Watch Sony’s elite ping-pong robot beat top-ranked players

The Verge / 4/23/2026

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Key Points

  • Sony’s AI division has developed the “Ace” ping-pong robot, positioned as the first table-tennis robot that can defeat top-ranked human players while following official ITTF rules.
  • The article contrasts Ace with earlier ping-pong robots (like Omron’s FORPHEUS) that demonstrated the ability to compete but were not shown as consistently beating elite humans under official regulations.
  • It highlights why physical, real-time sports are harder for robots than strategy games like chess or Go: robots must match both the speed and responsiveness of human perception, decision-making, and movement.
  • Ace’s success is presented as a meaningful step for embodied AI, showing progress beyond “besting humans in games” to performing at human competitive standards in a fast physical sport.
A human table tennis player out of focus in the foreground competing against a Sony’s Ace robot holding a red paddle.
Ace is the first robot that can beat the best human players while following the official rules of table tennis. | Image: Sony AI

Humans have been building ping-pong playing robots for decades, such as Omron's FORPHEUS that challenged amateur competitors at CES 2017. What sets Ace apart from the rest is that the robot, which was developed by Sony's AI division, is the first that can hold its own against top-ranked human players and occasionally even beat them in matches that follow the official rules of the International Table Tennis Federation (ITTF).

AI is already capable of besting humans at games like Chess and Go, but physical games pose a much greater challenge as robots have to be engineered to match the speed and responsiveness of the human mind and body. To b …

Read the full story at The Verge.