Skip to content
Advertisement

What can China’s next generation of robots do?

At Hong Kong’s InnoEx fair, Chinese firms showcased humanoid robots that box, guide tours, dance on stage and promise emotional support and learning.

schedule 13:03 visibility 81 views
What can China’s next generation of robots do?
Source: Euronews

At Hong Kong’s InnoEx fair, Chinese firms showcased humanoid robots that box, guide tours, dance on stage and promise emotional support and learning.

Chinese companies are showcasing more than 100 humanoid robots at a technology fair in Hong Kong, demonstrating machines that can box, dance and interact with visitors using synthetic skin and artificial intelligence.

The InnoEx tech fair opened on Sunday at the Hong Kong Convention and Exhibition Centre, running until Wednesday as part of the city's Business of Innovation and Technology Week.

Among the exhibitors are four of the world's five best-selling humanoid robot manufacturers in 2025 — AgiBot, EngineAI, UBTech and Unitree — according to technology research group Omdia.

Hangzhou-based robotics firm Unitree drew crowds with its G1 robot, which boxes with visitors wearing gloves and a full outfit.

At the Shenzhen DX Intech Technology stand, visitors reached out to touch the robots' faces, feeling their soft synthetic skin.

The company said some of its robots were already in use in museums and government venues across mainland China, guiding visitors and leading tours.

Novautek presented a more conventional, robot-like design, with a screen-based face.

The company said it envisioned a future in which robots would be programmed with distinct personalities and could provide emotional support and teaching skills.

When asked where it learned its knowledge, one robot replied, "My knowledge comes from a big omniscient brain inside me, like a comprehensive encyclopaedia”.

“I also keep learning and evolving through large model technology to answer various questions," the robot added.

Crowds cheered as Shenzhen-based EngineAI demonstrated its PM01 robot flipping, rolling and dancing on stage.

The company said it has plans to open two factories in China this year to scale up mass production.

EngineAI said that people may one day prefer interacting with robots to humans.

“(The robots will make) the human to believe 'I prefer to talk to the robot, than a salesperson,’” said Robert Chan from the company’s global strategy office.

“A salesperson is biased, the salesperson will convince me to make a decision for his advantage, will hide certain information,'" Chan added.

Heavy investment to compete with US

Chan said Beijing benefited from strengths such as low-cost engineering. He also pointed to a culture of knowledge exchange between companies, in contrast to Europe and the US, where firms tend to guard their technology more closely.

Robotics is becoming part of a wider technological rivalry between China and the United States, with growing national security implications.

Official data show that China had more than 140 humanoid robot manufacturers and over 330 models in 2025.

Accelerating the development of technologies such as humanoid robots is a priority in Beijing’s latest five-year plan, which has pledged to “target the frontiers of science and technology”.

Why Anthropic's Mythos model has Washington and Wall Street worked up

How disinformation affected Hungary's tightly fought election

Cyber warfare in space: Attacks on space systems rose since 2023

newspaper

Originally published at

Euronews

open_in_new Read Full Article

Related Articles

Cockroach Janata Party holds first protest in New Delhi
Culture

Cockroach Janata Party holds first protest in New Delhi

Hundreds of supporters of the Cockroach Janata Party, an online joke that drew millions across India, gathered for the first time in the national capital on Saturday, taking the social media movement off screens and into its biggest real-world test...

France 24

Read More

Control Resonant is a sequel — and also a starting point
Culture

Control Resonant is a sequel — and also a starting point

Chronologically, Control Resonant is a sequel to 2019's Control. But in most other ways, the games aren't directly connected. To developer Remedy, they're more like two sides of the same coin. When Resonant was first revealed last year, creative...

The Verge