Fez — Moroccan students have won several prizes at the “Enjoy AI Global Final 2025” in Wuzhen, eastern China, marking a strong first appearance for the country at a major robotics and artificial intelligence event.

“Enjoy AI Global Final 2025” brought together more than one million participants from 34 countries, a scale that earned recognition from Guinness World Records. The competition gathered school teams, robotics clubs, and young innovators around programming, design, and AI-driven problem solving.

For Morocco, it was a historic first. Until now, the country had never been represented in a robotics competition held in China. The 2025 edition changed that, and the results followed.

Prizes for Kaizen, Agora Robotics, and Morocco Dreamers

The Kaizen Misty-Robotech team from Kaizen school in Ain Sebaa won the Smart Robot Design prize, which rewards originality and precision in robot conception. Their project stood out for the way it combined technical execution and clear design choices.

In the “Battle of Tribes – Middle School” category, Agora Robotics took second place. Right behind them, Morocco Dreamers finished third. Together, the teams placed Moroccan students on the podium in one of the competition’s most active age brackets.

Across the different events, Moroccan participants impressed the jury with skills in programming, engineering, design, and innovation. Their performance signaled that they can compete on equal footing with peers from much more established robotics ecosystems.

From national selection to world stage

The presence of Moroccan teams in Wuzhen follows the first national edition of “Enjoy AI” held in Morocco. That event was organized by the association Generation AI in partnership with Boti School, and served as a selection ground for the global finals.

By progressing from national contests to a world stage and coming back with prizes, these students have done more than collect trophies. They have shown that robotics and AI education in Morocco is gaining ground and that local initiatives can feed directly into international competitions.

For the young teams, the trip to China will likely be remembered as both a learning experience and a starting point. For the wider ecosystem, it offers a concrete example of how early investment in science and technology training can translate into visibility and recognition abroad.