
Humanoid robots have become one of the tech industry’s latest obsessions, with companies worldwide racing to build and market a bipedal machine that can walk, talk, and maybe one day replace human labour. But as many public demos have shown, these bots often have a hard time just staying upright.
This week, a Russian company learned that lesson the hard way. During a live demonstration at a robotics forum, its highly anticipated humanoid robot AIdol took the stage—only to promptly tip over and crash to the floor in front of a crowd of onlookers.
Developed by the Russian firm Idol, AIdol was unveiled at an event organised by the New Technology Coalition, a consortium described on Telegram as a “group of companies focused on creating humanoid robots.” The machine, billed as “the first anthropomorphic robot of Russia,” lost its balance mid-performance, fell, and sustained some damage in the process.
Addressing the mishap, Idol CEO Vladimir Vitukhin offered a philosophical take: “This is precisely the kind of real-time learning where a successful mistake turns into knowledge, and an unsuccessful one turns into experience. I hope this error becomes a lesson,” he said.
The incident isn’t unique—robotic faceplants have become something of a rite of passage in the industry. Even major players have stumbled (literally). When Elon Musk first introduced the Tesla Bot, it turned out to be a person in a costume. While Musk has since shared videos of a functioning version—now called Optimus—the memory of that awkward debut lingers.
Meanwhile, other robotics firms have managed to make more convincing progress. Boston Dynamics, for instance, has impressed (and occasionally unsettled) audiences with its dog-like robot Spot and its remarkably agile bipedal bot Atlas, developed with support from DARPA.
Whether these increasingly capable machines are a triumph of engineering or a glimpse into a slightly unnerving future is still up for debate—but one thing is certain: building a humanoid robot that doesn’t fall over is still harder than it looks.