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Humanoid Press LLC · Haymarket, Virginia, United StatesRobot shatters the human half-marathon world record — in Beijing, today
Honor’s “Lightning” ran 21 km in 50:26 — obliterating Jacob Kiplimo’s human record of 57:20. Over 100 robot teams raced in Yizhuang. The age of humanoids just went public.
World Record • Humanoid Racing • Beijing 2026
Honor’s “Lightning” completed the Beijing E-Town humanoid robot half-marathon in 50 minutes and 26 seconds, demolishing Jacob Kiplimo’s human world record of 57:20 — watched by thousands on the streets of Yizhuang.
It happened on a Sunday morning in Yizhuang, Beijing’s southern technology district. A bright-red humanoid named Lightning — standing 169 cm tall, swinging short forearms for balance — crossed a half-marathon finish line in 50 minutes and 26 seconds. The human world record, held by Ugandan athlete Jacob Kiplimo, is 57:20. Machines had finally outrun us.
The 2026 Beijing E-Town Humanoid Robot Half-Marathon drew 112 competing teams — nearly five times last year’s inaugural field of 20 — and was staged concurrently with a conventional human race, each group in separate lanes to prevent collisions. Spectators lined the course in their thousands, phones raised.
“It’s the first time robots have surpassed humans, and that’s something I never imagined.”
Sun Zhigang, spectator at the Yizhuang courseHonor’s team swept all three podium positions with autonomous-navigation robots. Lightning’s legs are engineered to 90–95 cm — proportions that mirror elite human distance runners — and it runs on liquid-cooling technology derived from Honor’s smartphone division. A separately remotely-controlled Honor robot crossed first in 48:19, but under event weighting rules the autonomous champion was scored at 50:26.
Roughly 40% of entrants navigated autonomously; the rest were remotely controlled. The human winners, Zhao Haijie and Wang Qiaoxia, both finished in over an hour — more than ten minutes behind the robot frontrunners. Last year’s winning robot took 2 hours 40 minutes. The year-on-year leap is staggering.
Honor humanoid robot
Honor’s humanoid robot, unveiled at MWC 2026. Via humanoid.press database • @GadgetView2022 / YouTube.
China invested ¥73.5 billion ($10.8 billion) in robotics and embodied AI in 2025 alone. Unitree and Agibot are projected to hold 80% of all humanoid shipments this year, with China’s humanoid output forecast to surge 94% in 2026. The race is spectacle — but the industrial ambition beneath it is what changes everything.
“Running faster may not seem meaningful at first, but it enables technology transfer — into structural reliability, cooling, and eventually industrial applications.”
Du Xiaodi, Honor robotics engineer — winning teamExperts caution that the athleticism on display doesn’t yet translate to factory floors. Chinese firms are still closing the gap on the AI software needed for humanoids to match human manual dexterity at scale. But today, on a course in Yizhuang, the public milestone was undeniable.
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Sources
CNBC • Al Jazeera • CGTN • Reuters • AFP • Humanoid.Press Database