“…[ 1 ] Mastering the bionic strategies could direct the core design in diverse industrial applications, such as anti‐icing, [ 2 ] self‐cleaning, [ 3 ] and microfluidics, [ 4 ] and challenge the upcoming intelligent techniques including energy generation, [ 5 ] green printing, [ 6 ] and liquid robots. [ 7 ] Recent manipulation strategies are mainly divided into active method, by applying external electric fields, [ 8 ] magnetic fields, [ 9 ] temperature fields, [ 10 ] light, [ 11 ] and acoustic waves, [ 12 ] and passive method, by designing macrostructures like ridges, [ 13 ] tips, [ 14 ] ratchets, [ 15 ] grooves, [ 16 ] lattice cells, [ 17 ] or integrating wettable and less wettable regions on a solid surface. [ 18 ] Owing to its advantages of spontaneity, facility, diversity, as well as the energy‐saving property, the passive liquid manipulation method has aroused large amounts of research interest.…”