Diabolical Dynamics

Diabolical Dynamics was the 2001 game for the FIRST Robotics Competition.

Diabolical Dynamics
Year2001
Season Information
Number of teams515[1]
Number of regionals13[2]
Championship locationEpcot Center, Disney World
Awards
Chairman's Award winnerTeam 22 - “Double Deuce”[3]
Woodie Flowers Award winnerWilliam Beatty
ChampionsTeam 71 - "Team Hammond"
Team 125 - "NU-Trons"
Team 294 - "Beach Cities Robotics"
Team 365 - "MOE"
Team 279 - "TechFusion"

Field

The playing field is a carpeted, rectangular area. Dividing the field in half is an 18 in (457 mm) high railing with a central bridge, which can tilt to either side of the field or remain level.[4] Two 7 ft (2 m) high movable goals begin on opposite sides of the field. Around the perimeter of the field are two stations for human players, who work with remote controlled robots on the field to score points. At the start of each match, the alliance station contains twenty small balls. An additional twenty small balls and four large balls are located at the far end of the playing field.

Robots

Each robot can weigh up to 130 lb (59 kg), and must start each match small enough to fit inside a 30" x 36" x 5' space (0.76 m x 0.91 m x 1.52 m).

Scoring

Each match is a maximum of two minutes long. Alliances can end the match at any time. Alliances score one point for each small ball in the goal, ten points for each large ball in the goal, ten points for each robot in the End Zone, and ten points if the stretcher is in the End Zone. The alliance doubles its score for each goal that is on the bridge if the bridge is balanced, and multiplies its score by a factor of up to three by ending the match before the two-minute time limit. Each team receives the alliance score. A team multiplies its score by 1.1 if its large ball is on top of a goal. Scores are rounded up to the nearest whole point after applying all multipliers.

Reception

While most participants did not like the lack of "red versus blue" competition within matches, others praised the game for its inventiveness and emphasis on cooperation. A few consider it one of the best FIRST games designed.

Events

The following regional events were held in 2001:[2]

  • Kennedy Space Center Southeast Regional - Kennedy Space Center, FL
  • UTC New England Regional - Meadows Music Theater, Hartford, CT
  • SBPLI Long Island Regional - Suffolk County Community College, Long Island, NY
  • NASA Langley/VCU/School of Engineering FIRST Robotics Competition - Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA
  • West Michigan Regional - Grand Rapids Community college, Grand Rapids, MI
  • Johnson & Johnson Mid-Atlantic Regional - Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ
  • Lone Star Regional - Reliant Arena, Houston
  • New York City FIRST! Regional - Columbia University, New York City
  • Southern California Regional - Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena, Los Angeles
  • Great Lakes Regional - Eastern Michigan University, Ypsilanti, MI
  • Motorola Midwest Regional - Northwestern University, Evanston, Il
  • Philadelphia Alliance Regional - Drexel University, Philadelphia
  • Silicon Valley Regional - San Jose State University, San Jose, CA

The national championship was held at Epcot Center, Disney World, Orlando.

gollark: ... Why. What idiot thought "I'll make classes, I love boilerplate!"...
gollark: I believe it's from that mysterious `Item` "class".
gollark: a CC version would probably run better since it could just eat stupid quantities of RAM.
gollark: By passing in the result of send instead it shall crash.
gollark: also, yes. You must pass parallel a function.

See also

    References

    1. "2006 Annual Report" (PDF). FIRST. Archived from the original (PDF) on 18 September 2011. Retrieved 15 September 2011.
    2. "THE 2001 FIRST ROBOTICS COMPETITION MANUAL" (PDF). technokats.org. p. 3. Archived from the original (PDF) on 21 March 2012. Retrieved 18 September 2011.
    3. "FIRST History". FIRST. Archived from the original on 8 December 2015. Retrieved 12 June 2011.
    4. "The Game" (PDF). FIRST-A-HOLICS. Retrieved 1 June 2011.
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