Key Takeaways

- Sony's Ace robot defeated three out of five elite ping pong players, though it skips the hard part by not standing on two legs
- Artist Beeple created robot dogs with billionaire faces that walk around and poop NFTs as an interactive exhibit
- A marathon-running robot shattered after tripping, requiring medical teams to rush over
Robots are everywhere now. They're running marathons, serving as butlers, playing our video games, and occasionally toppling over in crowded public spaces. April 2026 gave us plenty of mechanical mayhem to process, and PC Gamer compiled the month's standout moments.
The common thread? These machines are being deployed in public faster than they can reliably function. As the original report puts it: "If you're struck by a self-driving car or crushed by a toppling robot, congratulations! You've just participated in a beta test you never agreed to."
Here are the five robots that made headlines this month, for better or worse.
5. Sony's Ace: The Ping Pong Pro (Sort Of)
Sony built a robot named Ace to play table tennis. It defeated three out of five "elite" players it faced, which sounds impressive until you read the fine print.
According to The Guardian, "Ace sidesteps some tricky aspects of table tennis by having an eight-jointed arm on a movable base that does not have to stand on two legs." PC Gamer's take on this understatement: "That's like saying Galactus sidesteps some tricky aspects of competitive cooking shows by completely consuming the planets the shows are held on."
Still, watching the arm track and return shots is technically impressive. Sony AI continues pushing what's possible in robotic precision, even if the result is more carnival game than sports competitor.
4. Beeple's Billionaire Dog Bots
Artist Beeple created an interactive exhibit featuring robot dogs with the faces of billionaires mounted on them. Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg, and Jeff Bezos all got the treatment. The robots walk around and poop NFTs.
The Musk version was spotted wandering the streets of San Francisco, which is exactly as unsettling as it sounds. PC Gamer's writer noted a "clawing fear of dogs with human faces" dating back to Invasion of the Body Snatchers. The dead-eyed robotic billionaire heads don't help.
Is it art? Is it commentary? Is it a fever dream? The answer might be yes to all three.
3. The Marathon Runner That Shattered
A marathon-running robot tripped during a race and shattered on impact. Medical teams rushed over, though what exactly they planned to do for a pile of broken machinery remains unclear.
The clip captures everything wrong with current humanoid robot deployments. These machines look impressive in controlled demos. Put them in unpredictable real-world conditions and they fall apart, sometimes literally.
Another ambitious tech timeline facing reality checks
Robot Self-Packing Gone Wrong
Another April highlight: footage of a robot attempting to pack itself. The results were exactly as chaotic as you'd expect.
The clip went viral on Reddit's r/funny, which tells you everything about how well the task went. Robots continue to struggle with tasks that require spatial reasoning and physical adaptation.
The Bigger Picture
April's robot highlights reveal a gap between marketing and reality. Companies rush robots into public settings before they're ready. The result is a mix of genuine innovation (Sony's ping pong precision) and public beta testing (marathon bots that can't handle a stumble).
PC Gamer plans to cover robots more regularly. Given the pace of deployments and failures, there's no shortage of material.
Logicity's Take
Frequently Asked Questions
Did Sony's Ace robot beat professional ping pong players?
Ace defeated three out of five elite players, but it uses an eight-jointed arm on a movable base rather than standing on two legs like a human would.
What are Beeple's robot dogs?
Artist Beeple created an interactive exhibit featuring robot dogs with billionaire faces (Musk, Zuckerberg, Bezos) that walk around and produce NFTs.
Why do robots keep failing in public?
Robots perform well in controlled environments but struggle with unpredictable real-world conditions. Companies often deploy them publicly before they're ready.
Are humanoid robots ready for everyday use?
Based on April 2026's highlights, not yet. Even marathon-running robots shatter after tripping, and self-packing remains beyond current capabilities.
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Source: PCGamer latest
Huma Shazia
Senior AI & Tech Writer
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