World's First Real-time
Full-body Mirroring
Humanoid Combat

New York City · June 6

Human pilots map their movement, instincts, and combat skill into full-body humanoid robot avatars in real time. Watch your moves turn to robot actions. This is Avatar Technology.

What is ARC League?

ARC merges the world's most lucrative sports business models into a single, unprecedented market opportunity. You build a robot like a Formula 1 team, pilot it to fight like a UFC champion, and present it to the world as a premier esports spectacle.

The Engineering Spirit

Construct, tune, and push your hardware to the absolute limit in a high-stakes technological arms race, the same relentless development rhythm that defines Formula 1, applied to the arena.

Rules

The Athletic Combat

Zero-latency teleoperation translates real human athletic mastery and fighting techniques into devastating, metal-on-metal gladiatorial combat, with the immediacy and physical stakes of a UFC main event.

Pilot Registration

The Game Excitement

A digital-native, global spectacle built for livestreaming, extreme entertainment, and the next generation of fans, production values and fandom energy on par with a premier esports championship.

Game Design

ARC League Robot Combat Debut

Sat, June 6.
New York City.

ARC League Robot Combat Debut is a single-night, invitation-led competition built for live operations, clear rules, and broadcast quality. Venue, participant, and distribution details are released on a published schedule for press, partners, and waitlist members.

Doors at 7pm ET (TBC), first match at 8pm ET.

Venue details are released to the waitlist on May 15.

June 3 at 12:00 PM EDT

NYC Tech Week

Keynote Presentation

Venue TBC · New York City

KeynoteTech Week

June 5 at 6:00 PM EDT

NYC Tech Week

ARC League Roadshow

Venue TBC · New York City

RoadshowDemo

June 6 at 8:00 PM EDT

NYC Tech Week

ARC League Robot Combat Debut

Venue TBC · New York City

CombatLive Event

Three nights. Live humanoid combat, industry conversations, and the builders behind it. Join us during NYC Tech Week.

Participate

Pick the path that fits you.

ARC League is built to be joined at different depths — as a competitor, a partner, a builder, or an audience. Each pathway has its own process.

Avatar Technology — combat skills

Human pilot → humanoid avatar, in real time.

Punch

Mirrored Punch

Pilot strike maps to the humanoid in real time — arm chain, hip drive, follow-through.

Kick

Mirrored Kick

Full-leg kinematics tracked from pilot to robot avatar at competitive speed.

Kicks

Rapid Kicks

Chained leg strikes flow pilot to avatar — balance held through every rep.

Combo

Punch + Kick Combo

Sequenced strikes show how stance, balance, and timing carry across the mirror.

Dodge

Dodge & Counter

Slip, weight shift, and counter-strike — defense mirrored without latency cues.

Agility

Swift Movements

Quick footwork and direction changes mirrored at match tempo without drift.

Torso

Waist Twist

Spine and pelvis rotation carry over so power-generation feels native to the avatar.

Impact

Board Break

Force, contact, and follow-through tested against a real target — not a simulation.

Motion

Full-Body Motion

Expressive range-of-motion mapping — every joint tracked, not just strikes.

Recovery

Stand Up

Ground-to-standing recovery mapped in real time — essential for falls and resets.

Calibration

Calibration Wave

Light-touch handshake from pilot to robot avatar before each session.

Marketplace

What the crowd sees is sport. What we build is infrastructure.

The crowd gets a sport. Builders get a single, stage-ready line: a humanoid platform built to stay upright under load, a pilot bridge that mirrors intent in real time, and the control fabric that binds them — held to the same bar we use in ARC League. When you want that stack in your shop, the marketplace matches kits and hardware to the same rules and standards as ARC League.

  • Arena nights run the same robot avatars and stacks the crowd sees — lights, latency, and pilots in the loop, not a lab walkthrough.
  • Pilot intent crosses a live bridge into the machine; control and telemetry stay coherent enough to train on and carry into your own builds.
  • Humanoid hardware, pilot equipment, and synchronization layer read as one line — held to the same operating picture we use in ARC League.
Humanoid robot in arena kit

Frequently asked

Questions? We got you covered.

No, but they do utilize autonomous dynamic balancing. Every action, strike, and tactical decision in the arena is piloted in real-time by a human pilot.