Year | 2010 |
---|---|
Season Information | |
Number of teams | 1809 [1] |
Number of regionals | 44 (including MI championship) [2] |
Number of district events | 7 [2] |
Championship location | Georgia Dome, Atlanta, Georgia |
FIRST Championship Awards | |
Chairman's Award winner | Team 341 - "Miss Daisy" [3] |
Woodie Flowers Award winner | Chris Fultz - Team 234 |
Founder's Award winner | Rockwell Collins |
Gracious Professionalism Winner | Team 1305 - "Ice Cubed" |
Champions | Team 294 - "Beach Cities Robotics" Team 67 - "The HOT Team" Team 177 - "Bobcat Robotics" [4] |
Links | |
Website | usfirst.org/roboticsprograms/frc |
← Lunacy |
Breakaway is the game for the 2010 FIRST Robotics Competition, announced on January 9, 2010. [5] Robots direct soccer balls into goals, traverse "bumps" in the field, suspend themselves and each other on towers, and/or go through a tunnel located in the center of the field.
In 2010, a new driver station was introduced, the Classmate PC, [6] replacing the previous Kwikbyte driver station.
Balls are kicked or herded into goals located in the corners of the fields. There are two goals for each alliance, adding up to 4 goals total.
At the end of the match, bonus points are awarded for robots that cling onto either of the two towers in the center of the field. More bonus points are awarded if alliance robots can suspend themselves from the robot clinging onto the tower.
Robots play Breakaway on a 27 by 54-foot rectangular field. [7] The field is bordered by a set of guardrails and alliance walls. There are two "bumps" in the field that divide it into three zones. During matches, the robots are controlled from alliance stations located outside the field at both ends. These rectangular zones consist of three-team player stations that provide connectivity between the controls used by the robot operators and the arena. Goals are located at the corners of the field, and extend behind the alliance wall and adjacent to the player stations. After goals are scored, human players must pick up the balls and pass them to the center of the alliance station to be placed on a ball return rack, after which they will re-enter play at midfield. Teams are penalized if balls are not re-entered within a set time limit.
Each round lasts two minutes and fifteen seconds. In the first fifteen seconds of a round, the robots run in autonomous mode, then there are two minutes of game play during which robots are user-controlled. The game is played by two three-robot alliances with each team starting one robot in each of the three sections of the field. At the beginning of a match, every robot must be touching either one of the bisecting bumps or an alliance wall. Also, at the start of the match each of the 12 balls in play must be placed at one vertex of a six foot by six foot grid. There are two grids marked at either ends of each of the three zones. [8] [9] [10]
Seven different fields were built and shipped around different events to be played on. [13]
51 events were held in the 2010 Breakaway season over 5 weeks, from March 4th to April 3rd, 2010. There were 44 regional events and 7 district events. [14] District events were held only in Michigan and led up to the Michigan State Championship in Ypsilanti. [2] In the 2010 season, weeks 1-5 were considered the Regular Season, with the Michigan State Championship and the FIRST Championship be considered Post-Season. [14]
Event | Location | Date | Champions |
---|---|---|---|
Washington DC Regional | Washington, D.C. | March 4 – 6 | 1727 REX, 3123 Wildcogs, 176 Aces High |
Peachtree Regional | Duluth, Georgia | March 4 – 6 | 1466 Webb Robotics, 1771 North Gwinnett Robotics, 1683 Techno Titans |
Granite State Regional | Manchester, New Hampshire | March 4 – 6 | 1073 The Force Team, 1519 Mechanical Mayhem, 1058 PVC Pirates |
Finger Lakes Regional | Rochester, New York | March 4 – 6 | 1551 The Grapes of Wrath, 217 ThunderChickens, 174 Arctic Warriors |
Greater Kansas City Regional | Kansas City, Missouri | March 4 – 6 | 2345 Kearnage, 525 Swartdogs, 931 Perpetual Chaos |
Bayou Regional | Westwego, Louisiana | March 4 – 6 | 1421 Team CHAOS, 2992 The S.S. Prometheus, 3364 Panhandle Pirates |
Oregon Regional | Portland, Oregon | March 4 – 6 | 997 Spartan Robotics, 2130 Alpha+, 1515 MorTorq |
San Diego Regional | San Diego, California | March 4 – 6 | 359 Hawaiian Kids, 100 The Wildhats, 294 Beach Cities Robotics |
Michigan Kettering University District Competition | Flint, Michigan | March 5 – 7 | 67 The HOT Team, 910 The Foley Freeze, 70 More Martians |
Michigan Traverse City District Competition | Traverse City, Michigan | March 5 – 7 | 1918 NC GEARS, 2645 PowerSurge, 1254 Tech Force |
New Jersey Regional | Trenton, New Jersey | March 5 – 7 | 25 Raider Robotix, 1676 The Pascack PI-oneers, 3059 Riverside Envirobotics |
Event | Location | Date | Champions |
---|---|---|---|
Florida Regional | Orlando, Florida | March 11 – 13 | 86 Team Resistance, 1612 Robo-Sharks, 1251 TechTigers Robotics |
Chesapeake Regional | Baltimore, Maryland | March 11 – 13 | 1517 AMP'D UP, 2377 C Company, 2534 Lumberjack Robotics |
WPI Regional | Worcester, Massachusetts | March 11 – 13 | 230 Gaelhawks, 20 The Rocketeers, 228 GUS |
Wisconsin Regional | Milwaukee, Wisconsin | March 11 – 13 | 2574 RoboHuskie, 1732 Hilltopper Robotics, 171 Cheese Curd Herd |
Arizona Regional | Phoenix, Arizona | March 11 – 13 | 359 Hawaiian Kids, 330 The Beach Bots, 2403 Plasma Robotics |
Michigan Cass Tech District Competition | Detroit, Michigan | March 12 – 13 | 217 ThunderChickens, 469 Las Guerrillas, 2960 Automation Nation |
Pittsburgh Regional | Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania | March 12 – 13 | 1114 Simbotics, 63 McDowell Robotics, 117 Steel Dragons Robotics |
Michigan Ann Arbor District Competition | Ann Arbor, Michigan | March 12 – 13 | 573 Mech Warriors, 2337 EngiNERDs, 66 Grizzly Robotics |
New York City Regional | New York, New York | March 12 – 14 | 341 Miss Daisy, 694 StuyPulse, 3204 Steampunk Penguins, 2265 Fe Maidens |
Israel Regional | Tel Aviv, Israel | March 14 – 16 | 1657 Hamosad, 2669 KY Bots, 2630 Thunderbolts |
Event | Location | Date | Champions |
---|---|---|---|
Boilermaker Regional | West Lafayette, Indiana | March 18 – 20 | 45 TechnoKats Robotics Team, 868 TechHOUNDS, 2171 RoboDogs |
Virginia Regional | Richmond, Virginia | March 18 – 20 | 1676 The Pascack PI-oneers, 1086 Blue Cheese, 1418 Vae Victis |
Dallas Regional | Dallas, Texas | March 18 – 20 | 148 Robowranglers, 2016 Mighty Monkey Wrenches, 1817 Llano Estacado RoboRaiders |
Midwest Regional | Chicago, Illinois | March 18 – 20 | 1732 Hilltopper Robotics, 16 Bomb Squad, 3352 Flaming Monkeys 4-H Robotics Club |
St. Louis Regional | St. Louis, Missouri | March 18 – 20 | 1208 Metool Brigade, 2775 Jackson Area Robotics, 3284 Camdenton LASER |
Utah Regional | Salt Lake City, Utah | March 18 – 20 | 1696 RoboRevolution, 2122 Team Tators, 3405 ALChemists |
Silicon Valley Regional | San Jose, California | March 18 – 20 | 971 Spartan Robotics, 254 The Cheesy Poofs, 649 MSET Fish |
Michigan Detroit District Competition | Detroit, Michigan | March 19 – 20 | 67 The HOT Team, 51 Wings of Fire, 1023 Bedford Express |
Michigan West Michigan District Competition | Allendale, Michigan | March 19 – 20 | 1243 Dragons, 3357 COMETS, 2054 Tech Vikes |
Event | Location | Date | Champions |
---|---|---|---|
Long Island Regional | Hempstead, New York | March 25 – 27 | 271 Mechanical Marauders, 358 Robotic Eagles, 263 Aftershock |
Boston Regional | Boston, Massachusetts | March 25 – 27 | 88 TJ2, 1922 Oz-Ram, 1768 Nashoba Robotics |
Buckeye Regional | Cleveland, Ohio | March 25 – 27 | 2252 The Mavericks, 3010 The Red Plague, 2506 Saber Robotics |
Philadelphia Regional | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | March 25 – 27 | 341 Miss Daisy, 365 Miracle Workerz, 486 Positronic Panthers |
Palmetto Regional | Clemson, South Carolina | March 25 – 27 | 343 Metal-In-Motion, 1261 Robo Lions, 1398 Robo-Raiders |
Waterloo Regional | Waterloo, Ontario, Canada | March 25 – 27 | 1114 Simbotics, 2056 OP Robotics, 296 Northern Knights |
Oklahoma Regional | Oklahoma City, Oklahoma | March 25 – 27 | 2419 Blue Valley CAPS Metal Mustang Robotics, 935 RaileRobotics, 1987 Broncobots |
Colorado Regional | Denver, Colorado | March 25 – 27 | 1540 Flaming Chickens, 2036 The Black Knights, 1584 Pirates |
Los Angeles Regional | Long Beach, California | March 25 – 27 | 330 The Beach Bots, 1717 D'Penguineers, 1452 Omnicats |
Seattle Regional | Seattle, Washington | March 25 – 27 | 488 Team XBOT, 2557 SOTAbots, 2990 Hotwire |
Hawaii Regional | Honolulu, Hawai'i | March 25 – 27 | 359 Hawaiian Kids, 368 Team Kika Mana, 2467 Sabertron |
Michigan Troy District Competition | Troy, Michigan | March 26 – 27 | 469 Las Guerrillas, 217 ThunderChickens, 1188 Ravens |
Event | Location | Date | Champions |
---|---|---|---|
Sacramento Regional | Davis, California | March 31 – April 1 | 604 Quixilver, 3256 WarriorBorgs, 2761 IronHorse Robotics |
Connecticut Regional | Hartford, Connecticut | April 1 – 3 | 1124 UberBots, 383 Brazilian Machine, 102 The Gearheads |
North Carolina Regional | Raleigh, North Carolina | April 1 – 3 | 1086 Blue Cheese, 1902 Exploding Bacon, 48 Team E.L.I.T.E. |
Greater Toronto Regional | Mississauga, Ontario, Canada | April 1 – 3 | 1114 Simbotics, 2056 OP Robotics, 1547 "Where's Waldo?" |
Minnesota 10000 Lakes Regional | Minneapolis, Minnesota | April 1 – 3 | 1714 MORE Robotics, 2062 CORE, 3038 ICE |
Minnesota North Star Regional | Minneapolis, Minnesota | April 1 – 3 | 71 Team Hammond, 1986 Team Titanium, 2667 Knights of the Valley |
Lone Star Regional | [14] , Texas | April 1 – 3 | 148 Robowranglers, 118 Robonauts, 647 CYBERWOLVES |
Las Vegas Regional | Las Vegas, Nevada | April 1 – 3 | 25 Raider Robotix, 254 The Cheesy Poofs, 3230 PrototypeX |
Event | Location | Date | Champions |
---|---|---|---|
Michigan State Championship | Ypsilanti, Michigan | March 31 – April 2 | 1918 NC GEARS, 469 Las Guerrillas, 2834 Bionic Black Hawks |
The World Championships were held at the Georgia Dome in Atlanta, Georgia. [14] Attendance was estimated to be around 20,000 at that all-seater stadium. Each division is named after a prominent historical figure in STEM, with the winners of each division playing each other in a final bracket on the Einstein Field.
Event | Location | Date |
---|---|---|
FIRST Championship | Atlanta, Georgia | April 15 – 17 |
The World Championships were held at the Georgia Dome in Atlanta, Georgia. [14] Attendance was estimated to be around 20,000 at that all-seater stadium. Each division is named after a prominent historical figure in STEM, with the winners of each division playing each other in a final bracket on the Einstein Field.
The following tables show the winners of each division and the divisional playoff results.
Division | Captain | 1st Pick | 2nd Pick |
---|---|---|---|
Archimedes | 254 | 233 | 3357 |
Curie | 1114 | 469 | 2041 |
Galileo | 1625 | 2056 | 3138 |
Newton | 294 | 67 | 177 |
Semifinals | Finals | ||||||||||||
294 - 67 - 177 | 14 | 14 | 15 | 2W | |||||||||
2056 - 1625 - 3138 | 13 | 22 | 12 | 1W | |||||||||
294 - 67 - 177 | 16 | 16 | N/P | 2W | |||||||||
1114 - 469 - 2041 | 14 | 13 | N/P | 0W | |||||||||
254 - 233 - 3357 | 10 | 11 | N/P | 0W | |||||||||
1114 - 469 - 2041 | 16 | 19 | N/P | 2W |
FIRST Frenzy: Raising the Bar was the 2004 game for the FIRST Robotics Competition. The game included elements from previous years' games, including mobile goals, "capping" goals with large inflatable balls, and others. In Raising the Bar, teams could score by having their human player score purple balls in any of the goals, capping the goals with a multiplier ball, or hanging their robot suspended from the 10-foot (3.0 m) high 'chin up bar'. In the qualifying matches, Teams competed in 2-member randomly generated alliances. In the elimination rounds, 3-member alliances competed against each other with one team sitting out each match. The alliance that won two matches advanced in the tournament.
Aim High was the 2006 game for the FIRST Robotics Competition. The competition involved teams competing to gain points by delivering balls into goals and positioning their robots in certain positions on the playing field. The teams took it in turn to provide defense and attack.
Toroid Terror was the 1997 game for the FIRST Robotics Competition. This was the first year that FRC had a regional event outside its origins in New Hampshire; in addition to Manchester, regionals were held in Chicago and New Brunswick, New Jersey, as well as the championship event at a complex set up in the Epcot parking lot. It was also the first year in which the scoring object was not a ball.
Co-Opertition FIRST was the 2000 game for the FIRST Robotics Competition.
Diabolical Dynamics was the 2001 game for the FIRST Robotics Competition.
FIRST Overdrive was the 2008 game for the FIRST Robotics Competition, announced on January 5, 2008. In it, teams competed to complete counterclockwise laps around a central barrier while manipulating large 40 in (1 m) diameter "Trackballs" over and under overpasses to score additional points.
The FIRST Championship is a four-day robotics championship held annually in April at which FIRST student robotics teams compete. For several years, the event was held at the Georgia Dome in Atlanta, Georgia, but moved to the Edward Jones Dome in St. Louis, Missouri in 2011, where it remained through 2017. In 2017, the Championship was split into two events, being additionally held at the George R. Brown Convention Center and Minute Maid Park in Houston, Texas. In 2018 and 2019, the Championship was held in Houston and Detroit, Michigan at the TCF Center and Ford Field. The event comprises four competitions; the FIRST Robotics Competition Championship, the FIRST Tech Challenge World Championship, the FIRST Lego League World Festival, and the FIRST Lego League Junior World Expo.
Lunacy is the game for the 2009 FIRST Robotics Competition. Announced on January 3, 2009, the name and some of the features of the game honor the 40th anniversary of the first human mission to the Moon. It is FRC's 18th game. This is the first FRC competition to use the cRIO Mobile Device Controller control system from National Instruments. The driver station introduced for 2009 was the Kwikbyte DS, which was replaced in 2010 by the Classmate PC.
Hot Shot! is the robotics competition event in the 2009-2010 FIRST Tech Challenge. Two teams compete to score points by depositing whiffle balls into designated areas.
Beach Cities Robotics is a FIRST Robotics Competition (FRC) team from the South Bay area in Southern California. The team is composed of members from both Mira Costa High School and Redondo Union High School.
Team 1717, D’Penguineers, were a FIRST Robotics team associated with the Dos Pueblos High School Engineering Academy (DPEA) in Goleta, California. D’Penguineers have won multiple awards at the regional and international levels of the FIRST Robotics Competition, and participate regularly in outreach programs for junior high and elementary schools. The team was highlighted in the book The New Cool.
Get Over It! is the robotics competition event for the 2010-11 FIRST Tech Challenge. Two teams compete to score points by depositing colored batons in various types of goals. The name of the game refers to the many obstacles that traverse the middle of the field, which include a mountain, two bridges, and two ramps.
Logo Motion is the 2011 FIRST Robotics Competition game. Playing pieces are inner tubes shaped like the components of the FIRST logo. The primary objective of the game is to place them on racks to gain points. In the endgame, robots deploy smaller robots ("minibots") to climb a tower. Minibots must be made from the FIRST Tech Challenge kit of parts. The game celebrates the 20th season of the FRC and is also meant to commemorate the artist Jack Kamen, who designed the original FIRST logo.
The Collegiate Aerial Robotics Demonstration (CARD) is a defunct robotics competition for college and university students inspired by FIRST. The inaugural event was held at the 2011 FIRST Championship in St. Louis, Missouri.
FIRST Steamworks, stylized as FIRST STEAMworks, was the FIRST Robotics Competition game for the 2017 season. As in past games, two alliances of three individual teams and their robots compete on a field to score "match" point to win the game and ranking points to advance to playoff rounds. The game has a steampunk theme and teams are required to shoot wiffle balls which represent fuel into a simulated boiler which transfers the generated steam into an airship in the middle of the field. Each alliance has one airship, which they pressurize with steam from the boiler and load with plastic gears from the field. At the end of the match, robots can climb and hang on team-supplied ropes attached to the airship for additional points.
Destination: Deep Space, stylized as DESTINATION: DEEP SPACE and officially known as Destination: Deep Space Presented By The Boeing Company, is the FIRST Robotics Competition game for the 2019 season. It involves two alliances of three teams each, with each team controlling a robot and performing specific tasks on a field to score points. The game centers around an outer space theme involving two alliances consisting of three teams each competing to place poly-carbonate hatch panels and orange rubber balls or "cargo" on rockets and cargo ships before returning to their HAB platform to climb at the end of the match.
Infinite Recharge is the FIRST Robotics Competition (FRC) game for the 2020 season. The season is in partnership with Lucasfilm as part of its Star Wars: Force for Change initiative.
Rapid React, stylized as RAPID REACT and officially known as Rapid React presented by The Boeing Company for sponsorship reasons, is the FIRST Robotics Competition (FRC) game for the 2022 season. The game is themed around transportation as part of the FIRST-wide FIRST Forward theme for 2021-2022.
Charged Up, stylized as CHARGED UP and officially known as Charged Up presented by Haas for sponsorship reasons, was the FIRST Robotics Competition game for the 2023 season. The game is part of the FIRST-wide FIRST Energize theme for the 2022-2023 season, which focuses on energy and sustainable development. The season's kickoff event occurred on January 7, 2023, and was streamed live on Twitch.
Crescendo, stylized as CRESCENDO and officially known as Crescendo presented by Haas for sponsorship reasons, was the FIRST Robotics Competition game for the 2024 season. The game is themed around music and concerts as part of the overall 2023-2024 FIRST in Show season. The game's kickoff event occurred on January 6, 2024, and was streamed live on Twitch.