- Disney’s bringing a self-walking Olaf to two parks in early 2026
- It looks even cooler than the Star Wars BDX Droids
- Olaf was built by Disney Imagineering
Disney Imagineering has already created a trove of animatronics and robots, maybe none more lovable than the Star Wars BDX Droids, but this next one is so real that itâs ice cool. Olaf, the walking, talking, and wisecracking snowman we all know from Frozen, is now a reality in the form of an incredibly animated, lifelike, and maybe even life-size robot.
And this isnât a proof of concept â Olaf is arriving in the Frozen worlds at Hong Kong Disneyland and Disneyland Paris in early 2026. He wonât be on a track either, and as detailed in the latest episode of Disneyâs We Call It Imagineering that just dropped on YouTube, this is a next-generation robotic character that can deliver full interactions with the audience.
While this robot from Disney Imagineering looks a bit different from earlier generations from the same group, and even the BDX Droids, Olaf is really the next step here. He was built, prototyped, and designed by the same group â Disney Research â in Zurich, Switzerland.
At the core, beyond the actuators and other physical components, is reinforcement learning â a form of AI that lets the robot practice thousands of movements inside a computer simulation. Instead of engineers manually programming every step, Olaf âlearnsâ how to walk, balance, and gesture through trial and error until his motions look natural.
Itâs also important to note that while AI is used for training the robotâs movements, this is not an AI character. Olaf will still be controlled or operated by a Disney Cast Member. Itâs a similar approach to what Disney uses with the BDX Droids: autonomy may assist with movement, training, or certain pre-recorded actions, but at the end of the day, Olaf is still a character â just like when you meet Mickey.
Much like the work of animating Olaf by Walt Disney Animation Studios, Imagineering develops Olafâs walk and other movements on a much faster timeline so the robot can perform them. Itâs how Olaf looks as if heâs waddled off the screen from Arendelle into the World of Frozen at a Disney park â effortlessly gliding along the pavement and subtly bopping his head as he takes in the world around him.
With Olaf, as with Disneyâs other animatronics, itâs about taking these characters from the screen and stories and presenting them in real life in ways that allow parkgoers and guests to interact with them. Three tenets were in mind with Olaf â âalive, curious, and unmistakably himself.â
Considering Jensen Huangâs â CEO and founder of Nvidia â remarks on the robot, I think Disney hit the nail on the head: âHow is it possible that Disney did all this technology and shrunk it into a little tiny snowman, just to make me happy? The magic is so incredible.â
It also signifies what Disney Imagineers have consistently told TechRadar and me in conversation: itâs not just technology for technologyâs sake; itâs for immersion and storytelling.
Unlike the roaming BDX Droids, the Walt Disney A-1000 Animatronic, or even an audio-animatronic housed in a ride, youâll be able to converse with Olaf, or might even find him wandering up to you at Hong Kong Disneyland and Disneyland Paris. Itâs unclear as of yet if these interactions will be canned, pre-recorded, or even autonomous, but itâs ambitious nonetheless.
We saw a similar interaction over the summer at Disneyland in Anaheim, California, when H.E.R.B.I.E. from Fantastic Four arrived in the parks for meet and greets, and the robot would respond. Itâs also important to note that H.E.R.B.I.E. was created for the parks at the request of Matt Shakman, the filmâs director, and that Imagineering pulled it off in mere months.
Still, Iâm more bullish than ever on how Disneyâs craft with robotics and technology will continue to show itself in increasingly immersive experiences as we move forward. And from a material perspective, Olafâs eyes and mouth are fully articulate, and his carrot nose, as well as his two twig arms, can be removed and popped back on pretty effortlessly. Though I canât imagine Disney will allow guests to just reach out and remove one.
What is clear, though, is that unlike the 1X Neo Beta or other humanoid robots that have drawn mixed responses from the general population, Disneyâs forms of robotics and animatronics are entertaining, friendly, and ones we actually want to see more of and have meaningful interactions with.
Itâs clear that Imagineering is working on more, and I, for one, canât wait to see when these arrive â and also need to figure out how I can meet Olaf at Hong Kong Disneyland and Disneyland Paris.
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