Toyota’s giant basketball robot might not be able to slam dunk — but it just earned a world record for consecutive free throws.

The humanlike machine set a Guinness World Record by consecutively nailing 2,020 free throws — a number which was a nod to the Tokyo Olympics slated for 2020, the Japanese company announced on Monday.

The achievement earned the robot, known as Cue3, the title of “Most consecutive basketball free throws by a humanoid robot (assisted).”

“For this record attempt, we remained members of Toyota but also collaborated with a professional sports team, and embarked on a challenge that no one else had undertaken,” project leader Tomohiro Nomi said in a statement.

The six-foot, 10-inch robot was engineered to compute a three-dimensional image of the basket in throwing the 3-pointers.

“What Toyota is doing here is really bringing the top capabilities in perception with the top capabilities in control to have robots perform something that is really challenging,” Stanford University Professor Oussama Khatib said.

The robot has apparently received some practiced since an earlier demonstration. Back in April, Cue3 made five of eight 3-point shots, which its engineers said was a ratio worse than usual.

When asked whether robots, such as Cue3, will soon be able to dribble, Nomi said it was possible “in 20 years, with technological advances.”

With Post wires