Red humanoid robot with wheels in a racing environment, showcasing advanced robotics technology and mobility capabilities during an event.

Red humanoid robot with wheels in a racing environment, showcasing advanced robotics technology and mobility capabilities during an event.
The Honor HUmanoid robot competing in the Beijing half marathon.

A humanoid robot has set a new world record for the half-marathon in Beijing, marking a major escalation in the capabilities of artificial intelligence and robotics.

The robot, developed by Chinese firm Honor, completed the 21-kilometer race in 50 minutes and 26 seconds.

That is well ahead of the human world record of roughly 57 minutes, set earlier this year by Uganda’s Jacob Kiplimo.

Watch the clip below:

The race was part of a robot competition held alongside a human event.

Around 40 percent of the machines ran autonomously, while others were remotely controlled.

The result represents a dramatic jump in performance.

In the same event last year, the fastest robot took more than two hours and 40 minutes to finish.

Several machines struggled during the race, with some falling or colliding with barriers, but the winning robot completed the course cleanly at a pace that would beat elite human runners.

The robot was designed with long, athlete-like legs and equipped with an advanced liquid-cooling system to maintain performance over long distances.

China has been investing heavily in humanoid robotics, with state planning documents identifying the sector as a strategic priority through the end of the decade.

Major U.S. companies are also racing to build humanoid robots. Firms such as Boston Dynamics have already moved their Atlas robot from prototype to early industrial deployment.

Meanwhile, Elon Musk’s Tesla is developing its Optimus robot for mass production, with plans to scale output and eventually sell the machines commercially.

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