A video circulating on X appears to show a close-quarters battle exercise, possibly involving the Chinese military, in which a heavily armed quadruped robot is used for clearing of rooms and hallways.
A private company in Shandong, China, demonstrated the correct use of robotic “wolves” and drones: they first provide fire suppression, then soldiers advance.
I think the only shortcoming of the robotic wolves is that they don’t perform flanking maneuvers and are not yet smart… pic.twitter.com/QCgWIsS7xh
— China pulse 🇨🇳 (@Eng_china5) April 1, 2026
The big takeaway is that militaries from Ukraine to Russia to China and even the US are increasingly trying to push machines, robotic dogs, FPVs, and ground bots, into the most dangerous confined spaces before troops follow.
However, not everyone is impressed…
the quadruped is real but for now it would have been stopped
(1) it is not serious about clearing corners
(2) it aims by making small leg adjustments
(3) how good is it at aiming high or low?
(4) its chassis will show before the weapon can fire
(5) the squad in this video is… pic.twitter.com/o7OB65WcPi— GROMPIYE (@civic_cat) April 1, 2026
That shift in letting robots handle the most dangerous jobs on the battlefield is already underway, and soon they will be clearing hallways, stairwells, tunnels, and rooms. These remain some of the deadliest areas on the modern battlefield, where first entry often means first casualties.
As we recently noted, Mike LeBlanc, co-founder of the humanoid robotics company Foundation, said its Phantom MK1 has been trained to breach rooms and other high-risk, enclosed environments ahead of human operators.
LeBlanc said, “The future of conflict is already here – our adversaries will use robots. The only real decision is whether we build and deploy systems to counter them, or ask someone’s son to do that job instead.”


















