Surena IV is additionally more agile. Custom power sensors on the lower part of its feet help the robot venture over lopsided surfaces by changing the point and position of each foot. Strolling speed expanded to 0.7 kilometres each hour from 0.3 km/h in the past age. While Surena IV is certainly not an exceptionally unique machine-like Atlas, the broadly coordinated humanoid from Boston Dynamics, it depends on an entire body movement regulator that persistently changes its stance to stay away from falls. In its general plan, Surena is presumably more practically identical to humanoids like UBTECH’s Walker, Honda’s Asimo, Pal Robotics’ Talos, KAIST’s Hubo, and AIST’s HRP-2, albeit these robots have as of now openly showed a more extensive scope of abilities. The robot shows a few human-like abilities, for example, getting a handle on a water bottle, composing its name on a whiteboard, copying a human’s posture.