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China Races Towards Dominance in Humanoid Robotics

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Walker S Strikes the Gong

China’s Humanoid Robot Push: UBTech, AI, and the Race for Real-World Deployment

China is rapidly positioning itself as a leader in humanoid robotics, with companies like UBTech at the forefront. According to a recent Wall Street Journal article, engineers are training humanoid robots to work in real-world environments, such as sorting auto parts at luxury EV factories. The robots learn not in isolated labs, but directly on the job—an approach that allows faster iteration and adaptation to messy, unpredictable tasks.

This effort is part of a broader national strategy: China aims to dominate humanoid robotics by 2027. With substantial government investment, strategic partnerships (like UBTech’s work with Geely and Foxconn), and access to an enormous volume of factory data, Chinese startups are building embodied AI systems capable of functioning in human-designed environments.

While current humanoids are still clumsy and expensive—UBTech’s Walker S costs hundreds of thousands of dollars—their capabilities are improving. Some can now collaborate, sort objects, and even navigate physical obstacles using AI models that require entirely new forms of training and sensor input beyond what typical chatbots use.

Although the U.S. still leads in chips and software, China’s manufacturing ecosystem could enable lower-cost, large-scale production—much like its electric vehicle boom. Industry analysts believe humanoid robots could become China’s next breakout tech sector.

👉 Read the full article on WSJ