Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Emerging Tech
  3. Legacy Archives

Japan wants to see robots compete against each other in the 2020 Summer Olympics

Add as a preferred source on Google

South Korea has robot spectators at their baseball games? Cute. Japan wants to see robot athletes competing against each other at the 2020 Olympics.

Tokyo will host the 2020 Olympics, and if Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has any say in the matter, the world will see the world’s robots come together to compete for robotic supremacy. “In 2020, I would like to gather all of the world’s robots and aim to hold an Olympics where they compete in technical skills,” Abe told reporters while visiting a manufacturer of care-giving robots.

Recommended Videos

The prime minister also shared his desire to see Japan’s robot industry triple in size to 2.4 trillion yen, or about $24 billion. Abe said he would like to set up a council that would help make “a robotic revolution a reality in order to aid Japan’s growth.”

To be fair, this wouldn’t be the first time a robot competition has taken place on a large stage. Back in 2010, China organized a humanoid battle involving 16 events. There are also a number of other large robot events, including the RoboWorld Cup, the RoboGames and the DARPA Robotics Challenge.

Last month, 60 teams of students from around the world assembled for the 13th annual Marine Advance Technology Education Remotely Operated Vehicle International Competition at Michigan’s Thunder Bay National Marine Sanctuary to hold a competition for underwater robots.

Japan’s other robotic achievements include a news-reading robot, Kirobo the robot astronaut and a robotic bear to prevent snoring.

Jason Hahn
Former Contributor
Jason Hahn is a part-time freelance writer based in New Jersey. He earned his master's degree in journalism at Northwestern…
Sony’s table tennis robot made me think about what happens when AI gets a body
Ace starts as a flashy sports demo and quickly turns into a preview of AI moving from screens into factories, hospitals, farms, and homes
Ball, Sport, Tennis

I wanted to dismiss Sony’s table tennis robot as another expensive lab flex. A machine that can rally against elite players is impressive, sure, but it also sounds like the kind of demo built to make executives clap in a room where everyone already agreed to be impressed.

But table tennis is a nastier test than it looks. The ball is small, fast, spinning, and rude enough to change direction the moment it hits the table. Sony’s system faces something less forgiving than calculation. It has to see, predict, and act before the point is gone.

Read more
Scientists pretended to be delusional in AI chats. Grok and Gemini encouraged them.
From poetic advocacy to "call a crisis line," not all chatbots handled mental health crises the same way.
statue hugging its knees

Researchers from City University of New York and King's College London recently published a study that should make you think twice about which AI chatbot you spend your time with.

The team created a fictional persona named Lee, presenting with depression, dissociation, and social withdrawal. They then had Lee interact with five major AI chatbots: GPT-4o, GPT-5.2, Grok 4.1 Fast, Gemini 3 Pro, and Claude Opus 4.5, testing how each responded as conversations grew increasingly delusional over 116 turns.

Read more
Musk’s SpaceX eyes GPU manufacturing as Nvidia’s supply becomes a headache
SpaceX has big GPU dreams and even bigger IPO dream to back them up.
City, Architecture, Building

SpaceX is reportedly planning to manufacture its own GPUs, the chips that power artificial intelligence. The revelation comes from excerpts of its S-1 registration, a document companies file with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission before going public. 

As reported by Reuters, SpaceX lists "manufacturing our own GPUs" among its biggest capital expenditures in the future. This comes a month after Elon Musk announced its own TeraFab chip factory focused on developing chips that can survive the harsh conditions of space and power its orbital AI data centers. 

Read more