• Home
  • Blog
  • Android
  • Cars
  • Gadgets
  • Gaming
  • Internet
  • Mobile
  • Sci-Fi
Tech News, Magazine & Review WordPress Theme 2017
  • Home
  • Blog
  • Android
  • Cars
  • Gadgets
  • Gaming
  • Internet
  • Mobile
  • Sci-Fi
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Blog
  • Android
  • Cars
  • Gadgets
  • Gaming
  • Internet
  • Mobile
  • Sci-Fi
No Result
View All Result
Blog - Creative Collaboration
No Result
View All Result
Home Sci-Fi

Taiwan shows off robot patrol dogs that could guard its South China Sea islands

June 2, 2026
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

A military research institute demonstrated three versions of a four-legged robot, one of them armed, for possible duty on remote outposts the coast guard struggles to staff.


Taiwan’s main weapons-development institute put three robot dogs through their paces on Monday, presenting them as a possible answer to a hard problem: how to keep watch over tiny, far-flung islands in the South China Sea without sending many more people to live on them.

The National Chung-Shan Institute of Science and Technology, which is military-owned, demonstrated three versions of a four-legged robot built by Ghost Robotics, a US supplier of quadruped machines, according to Reuters.

The institute has fitted its own equipment to the robots for three roles: reconnaissance, surveillance, and firepower. The last of those carries a gun mounted on its back, which is the detail that tends to draw the eye, and the one that places these machines in the contested territory between a patrol tool and a weapon.

Ghost Robotics, unlike some rivals, has not barred the weaponisation of its quadrupeds, which is part of why its machines have found their way into military programmes that Boston Dynamics’ terms would not permit. Taiwan’s marines have said there is a pressing need for robots that can handle beach and coastline patrols and inspections in the Spratlys and the Pratas, the two island groups at issue.

TNW City Coworking space – Where your best work happens

A workspace designed for growth, collaboration, and endless networking opportunities in the heart of tech.

Geography explains the interest. Taiwan controls Itu Aba, also called Taiping, the largest natural island in the Spratlys, and it holds the Pratas, which sit at the northern end of the South China Sea and are guarded in peacetime by the coast guard rather than the military. Both are small, remote, and expensive to keep manned.

A robot that can walk a perimeter in the heat without rotation, rest, or a supply chain for anything but power is, on paper, well suited to exactly that kind of posting.

The backdrop is a steadily tenser maritime standoff. Taiwan has complained of a rising number of Chinese coast guard patrols, and even drones, near the Pratas, part of Beijing’s broader pressure campaign against an island it claims as its own.

Unmanned systems have become a feature of that contest on both sides; Chinese forces have themselves trialled armed robot dogs and small drones in amphibious exercises near Taiwan over the past year.

For now this is a demonstration, not a deployment. Reuters reported that the military has signalled a requirement for the robots but has not placed a formal order, so the timeline, the numbers, and whether the armed variant ever reaches an actual beach all remain open.

Robotic quadrupeds have been edging into military service elsewhere, from the French Army’s trials of Boston Dynamics’ Spot to a wave of European battlefield-robot funding. Taiwan’s version of the idea now has a stage, a gun, and a set of islands it was built with in mind. What it does not yet have is an order.

Next Post

The 'best budget flip phone' of 2026 is already FREE at T-Mobile — here's the deal

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

No Result
View All Result

Recent Posts

  • White House internal fight stalls US AI regulation after Mythos
  • Gigabyte’s new AORUS Elite lineup has a monitor for every kind of gamer
  • I played ‘Star Fox’ on Switch 2. Multiplayer mode rules.
  • I wore the Oura Ring and the Whoop, and one will absolutely fit into your life better than the other
  • Lego launches smart Pokémon sets that you can battle with

Recent Comments

    No Result
    View All Result

    Categories

    • Android
    • Cars
    • Gadgets
    • Gaming
    • Internet
    • Mobile
    • Sci-Fi
    • Home
    • Shop
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions

    © CC Startup, Powered by Creative Collaboration. © 2020 Creative Collaboration, LLC. All Rights Reserved.

    No Result
    View All Result
    • Home
    • Blog
    • Android
    • Cars
    • Gadgets
    • Gaming
    • Internet
    • Mobile
    • Sci-Fi

    © CC Startup, Powered by Creative Collaboration. © 2020 Creative Collaboration, LLC. All Rights Reserved.

    Get more stuff like this
    in your inbox

    Subscribe to our mailing list and get interesting stuff and updates to your email inbox.

    Thank you for subscribing.

    Something went wrong.

    We respect your privacy and take protecting it seriously