On June 24, humanoid robots kicked penalty shots at MWC Shanghai 2026 to try real-time AI decision-making. The 2026 FIFA World Cup is bringing football to the attention of people all over the world.The Humanoid Robot Football Penalties Challenge took place at the Shanghai New International Expo Center in the Mobile AI Innovation Frontiers Zone. Robots must be able to read the goal, figure out angles, and hit without any help from a person or pre-programmed processes.Models from Booster Robotics and Unitree Robotics were seen competing in videos circulating on the internet.Robots score on perception, balance, and real time pressureEach robot assessed the position of the ball and the goalkeeper’s movement before attempting a penalty kick. Real-time movement change is done based on data received from the robot’s sensors.Organizers scored the robots on perception accuracy, balance control, motion planning, and adaptive response. The competition’s semi-finals wrapped on the first day and the final round is scheduled for June 25.In a different story, Hyundai Motor started a football campaign with Boston Dynamics’ Atlas robot prior to the FIFA World Cup. Atlas watches football footage and tracks how players move and position their bodies. The robot then goes to a practice area to copy the movements it saw.Sequences show Atlas shifting weight, swinging a leg to guide a ball with controlled contact, and progressing through balance and coordination drills. The robot raises its arms in celebration of a goal. In another scenario, it drops to one knee, mimicking an injury response from footage it had just watched.Hyundai said that this is Atlas’s first time playing football as part of a “School of Football” program. There are plans to use Atlas and Spot, a four-legged robot, at the FIFA World Cup, but their tasks have not been finalized.China’s humanoid advancement goes full speedPenalty challenge fits a pattern. China has used high-profile public events to showcase its robotics sector, and this is another one. In April, Beijing held its second humanoid half-marathon, scaling from 21 robots in 2025 to more than 300 running alongside human competitors, Cryptopolitan reported. Organizers said 38% of participating teams entered an autonomous navigation group, where robots completed the course without human guidance. The Global Times characterized that shift as moving from “human-led mode” to “full autonomy.”Counterpoint data cited by Cryptopolitan showed 16,000 humanoid robots were deployed globally in 2025, with China accounting for over 80% of installations. AGIBOT held the largest vendor share at 31.9%, followed by Unitree, UBTECH, and Leju. Tesla ranked fifth with about 5% share.The smartest crypto minds already read our newsletter. Want in? Join them.