More than 1,300 Chinese companies attended the opening of the CES show in Las Vegas on Tuesday, the world’s largest consumer electronics show held annually.
They showcase the latest technology and gadgets such as the world’s largest LED TV, augmented reality or AR glasses, artificial intelligence PCs and robots, and cars with smarter features.
Despite ongoing disputes between the United States and China in the technology sector, CES 2025 attracted more than 1,300 Chinese companies this year, up from 1,115 last year. Chinese participation represents more than a quarter of the 4,500 exhibitors registered in 2025, according to media reports.
Imaginechina
A robot exhibition in Las Vegas, where CES 2025 opened, the world’s largest consumer electronics show.
CES 2025 reflects the increasing diversification of Chinese manufacturers’ “globalization” strategy, with product lines extending from traditional PCs, phones and tablets to segments such as AI glasses, scanning robots, smart companions and other emerging intelligent terminal products.
Chinese brands occupy a larger share of the global market, said Wang Jiping, vice president of IDC China.

Ti Gong
Hisense has launched a 116-inch mini LED TV, the world’s largest RGB mini LED TV.
Before the opening of CES, Hisense launched a 116-inch mini LED TV, the world’s largest RGB mini LED TV. Featuring its own AI chip, Hisense has an advanced RGB color management system to provide users with vibrant images. The TV, which will debut at CES, will begin global sales in March, helping Hisense consolidate its leading position in the market for screens 100 inches or larger.
Lenovo, China’s largest PC, is showcasing its latest AI PCs at the event. XReal will showcase the new XReal One glasses and applications of convergence between AI and AR.
According to IDC, AI PC sales will reach 250 million units in 2028, accounting for 91% of total sales.
Chinese companies, including makers of robots, automobiles and PCs, also emerged during the CES keynote speech by Jensen Huang, chief executive of Nvidia.
Huang launched new RTX 50 series GPUs, small-sized AI supercomputing desktop products, and various AI tools and services to deeply connect artificial intelligence and physical worlds.
Chinese robot makers including Fourier and Unitree were mentioned in Nvidia’s keynote. The chip giant is expanding its AI capabilities from the PC and data center sectors to the robotics and automotive sectors with “physical AI” tools. Huang said they would help robots learn using simulated environments that closely mimic the real world.

Zhu Shenshen / SHINE
Nvidia is expanding its service to the “physical AI” level, with releases in the robotics and automotive sectors at CES 2025.