imagined this. Like that’s it. That’s the funniest possible version of how the Olaf animatronic would power off’
Olaf only made its public debut at Disneyland Paris’ World of Frozen on Sunday and is capable of strolling around the World of Frozen area.
The animatronic was developed by Disney Imagineering, the studio’s little-known research and development division, and is powered by the same chip that is being used to build humanoid robots.
This ‘physical AI’, as maker NVIDIA Newton puts it, allows robots to figure out how to walk on rubble or hold fragile objects like fruit.
The tech uses something called reinforcement learning, where robots learn to do things by being rewarded for performing actions. In case case, walking and talking like a snowman.
Unlike most robots, Olaf’s ‘snow’ isn’t a hard shell and his ‘legs’ are actually two wonky poles tucked under a foam skirt.
Disney said in November: ‘From the way he moves to the way he looks, every gesture and detail is crafted to reflect the Olaf audiences have seen in the film – alive, curious, and unmistakably himself.’
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