
Watch as bungling bots compete in first World Robot Games – & show humanoids aren't ready for world domination just yet
The three-day event, which takes place in China, will see robots with 280 teams from 16 different countries battle it out over a range of sporting events.
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The AI bots are set to go head-to-head in a range of competitions such as football, track and field, boxing and table tennis.
Robot-specific games are also set to take place - with contests ranging from sorting medicines to handling materials to cleaning services.
But human athletes can rest easy - footage of the games show there are a few defects which need to be ironed out.
At one of the first events a five–aside football match, 10 robots the size of seven–year–olds waddled around, frequently knocking each other over.
Mind-boggling footage showed the small bots step around the pitch, with one seen slowly knocking one into the back of the net.
Over in athletics, one robo-racer barrelled straight into a human operator who was knocked to the ground.
Footage also showed one racing humanoid near the finish line on a race - before tripping up at the last moment.
Participating robots are representing countries including the United States, Germany, and Brazil, among others.
There are 192 universities taking part in the groundbreaking competition.
Kicking off in the Chinese capital, the games include a whopping 500 androids.
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And although some were laughed at with sudden tumbles and jerky movement, some of the bots showed real strength.
HTWK Robots football team member Max Polter, affiliated with Leipzig University of Applied Sciences, said: "We come here to play and to win. But we are also interested in research.
"You can test a lot of interesting new and exciting approaches in this contest."
He added: "If we try something and it doesn't work, we lose the game.
"That's sad but it is better than investing a lot of money into a product which failed."
Spectators at the games paid anywhere between $17.83 and $80.77 for tickets.
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In a 1,500–metre race, domestic champion Unitree's humanoid runners effortlessly outpaced their rivals.
The fastest robot finished in 6:29:37, AFP reported.
For comparison, the fastest human record for the same race is 3:26:00.
Beijing's city government is one of the big backers of the games - a symbol of how much China are investing into robots and AI.
The push comes as the country faces an ageing population and slowing growth.
China has been rolling out headline-grabbing robot events, including the world's first humanoid marathon in Beijing earlier this year.
The historic competitive race between man and bot saw 21 humanoid robots race alongside 12,000 runners around the 13-mile course.
Organisers said the new games provide valuable data collection opportunities for developing robots for practical applications such as factory work.
Football matches can help train robots' coordination abilities, which could prove useful for automated assembly line operations in factories, analysts said.
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The Guardian
an hour ago
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BBC News
an hour ago
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