C3P-No

Robotics Company Builds Straight-Up Terminator

"We're at a point now where robots can move more sensually than Taylor Swift."
Joe Wilkins Avatar
Electric vehicle company XPeng has released a video of its "Iron" robot without skin, and the results are pretty disturbing.
XRoboHub via YouTube

Automation is getting a little out of control these days. Recent advances in the world of robotics have unleashed autonomous bodegas, sock-puppet style robo-servants, and even AI-powered dinosaurs.

For the most part, robotics developers have kept their projects on the lighter side, even if they occasionally creep us out. But that might be changing thanks to the Chinese automotive company XPeng, which just released a clip showcasing its “Iron” humanoid robot.

The clip, which circulated on social media, show a robotic exoskeleton strapped to a harness walking in a straight line. While XPeng’s Iron units are usually clad in a sleek white skin, this one is totally nude — and it looks like something straight out of the post-apocalyptic RPG Fallout, or like the titular antagonists from the “Terminator” franchise.

The bot also cleans up nicely. During an event this week, the company showed it off dressed in a cloth bodysuit that gave it a distinctly feminine profile.

Iron’s gait was so impressive that some observers wondered if it was a human inside a suit — a con Elon Musk once pulled — but XPeng CEO He Xiaopeng put that suggestion to rest when he unzipped the outfit, showing the robot inside.

XPENG's next-gen IRON robot effectively crossed the uncanny valley, leading many to believe it was a human in a suit.

In a follow-up event to prove it was a robot, He Xiaopeng had its leg skin cut open in front of a live audience. The robot then walked off the stage. pic.twitter.com/CNF5loZyaf

— The Humanoid Hub (@TheHumanoidHub) November 6, 2025

The bot displayed some pretty slick motion, swaying its hips as it walks.

“We’re at a point now where robots can move more sensually than Taylor Swift,” one Redditor commented.

“I am kind of blown away that they can get motors to work in such an elegant way. I assumed it was soft body mechanics,” wrote another. “Wow.”

Iron made its first debut on Wednesday, when XPeng CEO He Xiaopeng introduced the unit as the “most human-like” bot on the market to date. Per Humanoids Daily, the robot features “dexterous hands” with 22 degrees of flexibility, a “human-like spine,” gender options, and a digital face.

According to He, the bot also contains the “first all-solid-state battery in the industry,” as opposed to the liquid electrolyte typically found in lithium-ion batteries. Solid-state batteries are considered the “holy grail” for electric vehicle development, a design choice He says will make the robots safer for home use.

More on robots: Neuralink Head of Surgery Says Robot-Human Interface Happening “Very Soon”




Joe Wilkins Avatar

Joe Wilkins

Correspondent

I’m a tech and transit correspondent for Futurism, where my beat includes transportation, infrastructure, and the role of emerging technologies in governance, surveillance, and labor.