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Humanoid robots play football poorly in Chinese exhibition match
The Straits Times
|June 30, 2025
They looked like tipsy seven-year-olds stumbling about the football pitch.
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But the game that unfolded at an industrial zone in Beijing was a breakthrough for humanoid robots and the artificial intelligence (AI) that powered them through a 5-3 match on June 28.
Clad in black and purple jerseys with individual player numbers, diminutive humanoids faced off for two 10-minute halves, their movements controlled not by gesticulating coaches on the sidelines but by built-in algorithms.
The spectacle was less about lightning-speed action—two players fell on top of each other—and more about demonstrating balance, agility, and AI-powered decision-making.
The bots pumped their fists in the air after each goal—not hard since the goalies were pretty bad.
The games were not just a novelty but a signal of how far machine autonomy has progressed and a showcase for Chinese institutions in particular.
The matches featured teams from the leading Tsinghua University and schools like the Beijing Information Science and Technology University. One Tsinghua team called Vulcan won the championship following intense play, the China News Network reported.
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