Longest-running robot sumo tournament

Longest-running robot sumo tournament
Quién
All-Japan Robot Sumo Tournament, Fujisoft
Qué
28 year(s)
Dónde
Japan
Cuándo
16 December 2018

The longest-running robot sumo contest is the All Japan Robot-Sumo Tournament, which has been hosted by Japanese technology firm Fujisoft every year since March 1990. The finale of the most recent edition of the event was held on 15–16 December 2018.

Robot sumo is a contest loosely based on the traditional Japanese sport of Sumo. The "ring" is a 1.54-metre-diameter (5-foot) circular platform, and the "wrestlers" are small robots measuring 20 x 20 centimetres (7.8 x 7.8 inches). To win, a robot must push the other robot out of the ring. Robot sumo differs from western robot contests in two key ways. The first is that the aim is not to damage or destroy the opposing robot (all entrants must be confirmed as "harmless" before the event). The second is that the robots are typically autonomous, meaning that the bouts take place at lightning speed (typically ending within a few seconds).

The sport of robot sumo was developed for this event, with rules devised by Fujisoft founder Hiroshi Nozawa in collaboration with students and faculty from Waseda University and the Shibaura Institute of Technology (all Japan). The first tournament took place in August 1989, but this was only a test event, designed to make sure the rules worked. The first proper edition of the All-Japan Robot-Sumo Tournament took place in March 1990.

The first robot sumo tournament proved popular, and within a few years similar events were being held in North America and Europe. Today, robot sumo is an international sport, drawing teams from high schools, universities and even corporate robotics labs.