The event, titled "Agibot night," ran for one hour and was streamed online and broadcast on major platforms on Feb. 8, with both the performers and the audience composed entirely of the company’s robots.
"Agibot night goes beyond a conventional product showcase and marks a milestone for humanoid robotics, demonstrating how embodied intelligence is moving from laboratory experimentation into real-world social and cultural settings," Qiu Heng, chief marketing officer of Agibot said.
He added that sustaining complex, high-intensity performances over time serves as a real-world test of stability, consistency, and system-level coordination among multiple robots.
A performance combining humanoid and animal-shaped robots. Video courtesy of Agibot
Several segments highlighted technically demanding movements, including flips, high-speed spins, large-scale synchronized choreography, and fashion-style walks.
In some performances, human dancers appeared alongside Agibot G2 humanoid robots and Agibot D1 quadruped robots, demonstrating real-time alignment between human movement and robotic motion, according to Interesting Engineering.
Comedic skits featured multiple humanoid robots interacting on stage, emphasizing more natural timing, improved role coordination, and more expressive behavior.
The program also included a singing performance by the ultra-realistic humanoid robot Elf Xuan developed by AheadForm, which drew attention for its detailed, human-like facial expressions.
According to Omdia, Agibot, founded in 2023 in Shanghai, led global humanoid robot shipments in 2025, delivering 5,168 of the roughly 13,000 units shipped worldwide that year.