The viral Optimus robot failure at Tesla's December 2025 'Autonomy Visualized' event in Miami—knocking over water bottles, gesturing in apparent frustration, and toppling backward—has reignited doubts about its autonomy claims. No response from Tesla or Elon Musk, as broader challenges in production and competition come into focus.
Optimus's mishap during a water-handout demo echoed past teleoperation suspicions, akin to the 2024 'We, Robot' event and a 2023 shirt-folding video, per reports from the Los Angeles Times and others. Musk countered in an October 2025 investor call, touting feats like Optimus 'doing kung fu' at the Tron premiere with Jared Leto (Fortune), insisting on X they were AI-driven, not remote-controlled.
Recent demos showed mobility gains, such as record lab speeds, but a July 2025 Information report revealed Tesla produced only hundreds of units against a 5,000-goal. November updates announced Gen 3 production for 2026 at ~$20,000 retail.
Musk's hype persists: February 2025's $10T revenue prediction for Optimus and June 2024's $25T Tesla market cap forecast draw criticism amid delays. Rivals like Nvidia, OpenAI, Alphabet, Meta, and China's Unitree (G1 at $16,000) intensify pressure. Morgan Stanley eyes a $5T humanoid market by 2050 with 1B units, but Wall Street Journal insiders cite a 'technological gap' between demos and products. China's 150 embodied AI firms drew $5B+ in 2025 funding, accelerating the global race.