The World Cup has seen superstars, pitch invaders, heartbreak and joy across its 96 years, and on Sunday, it got a robot.

Atlas, an advanced humanoid robot, stepped pitchside to deliver the match ball to the referee at halftime at New York New Jersey Stadium, where Brazil were playing Norway in the round of 16. Its moves include imitating a few uncanny goal celebrations, such as Norwegian striker Erling Haaland's meditation pose.

"We always looked at human skill as a way to like motivate us and challenge us to push forward what robots can do," said Alberto Rodriguez, director of robot behavior at Boston Dynamics.

The robot, presented by tournament sponsor Hyundai Motor, has previously danced and engaged in parkour.

Hyundai robot Atlas brings the match ball out before the second half of the Brazil v Norway FIFA World Cup game, July 5, 2026.
Hyundai robot Atlas brings the match ball out before the second half of the Brazil v Norway FIFA World Cup game, July 5, 2026. (credit: REUTERS/JEENAH MOON)

Atlas's unique challenges in World Cup

But to deliver the match ball and pull off a few sweet moves, Atlas had to navigate challenges unique to the World Cup.

Standard Wi-Fi communications with Atlas were out of the question, with tens of thousands of fans surrounding the pitch with cellphones, so a new communications channel was established with a radio device attached to the robot's back.

"And grass has its own peculiarity," said Rodriguez. "We had to change the way that Atlas learns to walk and learns to jump and run so that it's more robust."

Hyundai has been aggressively pursuing mass production of the robots, announcing this year that it plans to deploy them at its US manufacturing plant in Georgia starting in 2028 to automate high-risk and repetitive tasks.