
Robots developed by WND-based GJS Robot make an appearance at the closing ceremony of the 15th National Games. [Photo/WeChat account: xinwu_wx]
The spotlight at the closing ceremony of the 15th National Games on Nov 21 fell on a cutting-edge creation from Wuxi National Hi-Tech District: the third-generation motion-sensing kungfu robots developed by GJS Robot.
The robots performed fluid, agile martial arts routines in sync with music. The core innovation behind the performance lies in the company's ability to control full-chain latency, from motion capture and wireless transmission to robot execution, within 15 milliseconds, far faster than the industry norm.

A robot developed by GJS Robot. [Photo/WeChat account: xinwu_wx]
Equipped with a high-precision inertial sensor array and integrated joint modules, operators can don lightweight motion-sensing gear and master basic control within five to eight minutes. This allows the robots to accurately replicate human martial arts movements, surpassing the limitations of traditional remote control or pre-programmed routines.
GJS Robot has long been active in human-robot interaction competitions. In 2019, its "Ganker Arena" made its debut at the World Cyber Games, becoming China's first mixed-reality robot combat IP.

A robot developed by GJS Robot. [Photo/WeChat account: xinwu_wx]
With the integration of AI and FPV technologies, the GEIO series of robots now feature object recognition and human-robot semantic interaction capabilities, expanding their application into education, public services, and beyond.