This Chinese Company Is Dominating Robotics
While Tesla's humanoid robot remains a promise, a Chinese company you may have dismissed as a toy maker is shipping thousands of humanoid robots annually and preparing for a $6 billion IPO. Unitree has achieved a 72% price drop in humanoid costs over two years while maintaining luxury-brand margins — a feat that mirrors how DJI and BYD conquered their industries. But as Chinese robotics firms flood global markets with government backing, Western lawmakers are debating whether to ban Chinese robots from military use. Can a company born from a viral YouTube video redefine the robotics industry, or will geopolitics derail the humanoid revolution?
Kernaussagen
Unitree shipped over 5,000 humanoids in 2025 and 20,000 robotic dogs, making it the only company selling humanoids on Amazon and achieving scale no Western competitor has matched.
The company cut humanoid prices 72% in two years (from $90k to $25k) while maintaining 60% gross margins — closer to Hermès than Apple — by vertically integrating supply chains.
Half of Unitree's IPO proceeds will fund proprietary AI models (VLA and world models) to move beyond dancing robots into autonomous industrial applications, directly competing with Figure and other Western startups.
China's regional governments are deploying massive robotics funds (Beijing alone committed $1.4 billion), replicating the playbook that built dominance in EVs and drones — but U.S. lawmakers are considering bans on Chinese robots in government use.
Current humanoid use cases remain primitive: 70% are for commercial stunts like dancing, 9% for industry (mostly tour guides), and true autonomous deployment is years away due to AI model limitations.
Kurzgesagt
Unitree is the world's only mass-market humanoid manufacturer, shipping 5,000+ units in 2025 with gross margins near 60% despite aggressive price cuts — positioning itself to dominate robotics the way DJI conquered drones, unless Western regulatory backlash disrupts its momentum.
From Viral YouTube Video to Market Leader
A Chinese grad student turned a $90k humanoid into a $25k product.
Wang Xingxing couldn't get into his preferred master's program due to poor English scores, so he pivoted to a different university and focused on robotics inspired by Boston Dynamics. His thesis project — a robotic dog built from cheap consumer electronics — went viral on YouTube with 18,000 views. Commenters asked to buy it, prompting him to drop a job offer from DJI after two months to commercialize the design.
By 2017, Unitree launched the Laikago, two years before Boston Dynamics sold its first commercial robot. By 2023, Unitree commanded 70–75% of the global robotic dog market. That same year, the company shipped its first humanoid (H1) — beating Tesla's repeatedly delayed bot to market. Today, Unitree remains the only humanoid you can buy on Amazon, shipping 5,000 humanoids and 20,000 dogs in 2025 alone.
The company releases new products every six months, mirroring smartphone cycles rather than traditional robotics timelines. This velocity — combined with vertical integration of supply chains — enabled a 72% price reduction in humanoids over two years while maintaining gross margins near 60%, comparable to luxury brands like Hermès.
The Economics of Scale
Luxury margins meet aggressive pricing in a counterintuitive business model.
China's Robotics Playbook: Scale First, Use Cases Later
The Reality Check: What Humanoids Actually Do Today
Dancing influencers and reception desks, not factory floors — yet.
Geopolitical Tensions: Backdoors and Bans
U.S. military uses Chinese robots; lawmakers consider blocking them.
Geopolitical Tensions: Backdoors and Bans
Unitree robots have been accused of «phoning home» with potential backdoors for data collection or kill switches. Videos show both Chinese and U.S. military units deploying Unitree dogs, and the bots appear on frontlines in Ukraine. U.S. lawmakers are now debating whether to ban Chinese robots from government use, a move that could fragment the global market and slow Western adoption of the world's most affordable humanoid platform.
The IPO and What Comes Next
Shanghai listing signals China-first strategy; Westerners mostly locked out.
STAR Exchange Listing Unitree will IPO on Shanghai's STAR exchange (not Hong Kong), signaling a China-for-China strategy. Western retail investors are largely excluded unless using specialized Chinese brokers.
Use Half for AI 50% of proceeds fund vision-language-action and world model development, aiming to make humanoids autonomous rather than remote-controlled performers.
Scale Manufacturing Remaining funds expand production capacity and launch new variants: heavy-duty dogs for logistics, smaller consumer companions, and industrial humanoids for factories and home services.
Summer 2025 Target IPO expected late summer 2025. Cap table includes Meituan (China's DoorDash), Sequoia China, Matrix Partners, Xiaomi, Tencent, Alibaba, and state funds.
Where Is Europe?
One under-the-radar company lifts 50 kg with under $100M funding.
Where Is Europe?
Wondercraft, a European robotics firm, has sold 450 humanoids to Renault, with 100+ units already in operation. Its robots lift 50+ kilograms — rivaling Boston Dynamics' Atlas — yet the company has raised under $100 million, a fraction of Figure's billion-dollar rounds. Europe has the engineering capability but lacks the scale capital and state coordination driving Chinese dominance.
The Founder's Vision
A nerd who still posts DIY hacks dreams of AGI.
“Let us together realize humanity's ultimate dream: AGI.”
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