As Pyeongchang hosts the Winter Olympics, down the road robots are also hitting the slopes – with a $10,000 prize on offer

It is not only human athletes who have been aiming to go “Faster, Higher, Stronger” in South Korea. Alongside the Pyeongchang Winter Olympics, the nation has hosted a very different skiing competition – for robots.

The Welli Hilli ski resort in Hoenseong, an hour’s drive west of Pyeongchang, was the location for the Ski Robot Challenge. There was a US $10,000 prize on offer to the eight teams competing from universities, institutes and private companies.

While their human counterparts were suffering the frustration of seeing events cancelled in Pyeongchang because of adverse weather, their mechanical counterparts had no such problem. “I heard the Alpine skiing has been postponed again due to wind conditions. That’s a pity,” said Lee Sok-min, a member of the winning TAEKWAN-V team. “Robots are doing fine here.”

The rules of the contest stipulated that the robots had to be more than 50cm in height, be able to stand on their own two legs, have independent power systems, use skis and poles, and have joints that allowed them to bend their knees and elbows. Sensors enabled the robots to detect the position of flags on the course, which they had to steer themselves through. Points were awarded for the number of flagpoles avoided, and the fastest time to the finish line. Not that all of the robots reached it.