Video Friday: The Robot World Cup

Video Friday: The Robot World Cup

Video Friday is your weekly selection of awesome robotics videos, collected by your friends at IEEE Spectrum robotics. We also post a weekly calendar of upcoming robotics events for the next few months. Please send us your events for inclusion.

RSS 2026: 13–17 July 2026, SYDNEY
Summer School on Multi-Robot Systems: 29 July–4 August 2026, PRAGUE
Actuate 2026: 18–19 August 2026, SAN FRANCISCO
IROS 2026: 27 September–1 October 2026, PITTSBURGH
Humanoids Summit Seoul: 22–23 September 2026, SEOUL

Enjoy today’s videos!

For the first time, two full teams of humanoid robots played an 11-vs-11 soccer match on hardware, bringing one of robotics’ most ambitious long-term visions closer to reality. Never before have two full-sized humanoid robot teams played a soccer game against each other.

[ RoboCup ]

Engineers at MIT and EPFL in Lausanne, Switzerland, have designed a robot that can swim underwater, and flap out of the water to continue flying through air, much like a diving bird. The robot can help scientists study the mechanics that enable these actions in aquatic aviators and may help launch a new class of aerial-aquatic drones and vehicles.

[ MIT ]

We’re excited to announce our breakthrough robotic hands for the NEO platform: hands that match or exceed human-level dexterity, strength, safety, and reliability. Designed from the ground up, these 25-DoF hands combine 25 fully actuated degrees of freedom with a tendon-driven system, rich tactile sensing, and built-in compliance. The result is a hand capable of true in-hand manipulation, precision tool use, and delicate interaction.

[ 1X ]

This match, Tech United played against IRIS at the mid size league at RoboCup 2026 in Incheon South-Korea.

[ Tech United ]

Atlas arrived pitchside at NYNJ Stadium in front of 80,000 people gathered to see Brazil vs Norway. After performing some of the sport’s most memorable player celebrations, Atlas helped kick-off the second half by delivering the match ball!

[ Boston Dynamics ]

Navigating discrete terrain such as stepping stones remains a major challenge for legged robots. Conventional approaches often rely on dense environment reconstruction from cameras or LiDAR, which can be affected by latency, occlusions, and significant computational overhead. We show that proximity sensors integrated into the bottom of a quadruped’s feet enable safe, terrain-seeking autonomous locomotion.

[ Paper ]

On this holiday, Digit is on grill duty. It turns out precise force control is good for more than payload handling. Happy 4th of July from all of us at Agility.

[ Agility ]

We’ve created GEN-1, our latest milestone in scaling robot learning. We believe it to be the first general-purpose AI model that crosses a new performance threshold: mastery of simple physical tasks. It improves average success rates to 99% on tasks where previous models achieve 64%, completes tasks roughly 3x faster than state of the art, and requires only 1 hour of robot data for each of these results. GEN-1 unlocks commercial viability across a broad range of applications—and while it cannot solve all tasks today, it is a significant step towards our mission of creating generalist intelligence for the physical world.

[ Generalist ]

4 years at Figure.

[ Figure ]

Reachy Mini is becoming your real AI companion. The Conversation App makes it able to talk fluently with you, help you with your to-do list, remind you of important tasks, and even chat about music. Long-term memory, voice interaction, always ready to help.

[ Reachy Mini ]

Is this sort of thing now a real job for humanoid robots, then?

[ Unitree ]

Quite a story, but is it a real job?

[ EngineAI ]

If you have a cute animal logo for your research I will always share it.

[ BIEVR-LIO ]

This is very delicate work, although the real challenge would be picking those nuts out of a jumbled bin full of randomly sized nuts, which is how most of us live our lives.

[ Sanctuary ]

Not for me, thank you, although I’m not saying that most of the other humanoid robots out there are any better looking, fundamentally.

[ UBTECH ]

Robotics professor, Dr. Christian Hubicki, judges robot soccer skills while knowing very little about soccer himself.

[ ORL ]

In this presentation, Brendan Schulman, Vice President of Policy at Boston Dynamics, outlines the critical role of government engagement in driving the success of the humanoid robotics industry. He demonstrates how legged robots like the Spot quadruped and Atlas humanoid are moving beyond factory settings to deliver real-world value in infrastructure inspection, industrial manufacturing, and public safety. Schulman highlights the intersection of AI and robotics, showcasing how large behavioral models and reinforcement learning enable robots to navigate slippery floors and autonomously avoid workplace hazards. Ultimately, he calls for a proactive national robotics strategy focused on workforce training, safety standards, and ethical frameworks to support supply chain resilience and global competitiveness.

[ Humanoids Summit ]

The post “Video Friday: A World Cup for Robots” by Evan Ackerman was published on 07/10/2026 by spectrum.ieee.org