World’s Fastest Humanoid Robot Runs at 22 MPH
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A full-sized humanoid robot ran faster than most people would ever run.
Chinese robotics company MirrorMe Technology has unveiled Bolt, a humanoid robot that reached a top speed of 22 miles per hour during real-world testing. This wasn’t CGI or a computer simulation. The images, shared by the company on X, show a real humanoid robot running at full speed inside a controlled testing facility.
That milestone makes Bolt the fastest-running humanoid robot of his size ever demonstrated outside of computer simulations. For robotics, this is a moment of crossing lines.
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Bolt, MirrorMe Technology’s humanoid robot, reaches 22 mph during a real-world speed test inside a controlled facility. (Zhang Xiangyi/China News Service/VCG via Getty Images)
What allows the world’s fastest humanoid robot to run at 22 mph?
In the promotional video, the race is shown in a split-screen view. On one side of the screen, Wang Hongtao, founder of MirrorMe Technology, runs on a treadmill. On the other hand, Bolt runs under the same conditions. The comparison makes the difference clear. As the pace increases, Wang struggles to keep up and eventually gives up, while Bolt continues to run smoothly, maintaining his balance as his stride rate increases.
Bolt takes shorter strides than a human runner, but makes up for it with a much faster stride rate. That faster pace helps the robot stay stable as it accelerates. Engineers say this performance reflects significant progress in the control of humanoid locomotion, dynamic balance and high-performance propulsion systems. The speed is impressive. Speed with control is the real achievement.
The humanoid robot design choices behind Bolt’s speed
Bolt is approximately 5 feet, 7 inches tall and weighs approximately 165 pounds, putting him close to the size and mass of an average adult human. MirrorMe says the similarity is intentional. The company describes this as the ideal humanoid shape.
Instead of oversized limbs or exaggerated mechanics, Bolt relies on newly designed joints combined with a fully optimized power system. The goal is to replicate natural human movement while remaining stable at extreme speeds. That combination is what sets Bolt apart.
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MirrorMe says Bolt’s 22mph run highlights stability and control, not just raw speed. (Cui Jun/Beijing Youth Daily/VCG via Getty Images)
Why Bolt’s sprint reflects years of robotics development
Bolt didn’t appear overnight. MirrorMe has focused on robotic speed as a long-term priority since 2016. Last year, its Black Panther II robot surprised viewers by running 328 feet in 13.17 seconds during a live television broadcast in China. Reports suggested that performance exceeded comparable tests conducted with Boston Dynamics machines.
In 2025, the company also set a record with a four-legged robot that surpassed 22 mph, reinforcing its focus on acceleration, agility and sustained high-speed movement. China’s interest in robotic athletics continues to grow. Beijing even hosted the first World Humanoid Robot Games, where humanoid robots competed in drag races on a track.
Why MirrorMe says speed is not the end goal
Running at 22mph attracts attention, but MirrorMe says speed alone isn’t the point. The engineers behind Bolt care more about what happens at that speed. Balance, reaction time and control matter more than a starting number. Those abilities are what allow a humanoid robot to move like a trained runner rather than a machine about to tip over.
That’s where the athlete angle comes into play. MirrorMe imagines Bolt as a training partner who can run alongside elite athletes, maintain a consistent pace, and push the limits without tiring. By matching and slightly surpassing human performance, the robot could help runners adjust form, pace and resistance while collecting precise movement data. In that context, the sprint is not a trick. It shows how humanoid robots could go beyond demonstrations and into real training and performance environments.
What does this mean to you?
Humanoid robots that can run at highway speeds are no longer something you only see in demos or concept videos. As these machines become faster and more stable, they begin to adapt to real-world functions. That includes athletic training, emergency response and physically demanding jobs where speed and endurance make a real difference. At the same time, faster robots raise real concerns. Safety, supervision and clear rules are even more important when machines can move so quickly around people. When robots run so fast, the limits must be clear.
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Engineers say Bolt’s high-speed sprint reflects advances in locomotion control, balance and driving systems. (Photo by Kevin Frayer/Getty Images)
Kurt’s Key Takeaways
Bolt running at 22 mph is eye-catching, but speed isn’t the main thing. What matters is what it shows. Robots are starting to move more like people. They can run, adjust, and stay upright at speeds that once toppled machines. That opens the door to real uses, but also raises real questions. How fast is too fast around people? Who sets the rules? And who is responsible when something goes wrong? Technology is advancing rapidly. The conversation about this must move just as quickly.
If humanoid robots can soon run and train faster than humans, where should limits be set on how and where they are allowed to operate? Let us know by writing to us at Cyberguy.com.
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Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson is an award-winning technology journalist with a deep love for technology, gear and devices that improve lives with his contributions to News and News Business since mornings on “News & Friends.” Do you have any technical questions? Get Kurt’s free CyberGuy newsletter, share your voice, a story idea or comment on CyberGuy.com.


