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Agibot Humanoid Robots Showcase Kung Fu Skills at Shaolin Temple

  • Writer: tech360.tv
    tech360.tv
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Chinese robotics firm Agibot released a new video showcasing its humanoid robots practicing martial arts at China’s historic Shaolin Temple. The robots demonstrated impressive synchronicity and precision at China’s historic Shaolin Temple.


Monks and robots perform synchronized martial arts in an outdoor temple setting. They wear blue robes, the robots are gray and yellow.
Credit: X

The clip, which began circulating on social media channels and through major media outlets from Feb. 7, blends traditional martial arts with modern artificial intelligence. This blend has evoked a spectrum of public emotions, ranging from surprise to fear.


Agibot’s humanoid robots are shown executing kung fu moves with balance, speed, and precision in the video. These movements are not new for the company’s robots.


The Shanghai-based company first debuted the Lingxi X2 humanoid in March 2025 as a general-purpose robot. A video from that time showed it cycling in an open space, similar to human activity.


In May 2025, the firm released another video featuring the robot performing the notoriously difficult Webster flip. This gymnastics move involves a forward somersault with a back-leg takeoff and precise body control throughout the midair phase.


The robot also demonstrated its ability to perform kung fu moves in this earlier clip, similar to those seen in the recently released video.


The Lingxi X2 humanoid, capable of performing martial arts sequences, is powered by its Genie Operator-1 AI model, also known as the Go-1 model.


The Go-1 model utilizes a zero-sample generalization technique, allowing the robot to manipulate items and carry out basic tasks without prior training. This technology also enables a group of humanoid robots to work in sync, as seen in the video clip.


The Go-1 model significantly enhances the X2’s ability to learn, plan, and perform tasks in real-world environments. It is designed to introduce "latent actions", a technique that helps robots understand human movement by leveraging past and current visual frames.


This feature addresses the shortage of labeled action data needed to train humanoid robots to exhibit human-like behavior.


The decision to film humanoids performing martial arts sequences at the Shaolin Temple holds symbolic significance. The temple is globally recognised as the birthplace of Shaolin kung fu, embodying centuries-old traditions of disciplined training, philosophy, and physical mastery.


Pairing this legacy with humanoids signals how technology is gradually integrating into traditional human domains. Agibot has positioned its robots as collaborators, rather than isolated machines, whether by assisting with physical tasks, performing alongside people, or learning from human demonstrations.


Combining centuries-old martial arts traditions with cutting-edge predictive artificial intelligence creates a powerful contrast between heritage and innovation. The performance prompts viewers to reflect on the rapid evolution of humanoid robotics.


These machines may soon move beyond laboratories and staged demonstrations to play a more visible role in daily human environments.

  • Chinese robotics firm Agibot released a video showing its humanoid robots performing kung fu with Shaolin monks.

  • The Lingxi X2 humanoid, powered by the Genie Operator-1 AI model, demonstrates advanced capabilities including synchronised movement and learning without prior training.

  • The video, circulating from Feb. 7, showcases the robots' precision and balance at China's historic Shaolin Temple.


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