While they don't get the attention that the US does, the Chinese have an absolutely spectacular year in space planned. The lack of attention is a mix of their own shyness about publicity (there's no Chinese Elon Musk cheerleading things on social media and we often find out exact launch dates and plans only after the launches have happened) and the current chill in relations between China and the US, which prevents them from cooperating in space.
Tianwen-1, the country's first mission to Mars, is in orbit and due to drop its lander, including a rover, in May. They will be only the second country with a rover on the Red Planet after the US.
Tianhe, the first module of their planned space station, launched yesterday and is now in orbit. Two more modules are supposed to launch in the fairly near future. An unmanned supply mission will rendezvous with Tianhe next month and the first crew is due to fly up in June in a Shenzhou spacecraft (China's workhorse passenger spacecraft, adapted from the Russian Soyuz).
Also in the past month, we have seen the first ground tests of the Shenzhou's successor, a 7 passenger vehicle similar to current US passenger spacecraft like SpaceX Crew Dragon and Boeing Starliner.
And they ended last year with the fifth Chang'e unmanned probe to the moon, this one becoming the first mission to return lunar samples to Earth since the seventies.
Scott Manley did a good piece on Tianhe and China's plans for Earth orbit.
Space trivia: Tianhe means "Harmony of the Heavens". I love the names the Chinese give their missions. Chang'e, for instance, is the ancient Chinese moon goddess and the rovers taken to the moon by some of the Chang'e missions are called Yutu after the rabbit that is the goddess' companion.