There are some news stories that make you stop, read the headline again, and then wonder whether you have accidentally fallen asleep in front of an episode of Black Mirror.
This is one of them.
According to Oddity Central, humanoid robots have reportedly been spotted on the streets of several Chinese cities, apparently begging for money with signs asking passers-by to help pay their electricity bills.
Yes, you read that correctly.
Not a human asking for spare change. Not even one of those slightly unsettling robot dogs trotting around with a camera on its back. A humanoid robot, kneeling or crouching in the street, complete with a QR code for digital donations and messages such as “Please pay my electricity bill”.
It is funny, bleak, clever and faintly horrifying all at the same time.

The future has arrived, and it wants a top up
The reported scenes are almost too perfect as a piece of modern satire. A robot, presumably worth thousands of pounds, sitting on the pavement asking humans to help it recharge.
If Charles Dickens were alive today, he would probably be writing about a small Victorian automaton clutching a tin cup outside a data centre.
The reports suggest that these “robot beggars” have appeared in cities including Beijing, Chengdu and Fuzhou. Some appear to be posed with bowed heads, others with signs, bowls, QR codes and digital payment details.
Of course, the big question is whether this is real begging, performance art, marketing, or simply somebody with a very expensive sense of humour.
My money is on stunt or social commentary.
And in many ways, that makes it even more interesting.
The QR code is the clever bit
The most modern detail in the whole thing is not the robot. It is the QR code.
That tiny square turns the whole scene from a daft novelty into something strangely plausible. A robot begging for power while accepting digital payments feels like a perfect little snapshot of where technology is going.
It is absurd, but only just.
We already live in a world where buskers, cafés, market stalls and even charity collectors use contactless payments. In China, mobile payments are deeply embedded in daily life, so a begging robot with a QR code is not as far fetched as it might first appear.
The technology is not really the shocking part.
The shocking part is how quickly we accept it.
A decade ago, this would have looked like a comedy sketch. Today, people are debating whether the robot is genuine, whether it is an art installation, whether it is a marketing campaign, and whether even begging has now been automated.
That last point is obviously ridiculous.
But also, somehow, not ridiculous enough to dismiss completely.
Are robots really coming for every job?
The lazy version of the AI debate is that robots are coming for factory workers, call centre staff, writers, designers, drivers and anyone who has ever touched a spreadsheet.
But a begging robot flips the whole conversation on its head.
Nobody seriously expected “street beggar” to appear on the great AI replacement list. Yet here we are, staring at photos and videos of humanoid machines apparently asking humans for money.
It is probably not a new economic model. I doubt anyone has run the numbers and decided that placing a Unitree humanoid on a pavement is the fastest route to financial independence.
These machines are still expensive, and they are not exactly discreet. You would need a lot of generous pedestrians to cover the cost of the robot, let alone its maintenance, transport and charging.
But as a symbol, it is brilliant.
It says: if a robot can be made to mimic labour, service, companionship, entertainment and now even desperation, where exactly do we draw the line?
The unsettling human reaction
What fascinates me most is not the robot itself, but how humans react to it.
Do people laugh?
Do they feel sorry for it?
Do they scan the QR code?
Do they take photos and walk away?
We are very good at projecting feelings onto machines. Give a robot a face, a posture and a slightly pathetic sign, and suddenly we start treating it as something more than plastic, metal, servos and software.
This is why robot dogs feel different from wheeled drones. It is why humanoid robots attract so much attention. They borrow just enough from us to make our brains do the rest.
A robot kneeling on a pavement does not need to be sentient to make people uncomfortable. It only needs to look like it is asking.
That is where the story becomes less about robotics and more about us.
Art, marketing or warning?
There is every chance these robot beggars are not what they appear to be. The Oddity Central story itself notes that people online have questioned the authenticity of the trend, with some suggesting that the robots may be art installations designed to make people think about the changing relationship between humans and machines.
If that is the case, then it worked.
A humanoid robot asking for electricity money is a wonderfully simple idea. It compresses dozens of modern anxieties into one image:
AI replacing people.
Machines becoming more lifelike.
Humans becoming more detached.
The gig economy becoming stranger.
Digital payments replacing cash.
Technology needing constant feeding.
And perhaps most importantly, our endless ability to turn almost anything into content.
Because whatever the original intention, the robots have done what all successful modern spectacles do: they went viral.
The Gadget Man view
I do not think this means we are about to see robot beggars on every high street.
At least, not yet.
But I do think it shows how quickly humanoid robots are moving from laboratory curiosities into public imagination. Whether they are used for research, marketing, entertainment, public service or bizarre street theatre, they are becoming more visible.
And visibility matters.
Once people see robots in public spaces, they stop being abstract. They become part of the mental furniture of everyday life. The first time you see one, you take a photo. The tenth time, you step around it on your way to buy a sandwich.
That is how the future usually arrives. Not with one enormous leap, but with a series of odd little moments that make us say, “Well, that’s new.”
A robot begging for electricity money may not be the future of poverty, employment or AI.
But it might be one of the strangest warning signs yet that the AI revolution is not going to stay neatly tucked away inside laptops, smartphones and cloud servers.
Sooner or later, it will be sitting on the pavement, holding up a sign, and asking us to scan a QR code.
And knowing us, somebody probably will