Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Emerging Tech
  3. News

Japan built robot wolves to thwart bear attack, and they’re flying off the shelves

Orders for the “Monster Wolf” have reportedly tripled amid rising wildlife attacks.

Add as a preferred source on Google
Monster Wolf Robot in Japan Featured
wolfkamuy

There are very few headlines that sound equally believable as both a robotics breakthrough and the plot of a low-budget sci-fi horror movie. Japan deploying glowing robot wolves to scare away bears is definitely one of them. The country’s bizarre robots are suddenly seeing a huge spike in demand, as reported by AFP, as bear attacks and sightings continue surging across Japan.

Japan’s robot wolves are becoming surprisingly popular anti-bear weapons

Originally built to keep deer and wild boars away from farms, Japan’s bizarre “Monster Wolf” robots are now being deployed near residential areas, resorts, golf courses, and even construction sites as wildlife encounters continue rising across the country. Which honestly sounds like the setup for a very weird survival horror game.

Developed by Hokkaido-based company Ohta Seiki, the robot looks exactly as terrifying as its name suggests. It uses infrared sensors to detect nearby animals, after which its glowing red eyes light up, its head starts moving around, and it blasts loud sounds ranging from wolf howls to industrial noise designed to scare the living daylights out of anything nearby.

And somehow, the ridiculous-looking thing actually works. CCTV footage has reportedly captured bears and wild boars immediately running away after triggering the robot, while demand has become so intense that buyers are now facing waiting periods of up to three months. The urgency is real too, with Japan recently recording over 50,000 bear sightings and a growing number of attacks, partly blamed on climate shifts and food shortages pushing wildlife closer to cities.

Honestly, this feels like Japan solving problems in the most Japanese way possible

The funny thing is that the “Monster Wolf” initially looked like one of those inventions the internet would laugh at for a week before forgetting entirely. Instead, it accidentally became a genuinely practical example of robotics solving a very specific real-world problem.

And honestly, this whole thing also says a lot about where modern robotics is heading. Not every robot needs to be a humanoid AI assistant replacing office workers. Sometimes, a terrifying solar-powered wolf with glowing eyes and speakers loud enough to traumatize wildlife is apparently the smarter solution. Weirdly enough, it also feels very on-brand for Japan, a country that has spent decades quietly turning strange robotics experiments into surprisingly effective real-world products.

Varun Mirchandani
Varun is an experienced technology journalist and editor with over eight years in consumer tech media. His work spans…
OpenAI is giving ChatGPT Plus subcription to a whole country
Malta’s partnership could push governments toward treating AI access like public infrastructure.
Man using ChatGPT on a laptop

ChatGPT Plus used to feel like one of those optional internet subscriptions people quietly justified to themselves every month. Now, OpenAI is partnering with governments to roll it out at a national level, which honestly feels like a very different conversation altogether.

OpenAI has officially announced a partnership with Malta that will provide ChatGPT Plus access to all Maltese citizens and residents for one year after they complete a free AI literacy course. The initiative, called “AI for All,” is being developed alongside the University of Malta and is being described as the company’s first nationwide partnership of this kind.

Read more
Kenya tells Microsoft that $1 billion AI data center would gulp half the country’s electricity
The proposed facility reportedly demands electricity on a scale the country simply cannot afford right now.
Microsoft Logo on a building office

The AI industry keeps talking about bigger models, faster chips, and trillion-parameter futures. What it talks about far less is the absolutely absurd amount of electricity needed to keep all of this running. That reality just hit a major roadblock in Kenya, where Microsoft’s proposed $1 billion AI data center project is reportedly facing resistance after government officials warned that the facility could consume so much power it might require “switching off half the country” to keep it operational.

Microsoft’s Kenya AI data center reportedly needs more power than the grid can comfortably handle

Read more
Amazon employees are doing fake tasks because they’re forced to use more AI and show it
Amazon Building Office Logo

The corporate AI race is slowly starting to feel less like innovation and more like performance art. Companies desperately want employees to “embrace AI,” employees desperately want management off their backs, and somewhere in the middle, everyone is now apparently automating tasks nobody actually needed automated in the first place.

According to a new Financial Times report, Amazon employees are using the company’s internal AI tool called “MeshClaw” for unnecessary tasks simply to inflate their AI usage scores and appear more aligned with the company’s growing AI-first culture. For context, Amazon’s MeshClaw can initiate code deployments, triage emails, and interact with apps such as Slack, according to people familiar with the matter.

Read more