A Chinese-made humanoid robot greeting guests at the Telangana Rising Global Summit 2025 has instantly become one of the most talked‑about moments from Bharat Future City. It perfectly captures what this summit is really about: showcasing how future tech, automation, and AI are no longer ideas on paper, but experiences you can see, touch, and interact with in Hyderabad.
The robot, the hype, and the message
The robot welcoming delegates at the entrance has turned into a selfie spot and a symbol of the summit’s global tech flavour. It sends a clear message that Telangana wants to be seen as comfortable with high-end robotics, AI, and human–machine interaction in public spaces.
But here’s the real opportunity: today it is a Chinese robot standing there, tomorrow it can (and should) be a robot built in Hyderabad, powered by homegrown startups and students. The buzz around this machine proves that audiences are ready—and that the stage is set for Indian innovation to step into the spotlight at future editions of the summit.
Tech exhibitions at Bharat Future City
Beyond the viral robot moment, the tech and innovation zone at the Telangana Rising Global Summit brings together AI, robotics, green mobility, semiconductors, health tech, and smart-city solutions under one roof. Delegates can walk through live demos, startup booths, and future-city visualisations that align with the state’s Telangana Rising 2047 vision for a 3‑trillion‑dollar, tech-driven economy.
The exhibitions are not just for big global brands; they are a discovery platform for local innovators, GCCs, and deep‑tech startups building in Hyderabad’s ecosystem. From AI-powered platforms to urban-infra tech and advanced data centres, the summit is positioning South Hyderabad and Bharat Future City as India’s next big tech cluster.
Why Hyderabad’s own robot should be next
If one imported robot can create this much excitement, imagine the impact of an Indian-built humanoid, designed, coded, and manufactured by teams from T-Hub, T-Works, local engineering colleges, and Hyderabad startups. It would turn that entrance moment from a “cool gimmick” into a powerful statement: Telangana is not just consuming futuristic tech; it is creating it.
For Hyderabad’s builders, this summit is a call-to-action in three areas:
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Build world-class robotics and AI products that can stand at the same global stage.
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Use platforms like Telangana Rising, T-Hub, and AI City plans to take prototypes to scale.
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Collaborate across government, startups, academia, and industry so that the next showcase robot is proudly “Made in Telangana”.
A new kind of tech tourism
With 1,000–3,000+ delegates, 27+ sectoral sessions, and major tech-led investments being discussed, the summit is already turning Bharat Future City into a live showroom of tomorrow’s Hyderabad. If the state continues to pair such events with engaging, interactive exhibitions—robots, drones, smart mobility demos—tech itself can become a reason for people to visit, explore, and invest in the city.
For readers of www.hyderabadstories.com, this moment with a Chinese robot is more than a viral clip; it is a teaser of what Hyderabad’s tech future could look like. The real hype will begin when the next robot at the summit introduces itself not just as a guest from abroad, but as a creation born in Telangana’s own labs, workshops, and co-working spaces.










