Chinese Humanoid Robot Slaps Child in Viral Demo Mishap, Sparking Safety Concerns
When a robot’s dance moves turn into a literal slap in the face, it’s a sign that the “future” might still need a few more safety rehearsals.
On March 21 in Shaanxi, China, a humanoid robot performing a choreographed routine for a crowd accidentally struck a young boy in the face mid-spin. The footage, which has since gone viral, has reignited the conversation about whether these metal machines are truly ready to mingle with humans.
The robot was mid-routine, spinning, kicking, running through its choreographed moves inside a cordoned-off area, when things went sideways. As it twirled toward the edge of the enclosure with its arms outstretched, it swung directly into a nearby child, striking him in the face.
Handlers rushed in almost immediately and tried to pull the machine back. The robot, however, wasn’t done. It continued its programmed routine even as staff intervened, which only heightened the clip’s unsettling nature. Per the circulating video, the boy appeared to see it coming, but simply didn’t have enough time to move.
The robot is believed to be the Unitree G1, a humanoid model made by Chinese tech firm Unitree Robotics. It weighs around 35 kilograms (roughly 77 lbs) and is built for research, education, and commercial use. With 23 degrees of freedom across its joints, the G1 is capable of complex physical movements, dancing included.
‘Metal is Painful’: The public reaction
As the video racked up millions of views across TikTok, X, and YouTube, the internet’s response was a mix of dark humor and genuine concern for the boy’s safety. Many pointed out that while the hit looked accidental, the physical reality of being struck by a 77-pound metal object is no joke.
As reported by NDTV, one observer noted that “being struck by metal is genuinely painful,” while another user simply commented, “What a dangerous performance.”
Beyond the immediate shock, the incident has sparked a deeper debate regarding safety protocols.
Not Unitree’s best month
This incident didn’t come out of nowhere. March has been a rough stretch for humanoid robots in public.
Earlier this year, a Unitree robot accidentally kicked its own handler during an event. Then, earlier in March, a separate Unitree machine was reportedly detained by police in Macau after it frightened an elderly woman so severely she required hospitalization.
And in a separate bizarre event, a dancing robot at a San Jose Chinese restaurant called Haidilao reportedly shattered plates mid-performance.
Each of these incidents, taken individually, could perhaps be written off as a glitch or an edge case. Taken together, they raise a much harder question: as humanoid robots become more common at public events, trade shows, and restaurants, are the safety protocols actually keeping pace?
The Unitree G1 is not a toy. It is a research-grade machine capable of powerful, fast movements. Placing it in close proximity to crowds, children included, without adequate barriers or fail-safes is, at minimum, a planning problem. At worst, it’s a serious safety gap waiting to cause real harm.
The boy in the video appears to have walked away without serious injury. But the conversation his 19 seconds of footage has sparked may be the most useful thing to come out of that demonstration.
Meanwhile, not all robot moves are misfires; some are learning to rally thanks to a new AI system that teaches machines to play tennis.
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