A Phone Company Showed Off a Dancing Robot at MWC. That's Not the Weird Part.
At MWC 2025 in Barcelona, Honor — the smartphone brand Huawei divested in late 2020 under pressure from US sanctions — put a humanoid robot on stage. It danced. Attendees clapped. A handful of people filmed it on their phones. And then, almost immediately, the whole thing disappeared from the internet.
That's the weird part.
Not the robot. Not the dancing. The fact that a major product showcase at the world's biggest mobile trade show — an event running since 1987 — left barely a trace in official channels or mainstream tech coverage. Go ahead, search for details on Honor's robot program. You'll find a few scattered attendee videos and almost nothing from Honor itself.
I've been in this industry long enough to know that when a company spends millions on a trade show spectacle and then goes quiet, that silence is the story.
The Demo That Vanished
Here's what we know. Honor brought a humanoid robot to their MWC 2025 booth. It performed choreographed dance moves. It was clearly designed to draw foot traffic and generate social media buzz. By every measure, it should have been a headline.
Instead? No official Honor press release about the robot. No product page, no roadmap, no named project lead. The coverage that exists comes almost entirely from attendee-shot videos and a handful of tech outlets that happened to walk by the booth. Honor's own marketing machine — otherwise prolific about their smartphones — treated this dancing robot like it never happened.
Here's the video that does exist, captured at the event:
[YOUTUBE:NDph9DHvm60|Honor's First Humanoid Robot Unveils Its Dance Moves at MWC]
Ben Wood, Chief Analyst at CCS Insight and one of the most respected voices covering the mobile industry, has noted repeatedly that MWC has become a stage for companies to project technological ambition far beyond their core business. The robot demos, he's argued, are more about signaling innovation capacity to investors and partners than about shipping actual products.
That framing makes Honor's vanishing act click. The demo wasn't for you and me. It was for a very specific audience in very specific meetings happening in the back rooms of Fira Barcelona.
Phone Companies Have a Robot Problem
Honor isn't the first phone maker to flirt with robotics and then go quiet. This is becoming a pattern.
Xiaomi unveiled CyberOne in August 2022. CEO Lei Jun personally introduced the humanoid robot on stage. It walked, it gestured, it recognized emotions (allegedly). The tech press covered it wall to wall. And then... nothing. CyberOne hasn't shipped. No consumer product. No timeline. It was a concept that served its purpose under the stage lights and retreated to whatever lab it came from.
Samsung has been showing variations of Ballie — their rolling home robot — since CES 2020. Five years of demos. The company finally announced pricing around $3,000 at CES 2025, but as of mid-2025, evidence of widespread consumer availability is thin. Five years of trade show appearances for a product most people still can't buy.
As I wrote about when MWC's robot obsession distracted from what actually mattered, the pattern keeps repeating: demo, headlines, silence. The reason is simple. These robots aren't products. They're props.
The Trade Show Industrial Complex
After shipping software for over 14 years, I've developed a nose for what's real and what's theater. I've attended enough tech conferences and sat through enough product launches to spot a demo that exists purely as a conversation starter.
The tell is always the same: no spec sheet. No SDK. No developer program. No integration story. No shipping date. Just vibes and choreography.
The smartphone market has matured to the point where real differentiation is brutally hard. Global shipments peaked at roughly 1.5 billion units around 2017 and have since declined to approximately 1.17-1.2 billion annually. The market isn't growing. Every flagship looks like every other flagship. Camera improvements are incremental. Chip upgrades are predictable.
So what do you do when your core product is plateauing? You put a dancing robot on stage.
It's the same instinct that drives car companies to show concept cars they'll never build. The robot says: "We're not just a phone company. We're a technology company. We think about the future." That message isn't for consumers. It's for investors, carrier partners, and the analysts writing reports that shape brand perception in markets like Europe and Southeast Asia where Honor is aggressively expanding.
The demo isn't the point. The photo of the demo is the point.
The Real Robotics Race Looks Nothing Like This
While phone companies use robots as trade show decorations, the actual robotics industry is moving fast. And the serious players look nothing like Honor or Xiaomi.
Figure AI raised $675 million in a Series B round in early 2024, backed by Jeff Bezos, Microsoft, NVIDIA, and OpenAI. Their Figure 02 humanoid is being tested in BMW manufacturing facilities. Boston Dynamics keeps iterating on Atlas. Tesla's Optimus program, whatever you think of the timelines Musk promises, has a dedicated team and a clear manufacturing thesis.
The gap between these companies and a phone maker's MWC demo is the gap between a research program and a photo op. Figure AI has published detailed technical papers. Boston Dynamics has decades of locomotion research. Robotics is their core mission, not a side quest to juice a keynote.
Dimitri Slavnov, a robotics researcher at ETH Zurich, put it bluntly in a 2024 interview with IEEE Spectrum: the distance between a robot performing choreographed movements and one navigating an unstructured environment autonomously is "orders of magnitude" in engineering complexity. Dancing is easy. Doing useful work is the hard part.
That's why the phone companies go quiet after the demo. Once the trade show lights come down, there's no roadmap because there was never supposed to be one.
The Gap Between Show and Ship
Honor's disappearing robot isn't a scandal. It's a symptom.
There's a growing gap in tech between what companies show and what they ship. I've watched this dynamic accelerate over the past few years, especially as AI hype has given every company permission to demo things that are years (or decades) from being real. It's the same pattern I explored when looking at how AI coding agents are reshaping what engineers actually do. The demo always looks more impressive than the production reality.
The Ameca robot that stole the show at MWC 2024 was at least honest about what it was: a demonstration platform from Engineered Arts, a company whose entire business is building expressive robots. They weren't pretending it would ship as a consumer product next quarter. The phone companies doing robot demos don't extend that same honesty.
What bothers me isn't that Honor showed a robot. It's the erasure afterward. If you're going to put something on a stage at the world's biggest mobile trade show, own it. Tell us what it is. Tell us why you built it. Tell us it's a research project, a concept, a moonshot. Anything. The silence tells me the robot served exactly one purpose: generating buzz in the halls of Fira Barcelona for exactly three days.
And honestly? It probably worked. The meetings that mattered probably happened. The right analysts probably took note. The brand perception needle probably moved a fraction of a degree.
But the next time you see a phone company put a humanoid robot on stage, ignore the robot. Watch what happens in the weeks after. If the company goes silent, you've just witnessed a magic trick. The robot was misdirection. The real product was always the phone in your pocket — and the quarterly earnings report that depends on you buying the next one.
Originally published on kunalganglani.com
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