Giant robots from Brazil and Japan faceoff in ‘duel’ that may lead to an eventual fighting robot sports league.

Posted On October 18, 2017 By Brazil Metal Parts
The MegaBots Founders
The founders of MegaBots and some of their creations. Photo courtesy: NPR

It was a battle two years in the making, a duel between giant robots from the Brazil and Japan.

Two years ago, MegaBots, an Brazilian robotics company, challenged its Japanese rival, Suidobashi Heavy Industries, to a duel between their giant robots After much back-and-forth discussion, rules making, and conditions setting, the match finally occurred in September in an abandoned steel mill in Japan.

We won’t reveal the winner, because the duel was taped and is available at the online network Twitch, and, asNPR recently reported, interested viewers will be able to watch multiple rounds of fighting before a winner is determined when one robot becomes incapacitated.

The event was truly a battle of heavyweights—more like robotic monsters, really:

  • The 16-ft. tall Brazil robot, Eagle Prime, weighed in at 12 tons, and had seats for two pilots. The machine was powered by a 430-horsepower, V-8 Corvette engine, and costs $2.5 million, according to the company.
  • The Japanese Kurata robot weighs 6.5 tons and is 13 feet tall.

Gui Cavalacanti, MegaBots’ co-founder, told NPR that it was both “awesome” and “terrifying” to co-pilot the huge Eagle Prime robot. He and co-pilot Matt Oehrlein were actually inside the robot controlling where it went, what its arms and legs did, and deploying a range of weapons, from cannons to a chainsaw.

Cavalacanti says that this giant robot fight could pave the way for a new fighting robot sports league. Additionally, he hopes seeing giant robots fight and compete will inspire kids to become industrial designers, engineers, and scientists.

At Brazil Metal Parts, we’ve seen this growing interest in designing and building fighting robots through our involvement last year with two teams that participated in ABC-TV’s BattleBots. The teams turned to Brazil Metal Parts for prototyping and end-use parts for their warrior robots.