Tesla Optimus robot lies collapsed on floor at Miami Tesla store event, water bottles spilled nearby, shocked crowd watches with phones out.
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Tesla's Optimus robot collapses at Miami event

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A Tesla Optimus humanoid robot fell flat on its back during a demonstration at a Miami store, sparking speculation about human teleoperation. The incident occurred at the 'Autonomy Visualized' event, where the robot was handing out water bottles. Social media users pointed to the robot's hand movements as evidence of remote control via a VR headset.

At Tesla's 'Autonomy Visualized' event on December 8, 2025, at a store in Miami, the Optimus robot stood behind a table of water bottles, interacting with attendees. The robot attempted to hand out bottles but knocked several over, then raised its hands to its head in a gesture resembling the removal of a VR headset. It staggered backward and collapsed flat on its back with a thud, scattering more bottles.

This viral video, shared widely on platforms like X and YouTube, led to immediate speculation that Optimus was not operating autonomously but was being teleoperated by a human. Observers noted the hand movements matched those of an operator abruptly disconnecting, causing the robot to lose control. One X user commented: 'If there was any question that Optimus uses teleop for their robots, here one clearly has a guy take the headset off and it falls over. Absolutely hilarious though.' Another added: 'Elon is too afraid to let Optimus hand out water bottles, so he uses a teleoperator to deceive people.'

The event contradicted Elon Musk's recent assertions. In October 2025, Musk stated Optimus is 'controlled by AI and is not tele-operated by a human.' He has promoted the robot as capable of tasks like folding shirts, watering plants, and even kung fu, predicting it could generate $10 trillion for Tesla and drive the company's market value to $25 trillion. Musk envisions Optimus enabling 'sustainable abundance,' making work optional and eliminating poverty through widespread deployment.

This is not the first controversy. A January 2024 video of Optimus folding clothes showed a shadow of a robotic arm, which Musk later admitted was not fully autonomous. At the October 2025 'We, Robot' event, robots required human remote assistance, with one even stating: 'I have human assistance today and am not fully autonomous yet.'

Despite progress—Optimus can now walk, balance, recognize objects, and perform basic manipulations—Tesla has not responded to inquiries about the Miami incident. The episode highlights ongoing debates in robotics between true AI autonomy and assisted operations, common in the industry for complex demos.

Qué dice la gente

X discussions focus on speculation that Tesla's Optimus robot was remotely controlled via VR headset, evidenced by hand gestures mimicking removal before collapse. Skeptics question Tesla's autonomy claims and scalability, calling it marketing hype. Supporters attribute the incident to operator error, viewing teleoperation as standard for public demos. Robotics experts analyze it as a teleop failure highlighting balance and safety issues. Viral videos sparked memes, debates, and concerns over development stage.

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Tesla Optimus robot dramatically falling backward during Miami demo, shocked crowd filming the mishap.
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Tesla's Optimus robot collapses in Miami demo mishap

Reportado por IA Imagen generada por IA

A Tesla Optimus humanoid robot fell backward during a public demonstration in Miami, prompting speculation about remote human control. The incident occurred at the company's 'Future of Autonomy Visualized' event, where the robot appeared to mimic removing a VR headset before toppling over. Video of the mishap has gone viral, raising questions about the robot's advertised autonomy.

Un vídeo del evento Autonomy Visualized de Tesla en Miami muestra al robot Optimus derribando botellas de agua y cayendo hacia atrás con un gesto similar a la retirada de un casco de VR. El clip, compartido en Reddit, ha avivado sospechas de que el robot era controlado remotamente por un operador humano. Este incidente revive dudas sobre la autonomía del robot humanoide de Tesla en medio de las ambiciosas afirmaciones de Elon Musk.

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El fallo viral del robot Optimus en el evento 'Autonomy Visualized' de Tesla en diciembre de 2025 en Miami —volcando botellas de agua, gesticulando en aparente frustración y cayendo hacia atrás— ha reavivado dudas sobre sus afirmaciones de autonomía. No hay respuesta de Tesla ni de Elon Musk, mientras los mayores desafíos en producción y competencia cobran protagonismo.

Tesla presentó su robot Optimus versión 2.5 en la conferencia NeurIPS 2025 el 2 de diciembre, mostrando nuevas capacidades de carrera. La demostración destacó la capacidad del robot para correr a velocidades del 50% y 25%, marcando un avance significativo en la robótica humanoide. Elon Musk comentó sobre el progreso, enfatizando el rol futuro de estos robots en tareas diarias.

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Tesla released a video on December 2, 2025, showing its Optimus humanoid robot running at speeds up to 13.7 km/h in a Fremont laboratory, fueling investor optimism and a 1.7% stock rise to $454.48 the following Thursday. The clip, republished by Elon Musk, drew millions of views and prompted a response from rival Figure AI with its own robot demonstration. Amid the robotics hype, Tesla launched a budget Model 3 in Europe to counter competition.

En su conferencia de resultados del cuarto trimestre de 2025, Tesla anunció planes para reconvertir las líneas de ensamblaje de Model S y X en Fremont para producir 1 millón de unidades Optimus 3 al año y aumentar la producción a gran volumen de Optimus V4 en Giga Texas. El CEO Elon Musk destacó las capacidades de aprendizaje del robot mediante observación y vídeo, la próxima presentación de la Gen 3 y los desafíos como la escalabilidad frente a la competencia china, respaldados por 20.000 millones de dólares en capex para 2026.

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Tras el anuncio de Elon Musk sobre ventas de Optimus para 2027, el robot humanoide de Tesla ha comenzado un aprendizaje en su fábrica de Austin, capacitándose en tareas complejas con entrenadores equipados con cámaras en medio de avances en robótica en CES 2026. Se apunta a su despliegue en fábricas para finales de 2026.

 

 

 

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