A country relies on a fleet of autonomous vehicles for the transportation of goods. However, it doesn’t always work smoothly. Videos featuring autonomous vehicles causing chaos are going viral.
Driverless vehicles inside the cars. For many people, this still sounds like something from the future. In China, they are already taking a step further and are relying on self-driving delivery vehicles without people who could intervene during the ride.
And this causes plenty of chaos and destruction, as seen in a video that the magazine Dexerto shared on X.com.
What can be seen in the video? In the shared video, you can see small AI-controlled vehicles making their way through the streets, showing no regard for their surroundings whatsoever: They drive over high curbs, through mud, through thick oil spills, and ignore even construction sites and freshly poured concrete roads.
In China, driverless delivery vans have become an absolute meme. They plow their way through crumbling roads, fresh concrete, motorcycles, just about everything.
Nothing can stop them.
The vehicles seen in the clips are part of the rapidly growing autonomous delivery network in China. Large logistics companies have introduced self-driving vans in urban and rural areas to automate last-mile delivery, thereby saving time and resources.
According to the magazine Dexerto, these vans are usually deployed on fixed routes between delivery centers and drop-off points, but are monitored by humans from a distance. However, as these videos show, it doesn’t always seem to function without issues.
And these delivery systems with autonomous robotic vehicles continue to grow. Neolix, a Chinese company specializing in autonomous vehicles, recently introduced the X1 model at CES 2026, designed for so-called “last mile” deliveries: The vehicle is built to navigate even on sidewalks, use elevators, and drive right into offices.
Currently, these last meters are still handled by humans, who carry food or other orders up the skyscrapers to earn some extra cash. But that could change with such robots.
The YouTuber JP Performance GmbH took a look at a special electric car from the German company Audi in a new video, which cannot even be bought in Germany. The Audi E5 Sportback is currently only available in China and is intended to be sold there for the time being: Audi sells a luxury car in China with 700 hp for 30,000 euros, twice the price in Germany