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Germany tastes victory in robot world cup

Although the fate of Germany in this year's European Championship is still set to be decided, the German robot football team's is far more certain: they are the champions. The American team opposite them in the finals put up a good fight, but when it came down to penalties, the German team was superior.

robotfootball

The Robot Football World Cup is an annual competition that sees robotics designers and enthusiasts from all over the world compete to see if their team of five robots can score more goals and make more saves than the opposition. Teams compete in a number of categories, though the main finals of the Standard Platform all use the same ‘Nao' bipedal robot.

There are other leagues and contests that take place with less typical robots, but Nao is a two-legged, two-armed robot with much the same physical capabilities as real humans – they just operate a little slower. That doesn't mean they can't pull off some exciting moves though, as highlights of the World Cup show.

Although a lot of teams entered the competition, none from the UK made it into the knock-out stages. The finals had strong competition though, with both the German team and one from the U.S. putting on such strong defence, that neither team could score.

When it came to penalties though, that was very different. The U.S. team failed to score again, but the German team was able to put away three goals out of five, crowning them the champions. As the Telegraph points out, this is redemptive for the developers on the German team, as they lost to an Australian team in last year's final.

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KitGuru Says: Although we're still a few decades off of these little guys being able to compete with humans, you can see it coming. Will we even want to watch humans play sports any more when we can watch robots do it to a higher standard instead?

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2 comments

  1. We don’t just watch sports for the level of competition, also because it’s humans that compete. You can admire the skill of Federer, Messi, or Bryant; they show the pinnacle of human physique; they can inspire children; while movies might suggest otherwise, robots lack that capacity. Athletic competitions are ingrained in all human social structures: we’ve been doing it for thousands of years. Robots take the social aspect out of the equation. Sure, we might watch some robot sports in the future, but I very much doubt Robot boxing or football could ever rival the popularity of a FIFA World Cup, the Olympics, or a Superbowl.

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