The BBC Announces Robot Wars' Return To TV (bbc.co.uk) 77
Blacklaw writes: The BBC has announced that Robot Wars, the classic metal-mashing amateur robotics competition, is returning for a new series. They are building an all-new battle arena — following the sale of the original for scrap in 2005. "The new series includes a raft of technological advances since the show first aired over a decade ago, and viewers can expect to see more innovative fighting machines as teams of amateur roboteers battle it out to win the coveted Robot Wars title."
Not my kind of robot war (Score:3)
Re:Not my kind of robot war (Score:4, Informative)
Pink hair is the best!
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I'm ok with that. Also I agree with Neon Genesis Evangelion should return.
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No, PINK-haired cat girls! ... especially one who's actual name is Pink.
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I always found the most interesting decision taken by the BBC was to get a room full of nerds who obviously spent a lot of time by themselves in their sheds and have them interviewed by Philippa Forrester, in very tight leather.
Re:Battlebots rip-off (Score:5, Informative)
Uh, Robot Wars first aired in the UK in 1998, two years before Battlebots first aired in the US.
Robot Wars also has the non-broadcast event history behind it dating back to 1994.
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A guy in the US came up with Robot Wars. A US record company funded it. As it was coming together, the relationship between the guy and the record company fell apart and ended in legal acrimony. The record company licensed it to a UK production company. The folks who were going to put it on in the US put together BattleBots. It think that the US folks worked on it first, but the UK folks got it on TV first.
FWIW, I prefer BattleBots (except for that bogus rule interpretation on the prohibition of capture
Re:Battlebots rip-off (Score:4, Funny)
Nah the Brits love to rip off 'merica.
Cricket is a cheap ripoff of Baseball.
Dr. Who is a cheap ripoff of Star Trek
They even double down by making a Red Dwarf a cheap ripoff of Voyager.
The Office is a cheap ripoff of The Office
And British football vs Football.
Facts just get in the way of a closed world view.
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Dont forget House of Cards.
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The Apprentice. Isn't Dancing with the Stars based on Strictly Come Dancing. Oh, and America's Got Talent.
I seem to recall there was a US version of Sherlock too. Life on Mars.
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The X Factor too.
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Don't get me started on that faker Shakespeare - he made his name rewriting Hollywood scripts
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Didn't it sort of get bogged down? (Score:5, Insightful)
Didn't it get tedious towards the end with all the robots being a sort of wedge with a flipper?
What I'd like to see is more autonomous bots, rather than what are effectively RC tanks.
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> What I'd like to see is more autonomous bots, rather than what are effectively RC tanks.
I was going to post something like this. They are not really robots, IMO. Autonomous bots would be much more interesting.
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One way to fix that would be more complex terrain so it's harder to drive a triangle around and as you say, autonomous bots that have to identify targets themselves.
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Maybe have some type of robot Olympics where the goal isn't to mash each other up, but to get around various obstacles. BBC also used to have the cartoon series "Ludwig" and the "The Great Egg Race" which would be a similar theme. That usually involved trying to transport an egg in some way without harm.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/archive/g... [bbc.co.uk]
There are international maze exploration competitions:
https://www2.meijo-u.ac.jp/~ic... [meijo-u.ac.jp]
Re: Didn't it sort of get bogged down? (Score:2)
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I was expecting more technological improvements after such a large gap of time, but it was mostly flippers, spinning disks, pincers. There was even Warhead, from the old UK shows.
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I was expecting more technological improvements after such a large gap of time, but it was mostly flippers, spinning disks, pincers.
News flash: spinners, flippers, and pincers are some of the best ways to damage a robotic target at this scale as long as entanglement, untethered projectiles, and electromagnetic type weapons aren't allowed.
Also, If you didn't see any technological improvements you must not have been looking very hard during the show, and must have also missed out on the behind the scenes stuff that appeared on youtube. The amount of energy contained in those weapons was enormous compared to the previous iteration of b
Re:Didn't it sort of get bogged down? (Score:5, Interesting)
The floor should at least be contoured, with hills and valleys. That brings up one of the problems with this type of competition, as long as the arena is fixed, the arena will determine what kind of specific robot is the best.
I'd like to see various arenas and each bot has to battle in each arena, say each level of a elimination competition is in a different arena and the specific arenas vary by episode.
Some examples:
1. Flat metal floor
1a. Flat metal floor with fixed obstacles.
1a. Flat metal floor with moving obstacles.
2. Undulating metal floor.
2a. Undulating metal floor with fixed obstacles.
2b. Undulating metal floor with moving obstacles.
3. Packed earthen floor.
3a. Packed earthen floor with fixed obstacles.
3b. Packed earthen floor with moving obstacles.
4. Undulating metal and packed earth floor combination with fixed obstacles.
4a. Undulating metal and packed earth floor combination with fixed obstacles.
4b. Undulating metal and packed earth floor combination with moving obstacles.
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And no modifications to the robots between matches, only repairs. Unlike what we saw in the most recent season of BattleBots, the same configuration must be used in every match, otherwise it isn't the same robot.
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Re:Didn't it sort of get bogged down? (Score:5, Interesting)
There was a series long time ago called "Robotica" that had for their host one of the Zappa offspring.
They had just that, all kinds of obstacles, so really low to the ground bots often were hung up. It forced designers to really think about what they were doing.
Best show of the bunch IMO.
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Well, autonomous fighting robots have been tried. It isn't very interesting to watch. At. All. Three minutes of watching two robots try to find each other is just not gripping. I work with autonomous robots a lot. Watching autonomous robots attack a 1-on-zero challenge course is something that is usually only interesting to other builders of autonomous robots, because the action is so freaking slow and the robots look feeble-minded. Only another builder can appreciate how difficult it is to make a robo
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Most notably it killed the house robot 'Matilda.
'It also used a self-righting mechanism that served a secondary purpose of enabling it to take a bow at the end of the battle. [youtu.be] Very cool.
So it's like Battle Bots? (Score:2)
So record and watch later (Score:2)
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Get some of the bot builders to talk about what they built.
Get some people (possible even two people, I hear there's a pair that might have recently been made available after a certain network canceled a certain show) to test some of the design elements in a controlled environment (e.g.
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Second. Why Battlebots decided to emulate WWF is beyond me.
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Letting drones compete would be a nice twist. I'm not sure how one could fairly handle letting drones compete with non-drones, though - seems like an either-or situation. Unless... hmm...
Other: Uneven floors and obstacles would be good, and could be varied, even with their own weather - a boulder-strewn badlands, a rainy forest, a post-apocalyptic hellscape, an icy barrens in a blizzard, etc. Maybe get rid of some of their old constraints, such as no fire-based or fluid weapons (although their arena woul
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Oh, another possibility for rule relaxation: they could allow electrical weapons, but only very low voltage (no limits on current). So it'd be quite possible to protect sensitive electronics (it takes voltage to get past electrical insulation), but robots will still be able to burn through each other with electricity.
Corrosives, if allowed, would probably have to have a requirement that they can't, in reaction with common metals and plastics, outgas anything dangerous. Flammables (and robots in general) sh
Matilda ! (Score:3)
Junkyard Wars (Score:3)
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No, thank you. A really fun concept, but after a while it had gotten repetitive and it was time to move on...
...laura
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Or more commonly known as Scrapheap Challenge over here in the UK - another show exported to the US (yup, we had it first) :)
Re: Junkyard Wars (Score:1)
Created by a (gulp) woman, Cathy Rogers.
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AKA Scrapheap Challenge.
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I loved that show but it was getting absurd towards the end. I remember one episode where they had to build something like a steam powered boat? Anyway one of the teams "found" a perfect condition, shiny brass steam engine just sitting inside a rusty truck in the middle of the junkyard. Over time it became less "build a machine from scrap" and more "build a chassis from scrap and attach the magic thing we planted".
divisions and unscripted? (Score:2)
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I thought tethered projectiles were allowed? I remember coming up with a bastard of a harpoon but it never made it past the beermat stage.
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1) Getting enough power behind a projectile to do damage (a lot of those robots are using quarter inch steel armor) without using explosives. Entangling isn't allowed, so a magnetic tow line or similar is out (also, if you're planning on towing them around the ring, there are better ways than launching a harpoon).
2) If you figure out 1), now you need to figure out how to make a tether t
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I could answer those questions, but then I'd have to kill you.
[whisper] There might be a ballista in there somewhere [/whisper]
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Quadcopters (Score:4, Interesting)
I'd like to see them include quadcopter vs quadcopter battles.
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The silly US show "What Could Possibly Go Wrong?" did one really good episode where the 2 guys each built their own octocopter and armed them with paintball guns and smoke bombs and then had to pilot them via onboard cameras and essentially did a race along an outdoor course where they were trying to disable each other to win. Although hitting each other with their paintball guns on such a big course proved to be quite challenging, I thought that single episode was far more entertaining than most of the Ro
Real, actual robots? (Score:2)
Does 10 years worth of technology mean we can have actual robots warring? Or will it still be a bunch of pseudo-aggressive, violent affectated radio-controlled cars?
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Yeah, my problem is that it's not robots but just RC cars with fancy bodies. Pretty boring to watch without a lot of fast forwarding.
Of course I grew up on CRobots (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crobots) and never really got into RC cars, real cars are enough of a time-sink.
I have one problem with this (Score:2)
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I get what you're saying, but we have plenty of things called robots in the real world right now, and the vast majority of them don't have much (if any) autonomy. I'm thinking of things like production line robot arms. It's true that they're not being remotely operated by a person in most cases (although some are, e.g. the bomb disposal bots) - but it's only pretty recently we've seen real autonomy (e.g. self driving cars).
Meh, so what... (Score:2)
Purpose-Built Arena (Score:2)