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This study presents a proof-of-concept experimental investigation of a multi-buoy cooperative point-absorber wave energy converter (WEC). The proposed concept consists of an array of surface-penetrating buoys connected through a shared closed-loop hydraulic power take-off (PTO) system. Energy is extracted through the collective motion of the buoy array, where pressurised flow generated by individual buoys drives a turbine within the hydraulic circuit. A 1:40 scale model was tested in the wave tank facilities at the University of Oslo. Experiments with regular and irregular long-crested waves at two different incident angles were conducted to assess power absorption, wave period response, and interaction effects. Two array configurations were investigated: an eight-buoy array with an axis-to-axis spacing of 1.5 buoy diameters, and a four-buoy array with a 3.0 diameter spacing. Although piston head leakage affected the power measurements, our results demonstrate that the WEC absorbs incoming wave energy and produces measurable power. The eight-buoy configuration achieved the highest power output per buoy compared to the four-buoy configuration, but exhibited increased sensitivity to wave period and wave heading, due to buoy-buoy interactions, such as collisions. This study highlights buoy count and internal buoy spacing as key design parameters for cooperative point-absorber wave energy systems. The results indicate that higher buoy counts enhance hydraulic cooperation, and increased buoy spacing improves robustness to wave heading and reduces destructive interaction effects. We also suggest that a lower system inertia can improve responsiveness to shorter waves. These insights provide a foundation for further optimisation and future full-scale development.