BattleBots

BattleBots
BattleBots
Billnye spinner.jpg
Publicity still of Bill Nye, the show's technical expert, in the BattleBots arena
Genre Reality Television
Created by Greg Munson and Trey Roski
Narrated by Tim Green, Sean Salisbury and Bil Dwyer
Country of origin United States
No. of seasons 5
No. of episodes 94
Production
Executive producer(s) Mack Anderson, Bradley Anderson, Debbie Liebling
Running time 30 minutes - 1 hour
Broadcast
Original channel Comedy Central
Original airing August, 2000 – November, 2002
External links
Website

BattleBots is an American company that hosts robot competitions. BattleBots is also the name of the television show created from the competition footage. BattleBots Inc. is headquartered in Vallejo, California and holds most of its competitions in San Francisco.

In a BattleBots event the competitors are remote-controlled armed and armored machines, designed to fight in an arena combat elimination tournament. If both combat robots are still operational at the end of the match the winner is determined by a point system based on damage, aggression, and strategy.

The television show BattleBots aired on the American cable network Comedy Central for five seasons, covering five BattleBots tournaments. The first season aired starting in August 2000, and the fifth season aired starting in August 2002. Hosts of BattleBots were Bil Dwyer and Sean Salisbury (with Tim Green replacing Salisbury after the second season) and correspondents included former Baywatch actresses Donna D'Errico, Carmen Electra, and Traci Bingham, former Playboy Playmate Heidi Mark, and identical twins Randy and Jason Sklar. Bill Nye was the show's "technical expert".

After five 'seasons', Comedy Central terminated their contract with BattleBots Inc. in late 2002.

Contents

Early history

BattleBots is an offshoot of the original American version of Robot Wars, the brainchild of Marc Thorpe. Robot Wars had financial backing from Sm:)e communications, a New York record company. The Thorpe/Sm:)e partnership broke up in 1997, starting many years of legal wrangling between Thorpe and Profile Records (the former Sm:)e communications). Profile licensed Robot Wars to a UK production company and Robot Wars ran for seven years as a popular television program in the UK.

The robot builders left behind in San Francisco formed BattleBots, Inc. and began a series of competitions. The first was held in Long Beach, California in August 1999 and was also cybercast on ZDTV. The second, held in November 1999, in Las Vegas, Nevada was a pay per view event. These led to the five semi-annual BattleBots tournaments televised as prime time series on the American network Comedy Central starting in May 2000.[1]

Weight classes

Robots at BattleBots tournaments were separated into four weight classes. The weight limits increased slightly over time. At the final tournaments the classes were:

  • Lightweight – 60 pounds (27 kilograms)
  • Middleweight – 120 pounds (54 kilograms)
  • Heavyweight – 220 pounds (100 kilograms)
  • Superheavyweight – 340 pounds (154 kilograms)

'Walking' robots ('StompBots') propelled by means other than wheels were initially given a 50% weight bonus. The rules changed following the victory of a heavyweight StompBot (Son of Whyachi) at BattleBots 3.0. For BattleBots 4.0 and beyond only a 20% weight bonus was given to walkers and the technical rules specified that walking mechanisms not use cam operated walking mechanisms as they were functionally too similar to wheel operation. Since the rules change, walking robots have entered the competition, but none have achieved any success beyond preliminary rounds.

Robot design

See Robot Combat.

Matches

Matches are three minutes long. During a match, two robots do their best to destroy each other using whatever means available.

There are only two events that cause the match to be paused and people enter the BattleBox. One is the event that the robots are stuck together and cannot separate or that both have simultaneously become immobilized. The other scenario is that one or both 'bots have caught on fire. In that case, the people entering the BattleBox are equipped with a fire extinguisher.

If a robot is unable to move for thirty seconds, because it is too badly damaged or it is stuck on the arena hazards, it is declared knocked out. The driver may also call a "tap-out" to forfeit the match if his or her robot is about to be destroyed. This ends the match ten seconds later; the opposing driver is "asked" (but not instructed) not to attack during the ten-second count.

In about half the matches, both robots survive the three minutes; at that point, three judges distribute a total of 45 points (15 points a judge, 5 points per judge per category) over three categories. The robot with the higher score wins. The judging categories are Aggression, Strategy, and Damage. A robot who hangs back safely from its opponent will not get many Aggression points; one in there fighting the whole time, however, will. The Strategy category is about how well a robot exploits its opponent's weaknesses, protects its own, and handles the hazards. A robot driving over the kill saws will lose points here, unless it had good reason to do so, while a robot that is able to attack its opponent's weak areas will gain points. The Damage category is for how much damage the bot can deal to its opponent while remaining intact itself.

The winner moves on; the loser is eliminated from the tournament.

At the end of the tournament, a series of 'rumbles' or 'melee rounds' are typically held in each weight class, allowing robots that survived the main tournament to fight in a 'free for all' in a 5 minute match. Occasionally there are too many robots for one rumble, and multiple rumbles are held with the top surviving bots competing in a final event. During the Season 5 Heavyweight rumble (the first rumble of that competition), a sheared-off robot part went through the Lexan arena roof and fell (harmlessly) into the audience. Because of this, the rest of the rumbles were canceled due to safety concerns.[1]

The BattleBox

The BattleBox is a 48' x 48' square arena designed to protect the drivers, officials, and audience from flying shrapnel and charging bots. It has a steel floor and steel-framed walls and roof paneled with thick, bulletproof polycarbonate plastic. The teams bring their robots in through doorways, which are sealed after all humans have exited. The drivers control their machines from outside the sealed arena.

Arena hazards

Operated by "Pulverizer Pete", the arena hazards are intended to make fights more interesting and unpredictable, and to reward drivers who can avoid the hazards while pushing or carrying their opponent into them. The hazards include:

  • Pulverizers: 150 lb. mallets that can do major damage to any bot that passes under them. Originally normal sledgehammers that did minimal damage, they were replaced with 50 pound aluminum mallets that had a tendency to break (season 2), and were ultimately replaced with the 150 pound mallets (seasons 3 and on).
  • Spike Strips: The walls of the arena are covered with 6-inch long sharpened steel spikes. Pushing an opponent hard into a wall can sometimes lodge it into the spikes, immobilizing it.
  • Spinners: These rapidly-spinning discs in the floor do not damage a robot, but interfere with its driving or fling it across the room (depending on the weight). The spinners only adversely affect the Lightweight class, as the higher weight class robots are heavy enough that they can just pass over them with little resistance.
  • Kill Saws: The Kill Saws are circular saws that rise out of the floor at high speed as soon as a robot drives over the red slots that conceal them. The carbide-tipped saw blades can tear into a bot's tires or chassis. In later seasons, red 'throwing blades' were added to increase the chance of a bot being launched.
  • Pistons: First introduced in Season 3, Pistons are steel columns that raise and lower from the floor without warning. As they are not sharp or particularly fast, they do not do much damage to robots, but they can stop a charging robot or flip one over or on its side. The Pistons were removed for Seasons 4 and 5.
  • Ramrods: These are sharpened steel spikes that come out of the arena floor in groups of six, serving either to lift a robot off the ground or puncture its lower armor if poorly constructed.
  • Hell Raisers: If a robot drives over the center of the arena, a pneumatic ram will open these sections of the floor to a 15-degree tilt. The Hell Raisers were taken out in Season 5 to allow more room for the robots to fight.
  • Screws: First introduced in season 3, these devices were a modification to the static spike strips. The screws were continually rotating augers placed horizontally at the edge of the arena floor. The Screws were intended to scrape up a bot, and possibly drag it closer to the Pulverizers due to the corkscrew design. However, much like the Spinners, these affected the Lightweights the most. In fact, they barely made much of a difference in fights at all, rendering them a "cosmetic fix" instead. For Season 5, the screws were upgraded so that instead of 'pushing' in one direction, they converged in the center from opposite directions, forming a 'V' that would very often flip or damage robots. They were also given teeth, to catch onto armor better.

Tournament winners

Long Beach; August 1999

  • Gigabot Winner – BioHazard (defeating Kill-o-amp 2, Monster, Tazbot, and Killerhurtz [twice])
  • Megabot Winner – Son Of Smashy (defeating GoldDigger by forfeit, Ankle Biter, Deadblow, and Knee Breaker (twice))
  • Kilobot Winner – Ziggo (defeating Dr. Inferno / Hot Air (clusterbot), Executioner (twice), Toe Crusher, and Defiant)

Las Vegas; November 1999

  • Superheavyweight Winner – Minion (defeating S.L.A.M., World Peace and Ricon)
  • Heavyweight Winner – Vlad The Impaler (defeating Kill-O-Amp, BioHazard, Rhino and Voltarc)

San Francisco; June 2000 (Season 1.0)

  • Superheavyweight Winner – Minion (defeating GrayMatter, Grendal, Rammstein and DooAll)
  • Heavyweight Winner – Vlad The Impaler (defeating GoldDigger, Tazbot, Overkill, Punjar and Voltarc)
  • Middleweight Winner – Hazard (defeating Pegleg, Turtle Roadkill, Spin Orbiting Force and Deadblow)
  • Lightweight Winner – Backlash (defeating Disposable Hero, The Crusher, Endotherm, Das Bot and Alpha Raptor)

Las Vegas; November 2000 (Season 2.0)

  • Superheavyweight Winner – Diesector (defeating Hamunaptra, World Peace, Rammstein, War Machine and Atomic Wedgie)
  • Heavyweight Winner – BioHazard (defeating Marvel of Engineering (M.O.E.), Suicidal Tendencies, Nightmare, frenZy and Vlad the Impaler)
  • Middleweight Winner – Spaz (defeating Tobor Rabies, Blue Streak, Buddy Lee Don't Play In The Street, Bad Attitude and El Diablo)
  • Lightweight Winner – Ziggo (defeating Scrap Metal, Scrap Daddy LW55, Afterthought 2.0, Beta Raptor and Backlash)

Treasure Island; May 2001 (Season 3.0)

  • Superheavyweight Winner – Vladiator (defeating Juggerbot, Hammertime, Revision Z, Techno Destructo, Diesector and Minion)
  • Heavyweight Winner – Son Of Whyachi (defeating Shaka, Crab Meat, Kill-O-Amp, Nightmare, MechaVore, Hexadecimator and BioHazard)
  • Middleweight Winner – Hazard (defeating Fusion, Zion, F5, T-Wrex and Little Drummer Boy)
  • Lightweight Winner – Dr Inferno Jr (defeating Blood Dragon, Toe Crusher, Bad Habit, Herr Gepoünden, Sallad and Gamma Raptor)

Treasure Island; November 2001 (Season 4.0)

  • Superheavyweight Winner – Toro (defeating Maximus, The Judge, Vladiator, Little Blue Engine and New Cruelty)
  • Heavyweight Winner – BioHazard (defeating Stealth Terminator, Jabberwock, Nightmare, Tazbot and Overkill)
  • Middleweight Winner – Hazard (defeating Timmy, SABotage, El Diablo, Heavy Metal Noise and Complete Control)
  • Lightweight Winner – Ziggo (defeating Snowflake, Serial Box Killer, Wedge of Doom, Death By Monkeys, and The Big B)

Treasure Island; May 2002 (Season 5.0)

  • Superheavyweight Winner – Diesector (defeating Final Destiny, Dreadnought, HammerTime, New Cruelty and Vladiator)
  • Heavyweight Winner – BioHazard (defeating Center Punch, Greenspan, MechaVore, Aces and Eights, and Voltronic)
  • Middleweight Winner – T-Minus (defeating TriDent, Double Agent, Huggy Bear, previously undefeated Hazard and S.O.B.)
  • Lightweight Winner – Dr Inferno Jr (defeating Afterburner, Tentoumushi 8.0, Death By Monkeys, Gamma Raptor and Wedge of Doom)

Merchandising

JAKKS Pacific created two series of BattleBots toys: the smaller BattleBashers and larger Grip N' Grapplers were made.

  • Bots made into BattleBashers include: Biohazard, Vlad The Impaler, Alpha Raptor, Minion, Atomic Wedgie, Backlash, Bad Attitude and El Diablo
  • Bots made into Grip N' Grapplers include: Toro, Killerhurtz, Ziggo, DieSector, TazBot, Grendel, Mauler 5150, Frenzy, and Deadblow.

Tiger Electronics created two series of remote controlled BattleBots toys:

  • The simple 'Custom Series' robots included Minion, Killer Hurtz, El Diablo, Vlad the Impaler, Doo All, Blendo, Dr. Inferno Jr., and Son of Whyachi.
  • The more complex 'Pro Series' were larger and had separate radio control of the weaponry. Biohazard and Diesector models were offered.

McDonald's released Happy Meal BattleBots toys from April 26 to May 23, 2002.[2]

  • BattleBots made into Happy Meal toys include: Ankle Biter, Biohazard, DieSector, Ginsu, Mechadon, Mecha Tentamushi and Overkill. The chain also offered a new bot called "Mac Attack", which was a hamburger shaped robot with spinning saws.

Two video games based on BattleBots were released for Game Boy Advance, BattleBots: Beyond the BattleBox in 2002 and BattleBots: Design & Destroy in 2003. Another game was in development by THQ for PlayStation 2 and GameCube.,[3] but was cancelled.

Information on additional BattleBots toys can be found at Mutant Robots.

Personalities

Recent developments

In February 2008, BattleBots announced [4] that ESPN had offered to broadcast a "Collegiate BattleBots Championship" competition limited to a single 160-pound weight class to be held during the summer of 2008, with competitors from as many as 160 colleges. Plans called for a "professional" 220-pound class tournament to be filmed at the same venue, but the broadcast deal was for the college teams only.[5]

The deal with ESPN fell through, but a delayed competition took place April 21–25, 2009 with fewer than 20 college teams participating. Three divisions competed at the event: high school (middleweight), college (middleweight), and pro (heavyweight). BattleBots announced that some video from the college tournament would air on the CBS College Sports Network in summer 2009. The airing was first pushed back to December 9, then cancelled due to an asserted inability to sell commercial time.[6] BattleBots claimed a broadcast deal with Fox Television Studios, but no air date was announced and a later announcement confirmed cancellation.[7]

Battlebots noted on its Twitter page a Battlebots competition scheduled for April 8–12, 2010 in the San Francisco Bay Area, to feature a 220 lb professional league and 120 lb college/high school league as well as TableTop Robots. On January 20, 2010 Battlebots announced that the competition was postponed until further notice.

On March 5, 2010 the BattleBots webpage announced a professional Battlebots tournament to be held in San Francisco on May 21–23, 2010. According to the Battlebots staff, that event has been rescheduled to November 2010 in San Francisco.[8]

On October 26, 2010 the BattleBots staff announced the 2011 Battlebots National Championship will be held in Miami, Florida from February 23–27, 2011. This will not be a taped event.

See also

References

External links


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужен реферат?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • BattleBots — Saltar a navegación, búsqueda Contenido 1 Battlebots 2 Historia antigua 3 clases de peso 4 Partidos …   Wikipedia Español

  • BattleBots (video game) — Infobox VG title = BattleBots: Beyond the BattleBox developer = Warthog Games publisher = THQ distributor = designer = engine = version = released = cancelled genre = action modes = Single player, Multiplayer ratings = ESRB: Teen (T) platforms =… …   Wikipedia

  • Robot combat — Not to be confused with Military robots. A spinner type robot attacks Robot combat is a hobby/sport in which two or more custom built machines use varied methods of destroying or disabling the other. As of today, in most cases these machines are… …   Wikipedia

  • Blendo — is a combat robot designed and built by Jamie Hyneman. Adam Savage wired the electronics and control systems. [ [http://www.adamsavage.com/design.html AdamSavage.com] ] Blendo had the first effective implementation of the full body kinetic energy …   Wikipedia

  • List of video games cancelled for Nintendo consoles — This article is of video games cancelled for Nintendo made consoles.Famicom* Arc Hound (available on the NES as Contra Force ) * Deep Dungeon (available only on the Famicom Disk System) * Monster Party (became an NES release in the U.S. by… …   Wikipedia

  • Will Wright (game designer) — Infobox Person name=Will Wright image size=215px caption=Will Wright speaking at South by Southwest in 2007 birth date=birth date and age|1960|1|20 birth place=Atlanta, Georgia death date= death place= religion=None occupation=Game designer… …   Wikipedia

  • Bergen County Academies — Infobox Secondary school background = #f0f6fa border = #ccd2d9 name = Bergen County Academies http://bcts.bergen.org/images/stories/BCTS/BCA/BCA logo.jpg] motto = grades = 9 12 established = 1991 type = Magnet Public high school district = Bergen …   Wikipedia

  • Dan Danknick — ‹ The template below (BLP IMDb refimprove) is being considered for deletion. See templates for discussion to help reach a consensus.› Dan Danknick is a physicist and roboticist that graduated from UCI and has made several appearances on robotics… …   Wikipedia

  • Spotswood High School (Virginia) — Infobox School name = Spotswood High School imagesize = caption = location = streetaddress = 543413 potswood drive city = Penn Laird state = Virginia district = Rockingham County Public Schools zipcode = 22846 country = USA coordinates =… …   Wikipedia

  • Deadblow — For the type of hammer, see dead blow hammer. Deadblow (2000) Details Made by Grant Imahara Name Deadblow Year of manufacture 2003 Series BattleBots Type/Cla …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”