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Published on 2026/02/20
WARS OF THE FUTURE

There�s a video going around on social media that, if nobody told you anything, could easily pass as real. It looks like a military training exercise: a line of soldiers advancing with machine guns, running while firing, crossing obstacles, climbing trenches� the kind of thing you�d expect from a tactical drill. The difference is they aren�t soldiers. They�re robots.

More specifically, robots similar to the Unitree G1, those Chinese humanoids we�ve been seeing for months doing parkour, boxing, getting up from the ground and moving with a naturalness that barely feels like science fiction anymore. In the video they move in formation, fire, take cover� and even though it�s obvious the footage is generated with artificial intelligence, what�s unsettling is how believable it looks.
And of course, it inevitably makes you think about the wars of the future.



The idea itself isn�t new: sending machines instead of people to the front lines. Robots remotely controlled from simulators, autonomous androids with a programmed mission, or hybrid systems where AI makes tactical decisions in real time. For any country, that would be the ideal scenario: fewer human casualties, less internal pressure, and a war fought with hardware instead of lives.
The problem is the enemy would have the same thing.

If that scenario ever arrives, wars could turn into clashes of robots versus robots. Mechanical armies advancing, firing, taking positions� until one side loses its technological edge and has no choice but to surrender. Not because of direct human defeat, but because it�s been outmatched in power, control, and machine production.
It sounds very futuristic, sure. But you don�t have to look that far ahead to see where things are heading.

In Ukraine, for example, we�re already seeing how drones have become a key part of the conflict. Some of them even use fiber-optic cables to communicate, precisely because radio signals are relatively easy to jam or block through electronic warfare. Technology moves forward, but the weaknesses are still there.
And the same would apply to robot armies.

Batteries, communications, sensors� all of it can fail. An electromagnetic pulse, electronic sabotage, or simple energy limitations could disable an entire unit without a single shot being fired. Right now, building a fully autonomous combat-ready android army is still quite far off.
But twenty years ago, the idea of drones making real-time targeting decisions also sounded distant � and now it�s part of reality.

So even if the video is fiction, the reflection isn�t.
War always evolves alongside technology, and the real question isn�t whether we�ll see machines fighting for nations� but when it will start to feel normal.



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