Two humanoid robots recently carried out a logistics workflow in a fully autonomous manner at a warehouse.
They moved a total of 32 boxes from uneven piles into storage racks without any remote control or human intervention.
Each robot used real-time perception and motion planning to adjust to box placement and pile height dynamically.
The robots walked through the same shared floor space, stayed balanced under load, and avoided collisions.
They demonstrated the potential for coordinated, continuous teamwork — a key step toward real warehouse deployment.
This test signals that the robots are shifting from experimental demos to practical, stable tools for industrial logistics.













