Robots and humans walk together in Seoul: the future arrived on the runway

Published on May 30, 2026 | Translated from Spanish

In Seoul, the MACH33 fashion show presented a runway where humanoid robots walked alongside human models. The event explored joint choreography to showcase how technology is advancing toward everyday integration. For the public, this indicates that robotics is moving closer to sectors like entertainment and work, changing our relationship with machines in the near future.

humanoid robots and human models walking in sync on a futuristic runway in Seoul, articulated metallic robotic arms moving in rhythm with human legs, blue LED sensors blinking on the robots' torsos and heads, visible cables at the joints, choreographic control software projected as floating holograms over the track, engineers adjusting parameters on tablets backstage, neon lights and spotlights crossing the scene, background screens showing motion diagrams and integration data, photorealistic cinematic style, dramatic lighting with cold and warm contrasts, polished metallic textures and shiny fabrics, motion blur in the steps, high-precision tech show atmosphere

Synchronized choreography and motion sensors on stage 🤖

The robots used in MACH33 employ dynamic balance algorithms and proximity sensors to coordinate their steps with humans. Each unit processes the models' positions in real time to adjust its speed and gestures. The choreography was programmed using motion capture software, allowing the machines to imitate certain biological movements. Although they still rely on operators for sudden changes, the achieved synchrony marks a technical advance in human-machine interaction.

Robots with better steps than some humans on the runway 😅

The funny thing about the show is that the robots didn't trip or step on anyone, something that can't be said for all humans on real runways. While the models sweated to maintain their poses, the machines repeated their choreography without a drop of oil out of place. That said, at the end of the event the robots didn't wave to the audience because, according to the organizers, they haven't yet programmed the farewell gesture.