Noetix Robotics Wins Medals at Global Humanoid Robotics Games
Noetix Robotics, a Beijing-based humanoid robotics company that is rapidly expanding, obtained exceptional results at the Global Humanoid Robotics Games. The company secured two gold medals and one silver medal, thereby securing third place on the medal table. Noetix made a significant stride in its mission to integrate humanoid robots into daily life by competing in nine categories with its humanoid robots N2 and the newly launched E1. The company demonstrated both technological innovation and athletic excellence.
Beijing has become a major robotics hub thanks to strong government support and steady investments in key technologies and the supply chain. With help from skilled workers, money, and buildings, the city has created a thriving ecosystem of robotics companies.
Noetix Robotics has also received a lot of assistance from the Beijing government, such as talent programs, workspace, and tax breaks for investors. Beijing set up a fair international stage for competition by holding the Global Humanoid Robotics Games. This pushed technological progress forward and sparked interest in embodied intelligence among the public. The Beijing Robotics Industry Development Fund helped all three of this year’s medallists.

Noetix Robotics, competed in nine events: the 100-metre, 400-metre, 1,500-metre, 4×100-metre relay, 100-metre sprints, high jump, standing long jump, floor exercise, and solo dance. The company fought with two humanoid robots, the small N2 and the new E1. Together, they showed how flexible, quick, and innovative the company could be in both sports and art.
The N2 has 18 degrees of freedom, is light, has a power life of one to two hours, and can run as fast as 3.2 metres per second. It can move through complicated terrain and do complicated moves like flips, running, and dancing thanks to motion control algorithms that it created itself. It is widely used in education, study, and dynamic demonstrations.
The E1 is a high-tech figure that walks on two legs and is 1.36 metres tall. It has 21 degrees of freedom, arms that can be stretched out, a flexible waist, and the ability to expand in modules. It can walk at a speed of 1.2 metres per second for up to two hours. The E1 uses multi-modal AI to sync up speaking, facial expressions, and body movements with a low latency response. This lets people speak different languages and show how they feel. Its 48V low-power system supports memory, personality development, and immersive involvement, and one can change their look and personality. The E1 is one of the most flexible humanoid robots in its class. It comes with an array of modular parts, such as improved arms and hands that can move easily.
Noetix Robotics won two golds and a silver with its E1 and N2 humanoid robots.With a 1.25-meter jump, the E1 won the standing long jump, and the N2 wowed the judges with a number of jumps and flips that scored 41.60 points -this was more than any other competitor. In solo dance, Noetix and the Beijing Dance Academy won silver. They danced Yingge, a traditional Chinese folk dance from the Chaozhou-Shantou area. The act, combining culture and technology, received 95.30 points.
Experts from Tsinghua University and the Chinese Academy of Sciences founded the firm in September 2023, with a focus on embodied operating systems, robotic bionics, and general artificial intelligence ontology. Their robots combine strong perception and interaction capabilities with a lightweight bionic structural design, which the company states “makes them suitable for industrial collaboration, research, and education.”
Looking ahead, Noetix Robotics wants humanoid robots to be a normal part of life, helping people and taking care of things around the house. Their athletic and functional skills will be improved even more by the company – to take them from labs and contests to real-life uses and improving everyday life.
Picture Source:Noetix Robotics