Marcus Bartholomew the Third Senior

FTC Team #32314

FIRST Tech Challenge · 1st Year · 2025–26 Decode Season

📅 Upcoming: FTC Championship Tournament

April 12, 2026 · Forest Lake Academy, Apopka, FL
Livestream and live scoring available!

Parent Info & Schedule →

We’re WCCA’s first-ever FTC team! FIRST Tech Challenge is a robotics competition for 7th through 12th graders where teams design, build, and program robots to compete in head-to-head matches.


What is FIRST Tech Challenge?

FIRST Tech Challenge is a robotics competition where you build and program a robot to play in a robot game. There’s a different game every year.

This year’s game is called Decode. The main way to score points is by getting balls, called artifacts, into your alliance’s goal. The game is played with two alliances of two robots each — so there are four robots playing on a 12-foot by 12-foot field during each match.

Each match starts with 30 seconds of autonomous period where the robot runs using pre-programmed logic. Then there are 2 minutes of teleop period where the robot can be remote controlled by drivers.

Our Robots

Robot 1: The Starter Bot

Our first robot was based on a starter bot from a company called GoBilda. A starter bot is a robot you can build from a kit using instructions that can do the basic things necessary to play the game — and it’s a great way for a new team to get up and running quickly.

Starter bot frame under construction Starter bot with flywheel and artifacts loaded

The starter bot used a tank drive — it had a different motor powering each side’s wheels. If both sides turned the same direction, the robot drove straight. If they turned in opposite directions, the robot spun around.

Team members wiring the starter bot Wiring the starter bot electronics

A human player could load 3 artifacts into the robot when it was in the loading zone. When the robot was ready to launch an artifact, the flywheel spun up to speed, and then two servos spun wheels to feed an artifact into the launcher — and the artifact shot up and into the goal. We added a servo for adjustable launch angle and variable launch speed so that we could shoot from farther away from the goal.

The starter bot taught us a lot, but we wanted to take things to the next level — so we moved on to building a much more capable robot.

Robot 2: The RI3D Bot

Our current robot is based on GoBilda’s Robot in 3 Days (RI3D) design.

This robot is a big upgrade from the starter bot:

We’re continuing to refine the robot — improving launcher consistency, fine-tuning autonomous routines, and working on auto-aim to hit the goal more reliably.

Competitions

Adventist Robotics FTC Carolina Scrimmage

March 1, 2026 · Our first-ever competition!

We competed in 5 qualification matches and finished 2nd in rankings out of 8 teams. Our focus on ranking points helped us pull ahead of the 3 other teams with a win/loss record of 3-2.

For alliance selection for the playoffs, the NC Avengers (team 26520) selected us as their alliance partner, and we graciously accepted! The first match did not go so well. Our auto-aim was off and we lost 60-76. The NC Avengers suggested that if our shots weren’t working so well we should focus on defense and preventing the other alliance from scoring. Using that strategy, we were able to come back from behind and win the next two matches convincingly to win the finals 2–1 and take home the championship together with the NC Avengers! 🏆

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