At first, the robot didn’t seem like anything too unusual. It was small, crab-shaped, and designed to move through the seafloor in a way that would let researchers quietly observe what wild crabs were doing without disturbing them too much. The idea was simple enough: if the robot could blend in just enough, it might help scientists get a closer look at how crabs behave when they think no one is watching.
And at first, that seemed to be exactly what was happening. The other crabs clearly noticed it almost immediately. Some approached cautiously. Others seemed to circle around it, pausing just long enough to inspect it before moving again. It didn’t seem like they were panicking or trying to attack it. If anything, they appeared… curious. That alone was already interesting. Because instead of ignoring the robot completely, the crabs seemed to accept it as something worth checking out.
But what happened after that was where the footage became much harder to explain. Because the moment things in the water started to change, the behavior of the entire group changed with it. And suddenly, all of the crabs started doing something no one expected.