Nvidia is actively recruiting for more than 12 positions in China focused on robotics and AI, a move that signals the company’s deepening commitment to one of the most complex and politically charged tech markets on the planet.
The roles span senior engineering positions tied to Nvidia’s Omniverse platform and humanoid robotics efforts, with openings posted across major Chinese cities including Shanghai and Beijing. It’s a bet that robotics, unlike advanced AI chips, can remain a viable growth lane in China even as Washington tightens the screws on semiconductor exports.
The strategy behind the surge
Nvidia’s headcount in China grew from roughly 3,000 to approximately 4,000 by the end of 2024. The latest batch of job postings suggests that trajectory hasn’t slowed. These aren’t entry-level gigs either. The company is targeting experienced engineers who can push forward work on simulation platforms and humanoid robotics systems.
On June 1, Nvidia took a concrete step by partnering with Unitree Robotics, a Chinese company, to build a humanoid robot platform. The system integrates Nvidia’s Blackwell chips and is designed for global researchers, with institutions like Stanford and ETH Zurich among the intended users.
Unitree, for its part, is preparing for an IPO on the Shanghai Stock Exchange. So both sides of this deal are making big, public-facing commitments at the same time.
US export controls have hammered Nvidia’s ability to sell its most powerful AI training chips to Chinese customers. But robotics-related hardware and software haven’t faced the same restrictions. Nvidia appears to be threading the needle, investing heavily in a sector where the regulatory guardrails still leave room to operate.
China’s robotics ecosystem is getting competitive fast
Spirit AI, a Chinese robotics company, led the RoboArena leaderboard in early June with its v1.6 model. For context, RoboArena functions as a kind of international ranking system for robotics capabilities. Topping it is roughly the equivalent of leading a benchmark in the AI model space.
By hiring locally in China, Nvidia ensures it has engineers who understand the domestic market’s specific needs, regulatory quirks, and competitive dynamics.
What this means for investors
The Unitree partnership went forward without any noted regulatory obstacles. The hiring push is proceeding without public friction from Washington. And the roles being posted suggest Nvidia sees a multi-year commitment, not a short-term experiment.
That said, the regulatory environment is a moving target. The US has progressively tightened chip export rules over the past few years, and there’s no guarantee that robotics-adjacent technology will remain exempt. If Blackwell chips become restricted for robotics applications in China, the entire strategy could face a sudden and uncomfortable recalibration.
Investors should watch two things closely: the pace of new hiring announcements, which signals internal conviction, and any changes to US export control language that might rope in robotics hardware or simulation software.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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