Da Sheng D12, humanoid robot, WuBa Intelligent Tech, Hangzhou City, Zhejiang Province, China


China's Robot Army: Military Robot Dog Maker Pushes Humanoids into Workforce After Major Order

Dec 13, 2025

The maker of China’s military Robowolf quadrupeds is now unleashing its humanoid robots into industry after securing what it calls a landmark deployment contract.

Hangzhou-based 58 Intelligent Technology (五八智能科技), also known as WuBa Intelligent Tech, has reportedly secured a $5.5 million order for its full-sized humanoid robot, the Da Sheng D12. The entity that’s buying the robots hasn’t been disclosed, but Chinese state media calls it one of the republic’s largest industrial humanoid contracts to date.

The state-backed robotics firm is accelerating the production of its AI-powered quadruped and humanoid robots after recently securing around $69 million in funding. Cheng Peng, a Zhejiang University-trained engineer and military researcher, launched 58 Intelligent in 2022.

The company has maintained a relatively low profile even as its robotic dogs have become synonymous with the People’s Liberation Army’s robot arsenal. Its Robowolf quadrupeds were showcased during the China’s 2025 Victory Day military parade. The robotic dogs first appeared publicly in November 2024 during Airshow China 2024 in Zhihua. The company’s Q20A quadrupedal platform served as the foundation for the military-grade machine.

Public reports indicate that 58 Intelligent began developing its Da Sheng D12 humanoid in 2023 as the Chinese government made it national policy to mass produce humanoids by 2025 and to own the market by 2027. The People’s Republic is well past its initial goal of manufacturing 10,000 humanoids by year’s end, with some reports suggesting that more than 30,000 have been shipped.

Standing 1.7 meters (5 feet 7 inches), the D12 humanoid weighs around 55 kg (121 lbs) and boasts a reported 42 degrees of freedom (DoF). Detailed specs have not been publicized but the company says it’s powered by its custom high-power actuators and reinforcement learning motion control.

Early field tests placed D12 units on a Sichuan Changhong Electronics assembly line, where they reportedly took on jobs formerly handled by human interns like barcode scanning, labeling, and material handling. Other demos have shown the robot directing traffic, responding to mock fire emergencies, and navigating cluttered environments.

"China’s Robowolf Maker Pushes Humanoids into Industry with $5.5M Order"

by Mike Kalil
December 11, 2025
 
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