Robot Fighting League

The Robot Fighting League (RFL) organizes and promotes combat robot competitions and other robotic sports. The RFL was created in November 2002 out of an ongoing discussion among many of the combat robot competition organizers. The RFL mission is to promote the sport of fighting robots, provide consistency among events and support builders and event organizers.

What the RFL does

Chart showing number of RFL sanctioned fights by year.[1]

The Robot Fighting League is composed of "Event Organizers" who organize and promote combat robot competitions. Since the founding of the league in 2002 RFL members have presented over 120 events for combat robots in the United States, Canada, Australia, and Brazil.[1] This exceeds the number of robot combat events put on by all other sanctioning bodies in the Americas since the beginning of the sport.[2]

The RFL has developed a standard set of rules and regulations for robot combat events. These rules are used by all RFL member events, providing combat robot builders with a consistent environment in which to build and compete.

The RFL organized a national championship event every year from 2003 through 2005. Competitors who qualified by placing in the top tier at RFL events during the preceding year competed for the championships in weight classes ranging from 150 grams to 340 pounds.

Current membership

Any group that organizes robot combat events using the RFL rules is eligible to apply for membership in the league. Current event members include:

Event Location
Battle Beach Ormond Beach, FL
California Insect Bots Gilroy, CA
Carolina Combat Robots Greensboro, NC
Central Illinois Robotics Club Peoria, IL
ComBots (RoboGames) San Francisco, CA
Ohio Robot Club Cleveland, OH
Queensland Robotics Sports Club Brisbane, Australia
RoboCore São Paulo, Brasil
Saskatoon Combat Robotics Club Saskatoon, Saskatchewan
Western Allied Robotics Seattle, WA

Rules

The RFL rule set is revised annually in the last calendar quarter of the year. Member organizations submit changes for discussion by the RFL general membership, and a "draft for review" emerges from that discussion. The draft is published for public comment on the RFL Forum during a 30-day review period. Builder comments and suggestions on the draft are welcomed. After the review period, the comments and suggestions are reviewed and incorporated. The final draft is then submitted to a vote by the RFL general membership, with a simple majority required for acceptance. If accepted, the revised rules become effective for the next calendar year.

Winners of the RFL National Championships

2003 2004 2005 2006
150 g Quark2 VD
1 lb VDD Pneu Jimmy MC Pee Pants UnderWhere?!
3 lb Wallop Buster Blade Itsa?
12 lb Li'l Shocker Target Practice Li'l Shocker CheepShot 3.0
30 lb Peanut Totally Offensive Totally Offensive Xhilirating impaX
60 lb Wedge of Doom West Side Glory Joe 2.0 Son of Whacky Compass
120 lb Max Wedge Max Wedge Devil's Plunger Ice Cube
220 lb Megabyte SJ Sewer Snake Shrederator
340 lb Mer Madd Shovelhead Shovelhead Psychotic Reaction

Media coverage

In May/June 2011, Science Channel broadcast selected heavyweight combat division matches from RoboGames in a one-hour special entitled Killer Robots: RoboGames 2011. The program was hosted by Grant Imahara of the Mythbusters.[3]

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/8/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.