Unitree H1’s running clip made r/singularity feel the speedup
Original: Unitree H1 accelerating from jogging to running View original →
The Unitree H1 clip hit r/singularity because it is the kind of robotics progress that does not need a chart. The post described a test run for the April 19 Beijing humanoid robot half-marathon, showing the H1 accelerate from a jogging gait into a faster run. The comment section quickly moved from jokes about being chased to a more grounded observation: humanoid movement looked very different even compared with demos from a year ago.
That community reaction matters because humanoid robotics is often hard to read from lab clips. A robot can walk in a controlled hallway, fall on uneven ground, or need careful setup outside the frame. A gait transition is more specific. Moving from jog to run asks the control stack to handle timing, foot placement, momentum, and balance while the body is already in motion.
The video is still a limited signal. It does not prove endurance, safety around people, battery performance, recovery after a stumble, or how much human supervision was present. The upcoming half-marathon context also matters: a race setting can reveal whether a robot is merely capable of a short burst or can keep operating when terrain, heat, crowds, and repeated corrections accumulate.
What made the thread energetic was the gap between old expectations and the current clip. Commenters remembered humanoids that needed handlers close by or looked fragile after a few steps. Seeing a commercial humanoid change pace in open view made the future feel less abstract, even for users who reacted with unease.
The next useful data point is not another dramatic video. It is the full race result on April 19: distance covered, pauses, falls, battery swaps, operator involvement, and how many robots finish. If those details hold up, the H1 clip will look less like a viral moment and more like a marker that humanoid mobility is leaving the demo loop.
Source: r/singularity discussion.
Related Articles
Chinese robotics company Unitree has unveiled the GD01, the world's first mass-produced manned mecha. A human pilot can board and operate the large-scale robotic suit - the first time the science fiction concept has crossed into commercial mass production.
Unitree founder Wang Xingxing disclosed plans to ship between 10,000 and 20,000 G1 humanoid robots in 2026, nearly quadrupling last year's ~5,500 units. Morgan Stanley doubled its China humanoid sales forecast to 28,000 units, reflecting the sector's rapid shift from research to commercial scale.
China's Agibot and Unitree dominate early humanoid robotics, shipping the vast majority of 2025's 13,317 global units. Faster model cycles, lower costs, and EV-derived supply chains give Chinese firms a structural edge over US rivals like Tesla Optimus.