In the corner sits Majestic Savage, a robot built for battle by the talented student, Jessie Bass.
Majestic Savage was just one of the robots which fought in the second annual Sumo Robo tournament, held Feb. 16.
Shiloh Marriett, 13, showed off her sumo bot, equipped with a special pink shovel.
鈥淭he whole point of sumo bots, is two bots go against each other and try to push each other out of the circle,鈥 she said, adding the bots use sensors to detect each other.
The robots are placed in a sumo-style arena and once they鈥檙e turned on, the robots push each other, or not, depending on their build and coding.
She said the shovel will go under tires and mess up the tread of the other robots. The shovel is also pink so it will trick the other robots sensor.
Marriett hopes to win first place.
Tournament organizer Murray Chalmers said the kids build and program their own robots.
鈥淭hey have just a great time,鈥 he said.
The robots are built using Lego Mindstorm kits, with size and weight requirements for the tournaments.
Around 106 students at the elementary, middle and high school level gathered in 50 teams.
Each sumo bot will have about six battles in the tournament in elimination-style rounds. The winning 91大黄鸭 team earns a trophy.
鈥淚t really matches up well with the new B.C. curriculum,鈥 said Chalmers.
The students learn coding which is part of the curriculum and problem-solving techniques in the real world, he said.
鈥(It鈥檚) learning problem solving and reacting to what needs to be done at the time鈥 this is what it鈥檚 all about. They think they have it all figured out and when they get there, things go wrong so they have to fix it, and this is real-time fixing and real-time problem solving. That鈥檚 really valuable for kids these days.鈥
鈥淚 want them to learn stuff without thinking they鈥檙e really in the classroom,鈥 said Chalmers.
The tournament was held at the Educational Services building in Rutland.