Robot Wars (TV series)

This article is about the British television series. For other uses, see Robot Wars.
Robot Wars
Also known as Robot Wars Extreme (2001–2003)
Genre Technological game show
Created by Tom Gutteridge
Steve Carsey
Directed by Stuart McDonald
Presented by Jeremy Clarkson (1998)
Craig Charles (1998–2004)
Dara Ó Briain (2016)
Starring Philippa Forrester (1998–2000, 2002–2003)
Julia Reed (2000–2001)
Jayne Middlemiss (2003–2004)
Angela Scanlon (2016)
Voices of Stuart McDonald (Voice of the Robots)
Narrated by Jonathan Pearce
Country of origin United Kingdom
Original language(s) English
No. of series 7 (Domestic)
2 (Extreme)
9 (Overall)
No. of episodes 125 (Domestic)
30 (Extreme)
155 (Overall)
Production
Camera setup Multi-camera
Running time 30 minutes (1998–1999)
45 minutes (1999–2003)
60 minutes (2003–2004, 2016)
Production company(s) TV21 (1998–2001)
Mentorn (2001–2004, 2016)
Distributor Passion Distribution
Release
Original network BBC Two (1998–2003, 2016)
BBC One (2000)
BBC Choice (2001–2003)
Five (2003-2004)
Picture format 4:3 (1998–2001)
16:9 (2001–04, 2016–)
Original release Original series:
20 February 1998 (1998-02-20) – 28 March 2004 (2004-03-28)
Revived series:
2016 – present

Robot Wars is a British technological game show that was first broadcast on BBC Two from 20 February 1998 to 23 February 2001, then on BBC Choice from 8 October 2001 to 7 February 2003 (later repeated on BBC Two) and finally on Channel 5 from 2 November 2003 to 28 March 2004. A celebrity special was shown on BBC One on 27 December 2000. The show was originally presented by Jeremy Clarkson for the first series before Craig Charles took over until the seventh series. Philippa Forrester co-hosted the first three series, the fifth and Extreme 2. The fourth series and Extreme 1 were co-hosted by Julia Reed and the seventh by Jayne Middlemiss. Jonathan Pearce provided commentary for all series.

Additional series were filmed for specific sectors of the global market, including two series of Robot Wars Extreme Warriors with US competitors for the TNN network (hosted by Mick Foley with Rebecca Grant serving as pit reporter), two of Dutch Robot Wars for distribution in the Netherlands, and a single series for Germany. The fourth series of the UK Robot Wars was shown in the US on TNN as Robot Wars: Grand Champions in 2002, and hosted by Joanie Laurer.[1]

The series, centred on the sport of robot combat, involved teams of amateur and professional roboteers operating their own constructed robots to fight against each other in both friendly and tournament matches, whilst also avoiding arena hazards and more powerful "House Robots", which were not bound by the same weight or weapon limits as the contestants. Earlier series included assault and trial courses for competing robots before they were ceased from the first "Extreme" series onwards.

Its merchandising was commercially successful, being one of the most popular selling toy ranges in 2002. It included a mini arena, pullback toys and radio-controlled versions of Shunt, Matilda and Sir Killalot.[2]

In 2003, the roboteers themselves formed The Fighting Robot Association and with their associated event organizers, carry on participating in competitions for new audiences. In 2013, Roaming Robots purchased the rights to the Robot Wars brand from Robot Wars LLC and now operates their travelling robotic combat show under that name.[3]

With a peak audience of 6 million viewers in the UK during the late 1990s, the format went on to become a worldwide success, showing in 45 countries including the US, Australia, Canada, China, India, Germany and Italy. In March 2003, it was dropped by BBC Two after eight series and Mentorn announced it was making 22 episodes for Channel 5,[4] concluding with the World Championships.

On 13 January 2016, the BBC confirmed that it would be rebooting the show for a six-part series.[5] On 3 February 2016, BBC Press Office confirmed via Twitter that Dara Ó Briain will host the new series, with Angela Scanlon serving as pit reporter and Jonathan Pearce returning as commentator.[6]

History

Original Robot Wars logo from 1998 to 2003

Robot Wars was the brainchild of Marc Thorpe, a designer working for the LucasToys division of Lucasfilm.[7] In 1992, Thorpe had the initial idea for robot combat sport after unsuccessfully attempting to create a radio-controlled vacuum cleaner.[8] In 1994, Marc Thorpe created Robot Wars and held the first competition at the Fort Mason Center in San Francisco. Approximately one month prior to the event, Thorpe formed a partnership with New York-based record company Sm:)e Communications, later Profile Records, who provided additional funding.[7]

Between 1995 and 1997, three further Robot Wars events took place in America and, in 1995, Profile Records partnered with production company Mentorn to produce and televise a Robot Wars event in the UK. Mentorn acquired the worldwide television rights from Profile in 1995 after Tom Gutteridge (the head of Mentorn) had seen an amateur tape of a San Francisco event.

Gutteridge and one of his producers Steve Carsey created a television format based on the Robot Wars concept. They produced a live event opposite BBC Television Centre in Wood Lane, Shepherds Bush, London and hired Derek Foxwell to build 3 combat robots, 2 of which were named The Mouse and Grunt who would eventually take part in the first UK series of Robot Wars, to take on three American robots, Thor, La Machine and The Master, all of which were veterans of the original American competition. The Controller of BBC Two, Michael Jackson, attended the event, which was not filmed, and he promised to commission a series. However, it wasn't until 1998 that a subsequent Controller of BBC Two, Mark Thompson, fulfilled Jackson's promise and actually commissioned 6 episodes. Gutteridge and Carsey were producers and Foxwell was the technical supervisor and senior technical consultant. He drafted the rules and regulations and was in charge of the pit area and the technical team, which scrutineered the robots, got them on and off stage and helped the contestants prepare and repair their robots. Irvine, initially a member of the technical team, served as one of the judges.

On the first day, I was in the dressing room and looking in the mirror, and looking down at the arena. And they were pulling the robots into the arena on an invisible twine because nothing was working. And I was thinking: "Oh my God, what have I done with my career?" And you know, within the blink of an eye, it was the most watched show on BBC2.
Craig Charles on the success of Robot Wars in the late 90s and early 2000s which aired at 6:30 on Friday evening and attracted over 6 million viewers, [9]

Profile sought no input or consent from Thorpe before doing this, and this aggravated the already troubled relationship between Thorpe and Profile Records and indirectly spurred legal disagreements surrounding the ownership of the Robot Wars concept. The legal proceedings surrounding these would last until 6 February 2002.[8] Mentorn used Thorpe as a Consultant on the series, however, and the initial series of Robot Wars in the UK was broadcast over six weeks in February and March 1998. It was an immediate hit, with more than 2 million viewers, and a further 18 episodes were commissioned by the BBC that year. 155 episodes were produced in total, and the show was seen in 26 countries. Two series were produced in the US for the TNN (now Spike) network, and a version was also shown on Nickelodeon. Series were also produced in many European countries. Although the series had various directors and producers, all were produced in the UK by Mentorn, and executive produced by Tom Gutteridge and Steve Carsey. The initial series were staged in various film studios around London. But the stage and pit area became too large to fit into any of the conventional studios, so filming was later moved to an aircraft hangar at RAF Newton. The 2016 series was filmed in a warehouse at Westway Park in Renfrew.[10]

Viewing figures dropped significantly in the early 2000s from uninterest in the series reaching only 1.2 million in the sixth series - the final to be broadcast on BBC Two.[11]

Battle rules

A robot could lose a match in several ways during the knockout format of the show:

Although the format changed several times over the years, these rules remained the same across all series and competitions.

Format

Domestic

Series Competition Format The Heats The Semi-finals The Final Side-Events
1 Six robots in six heats. The winners met in a single melee fight to determine the champion. All six robots took on the Gauntlet with one eliminated. The remaining five took part in a trial with a further one eliminated. The final four took part in one-on-one Arena battles in a knockout format. There was no Semi-Final held The Final was held as a melee at the end of the final heat.
2 Six robots in twelve heats. The winners of each heat went into one of two semi-finals. Two robots from each semi-final reached the final show. All six robots took on the Gauntlet with one eliminated. The remaining five took part in a trial with a further one eliminated. The final four took part in one-on-one Arena battles in a knockout format. Arena battle knockout of two rounds plus a third place playoff.
3 Eight robots in sixteen heats. The sixteen heat winners reached one of two semi-finals. Two robots from each semi-final reached the final. Arena battle knockout of three rounds. Arena battle knockout of two rounds. 'Pinball Warrior', 'Football', the 'Middleweight Melee' and 'Walker Battles'
4 Six robots in sixteen heats. The sixteen heats winners reached one of two semi-finals. Two robots from each semi-final reached the final. Three-way Arena melee first round before two Arena knockout rounds. 'Pinball Warrior' and 'Sumo Basho'.
5 Eight robots in twelve heats. The twelve heat winners reached one of two semi-finals. Two robots from each semi-final reached the final. Arena battle knockout of three rounds Arena battle knockout of two rounds, with the three losers of the first round having competing in a second-chance three-way melee for a place in the second round.
6 Arena battle knockout of three rounds. The first round as a four-way melee with two qualifiers.
7 Eight robots in sixteen heats. The sixteen heat winners reached one of two semi-finals. Two robots from each semi-final reached the final. Arena battle knockout of two rounds. Qualifying bouts for the World Championships and fights from other weight classes
2016 Eight robots in five heats. The five heat winners would move on to the grand final along with a wildcard robot chosen by the judges. There was no Semi-Final held. The six remaining robots would all battle each other for the title in the final episode.

Extreme

There were also two series made for the UK, Robot Wars Extreme, which did not focus on a single championship.

Extreme 1 Events These tournaments and themed battles continued over the entire series
All-Star Tournament Six robots in six heats. The winners met in a single melee fight to determine the champion.
Annihilator Six-way battles with one robot eliminated per round.
Challenge Belt Where robots would try and defend their honor for the challenge belt.
Mayhems Three-way battles to progress to the series annihilators.
Tag Team Terror Two robots team up and fight tag-team style.
Vengeance Battle This allowed robots with unfinished business or grudges to settle things once and for all.
Wildcard Warriors Newcomers take on established robots.
Extreme 2 Added Events This series followed one theme over each episode
New Blood A new robot tournament.
Iron Maidens Women took control.
Robot Rampage A tournament with the weight restrictions lifted.
University Challenge All robots were entered by Universities.
Commonwealth Carnage All robots were from teams based in the Commonwealth.

Presenters

Main presenters
Pearce
Jonathan Pearce, commentator
Charles
Craig Charles (1998–2004)

The first series of Robot Wars was presented by Jeremy Clarkson and co-hosted by Philippa Forrester. In keeping with his edgy persona established on Top Gear, Clarkson frequently made tongue-in-cheek jokes about competitors and their robots, such as remarking that a contestant robot called "Skarab" looked like "cheese on toast".[12] Clarkson left Robot Wars after the first series and was replaced with Craig Charles.[13] Charles, well known as playing the character Dave Lister in the science fiction-themed sitcom Red Dwarf,[14] was seen as taking the programme and its contestants more seriously than Clarkson, and was more enthusiastic while presenting it.[12] Charles would close each episode with a four line poem ending with the words " Robot Wars". Charles presented Robot Wars until it ceased production in 2004.

"My son, Jack, was a fan of the first series and said I should get involved. So I made a few phone calls and the rest is history."

-Craig Charles speaking on how he got involved with Robot Wars.

In comparison to Charles' background in science fiction, Philippa Forrester was best known as co-host of the science and technology programme Tomorrow's World.[15] Her role on Robot Wars was as the pit reporter[16] who would speak to contestants about their robots before and after battles. Forrester was pit reporter for six of the show's nine series; Julia Reed took the role for Series 4 and Extreme 1 since Forrester was unable to participate in the programme due to pregnancy, but Forrester returned for Series 5, Series 6 and Extreme 2. When the programme moved to Channel 5 for the seventh series, Forrester did not return for unknown reasons, so Jayne Middlemiss took over the pit reporter duties.[13]

Jonathan Pearce was the show's commentator throughout its entire run. He commentated in the same loud and enthusiastic manner as his football commentaries.[17] The programme was well known for phrases such as "Roboteers, stand by", "3. 2. 1. Activate" and "Cease!". These phrases were announced by the director, Stuart McDonald and became a recognisable part of the series for the entire duration of its run.[18]

In 2016, Dara Ó Briain and Angela Scanlon were announced as the hosts of its first series in twelve years, with Jonathan Pearce returning as commentator.

House robots

Throughout the series, house robots acted as obstacles to competing robots in battles and challenges. House robots were permitted to attack robots that were in the Control Patrol Zones at the corners of the arena or upon the submission of a competing robot. The house robots were an intrinsic part of the programme's success and merchandising of these robots was highly successful.[19] Furthermore, the house robots were not subject to the 100 kg weight limit or weapon rules that contestant robots had to adhere to, the most notable example of this was Sergeant Bash's flamethrower.

Bold text indicate house robots that returned for the new series.

House Robot First Competed Weight/kg Speed/mph Height/cm Length/cm Width/cm Power Weaponry Strengths Weakness Method
Cassius Chrome Seventh War 250 20 85 130 100 2x24V magnetic drive motors Two rotary driven interchangeable "fists" and front shovel. Fastest House Robot Requires attack time, high ground clearance High speed ramming
Dead Metal First War 112 12 70 160 100 Battery driven motors Hydraulic pincers and 3000rpm circular saw Synergy of Weapons Poor manoeuvrability Grabbing a competitor robot and engaging the saw
Growler Sixth War 375 17 76 152 130 Six Batteries and Two Electric Motors 3000psi Front Jaws Speed and sheer destructive power Unpredictable Grabs with jaws to push
Matilda First War 116 8 66 140 66 Battery driven engine Pneumatic tusks and rear chainsaw or 27 kg vertical flywheel Tough Exo-skeleton Lacks self-control Lifts with tusks or hits with rear weapon
Mr. Psycho Sixth War 750 8 150 163 145 12 Battery 30 kg Hammer and Grabbing Claw of 5 ton force Biggest House Robot High Battery Usage Hammer strike or Claw grab
Refbot Fourth War 120 7 130 140 90 Battery Power Front and Rear Scoops; Electric Countout; Fire Extinguisher and Coloured Card non-competitive non-competitive N/A
Sergeant Bash First War 120 8 90 140 90 Four Batteries Propane fueled flamethrower and Front Hydraulic Pincers Long-Range Weaponry Limited Fuel Capacity Engage Flamethrower or Grabbing with jaws
Shunt First War 105 10 70 130 110 "Prototype Cold-Fusion Engine Front ramming plough, rear lifting scoop & pneumatic diamond edge axe High Pushing Power Lightest and has no side self-righting mechanisms Hit with axe or push
Sir Killalot Second War 281 5 130 120 120 Petrol Engine Rotating drill lance and hydraulic claws Heavy with powerful weaponry Slowest House Robot Spike with lance / Grab with claw

Arena and hazards

Arenas

There were numerous arena incarnations used during the original run of Robot Wars on the BBC. These arenas were also used by international versions such as Robot Wars: Extreme Warriors in the United States. The arena was approximately 32 feet by 48 feet. For Series 1 to 3 the Arena was not enclosed as such as the audience were raised above the arena. The increasing sophistication of weaponry from contestant robots - most notably demonstrated by Hypnodisc in series 3 - as well as arena hazards prompted producers to enclose the arena entirely in a perspex box 20 feet high from Series 4 onwards to protect the audience and production team from debris. Although the perspex screen mullions and transoms impaired the live audiences' view as well as external views of the arena on television, on numerous occasions it proved to be necessary. The floor flipper would send lighter robots (such as featherweight contests) out of the arena and straight into the perspex box. Furthermore, items from the drop zone were often unpredictable, most notably when Matilda obliterated a television screen with her flywheel sending shards of glass strewn across the arena.

In early 2004 the Robot Wars arena was purchased from the television production firm Mentorn by a company called Robot Arenas Ltd., based in the UK, an organization set up by a past competitor in Robot Wars to continue the sport of robot combat in the UK.

The Robot Wars arenavalued originally at £11,000was sold for scrap in 2005 for £250 by the new owners of the former RAF Newton air base, where the arena was housed. A suit filed against RAF Newton by Robot Arenas Ltd. found that RAF Newton had acted reasonably in the matter and owed no compensation to Robot Arenas Ltd.[20]

Hazards

Throughout Robot Wars run, arena hazards were introduced and amended. Generally hazards which proved ineffective were omitted in later series however some hazards proved to be a success such as the Pit of Oblivion, Floor Flipper and the Drop Zone and were retained for the entire original run of the show. The assorted hazards in the arena that changed from one series the next included:

Competitors and results

Domestic Championships results
Series Winner Grand Finalists
1 Roadblock Recyclopse Robot The Bruce Cunning Plan Bodyhammer T.R.A.C.I.E.
Series Winner Runner-up Third Place Fourth Place
2 Panic Attack Cassius Roadblock Killertron
3 Chaos 2 Hypno-Disc Firestorm Steg-O-Saw-Us
4 Chaos 2 Pussycat Stinger Hypno-Disc
5 Razer Bigger Brother Firestorm 3 Hypno-Disc
6 Tornado Razer Firestorm 4 Terrorhurtz
7 Typhoon 2 Storm 2 Tornado X-Terminator
Series Winner Grand Finalists
2016 TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD
Special Championships results
Championship Winner Runner-up
International League Championship Razer (England) Diotior (Republic of Ireland)
Championship Winner Runner-up Semi-Finalists
Celebrity Special Pussycat (Adam Woodyatt & Natalie Casside) Diotior (Vic Reeves) Gemini (Anthea & Wendy Turner) Sir Chromalot (Shane Lynch)
Championship Winner Runner-up Third Place Fourth Place
Tag Team Terror King B3 & 101 Firestorm 2 & Scorpion Bigger Brother & Plunderbird 4 X-Terminator 2 & Invertabrat
Championship Winner Runner-up
Annihilator North Spikasaurus Dominator 2
Annihilator South Razer Onslaught
Championship Winner Runner-up Semi-Finalists
First World Championship Razer (England) Behemoth (England) 101 (England) Diotior (Republic of Ireland)
War of Independence Mortis (UK) Frenzy (USA) Ming 2 (UK) Panic Attack (UK)
Second World Championship Razer (UK) Drillzilla (USA) Manta (USA) Tornado (UK)
The Forces Anvil (RAF) Mega-Hurts (Navy) Oblark (Fire Brigade) Sub-Version (Submariners)
Championship Winners Semi-Finalists
UK vs. Germany Fluffy (UK) Das Gepäck (Germany) 259 (UK) Delldog (Germany)
Championship Winner Runner-up Semi-Finalists
European Championship Tornado (UK) Philipper 2 (Belgium) Black Hole (Germany) Razer (UK)
Championship Winner Runner-up
Annihilator Kan-Opener Ripper
Championship Winner Runner-up Semi-Finalists
All Star Championship Pussycat Dantomkia Kat 3 Panic Attack
Third World Championship Storm 2 (UK) Supernova (Sri Lanka) Crushtacean (South Africa) Tough As Nails (Netherlands)

The competing robots are listed in Category:Robot Wars competitors.

Merchandise

Toys

A Sir Killalot toy

Pullback and friction toys were made of all the House Robots, with the exception of Cassius Chrome as the toys had stopped production when he was introduced for the final series. There were also pullback and ripcord toys of Chaos 2, Dantomkia, Firestorm, Hypno-Disc, Panic Attack, Pussycat, Razer, Stinger, Tornado, Wheely Big Cheese and X-Terminator 2. Each came with an accessory.

There were remote controlled versions of Shunt, Matilda, Sir Killalot, and Growler. There also were smaller remote control battlers, which had "imobolisation spots" on the rear of the toy. Sgt. Bash, and the competitor robot Tornado were the only two made. These were smaller than the other remote control robots mentioned above.

There were customisable kit toys of the House Robot Matilda, and competitors Hypno-Disc and Panic Attack. A Sergeant Bash pitstop kit was prototyped but never released.

Minibots were a series of small die-cast replica robots. The range included all of the Series 5 House Robots along with competitor robots Chaos 2, Dominator 2, Firestorm III, Gemini, Hypno-Disc, Mega Morg, Panic Attack, Plunderbird 5, Pussycat, Razer, Suicidal Tendencies, Tornado, Wheely Big Cheese, Wild Thing and X-Terminator 2. They had an interactive replica arena and two additional playsets.

Home media

Several VHS videos were released of the show. These included "The First Great War" a look at the making of Series 1, "The First World Championship" which was released exclusively on video at the time and the "Ultimate Warrior Collection" featuring exclusive access to the teams of Chaos 2, Hypno-Disc and Razer, along with footage of their battles. Along the same lines a "Ultimate Archive Collection" was released showing exclusive footage of the House Robots and their operators along with some of their greatest battles and most embarrassing moments.

The Ultimate Warrior Collection, Ultimate Archive Collection and First Great War were also released on DVD. The footage and content remained the same as the VHS releases.

Video games

Robot Wars: Metal Mayhem is the first game based on the show, released on Game Boy Color in 2000. It followed in 2001 by Robot Wars: Arenas of Destruction on PlayStation 2, Microsoft Windows and Game Boy Advance. After the first two titles sold over 250,000 copies, a third and final game, released on Game Boy Advance, Microsoft Windows and Xbox in 2002 called Robot Wars: Extreme Destruction.[2]

Other

A huge array of other merchandise was produced due to the success of the show. Items available included mugs, glasses, mobile phone covers, toiletries, stationery, clocks, watches, bedding, curtains and clothing. The show even produced an unsuccessful single, which peaked at number 51 in the UK singles charts in December 2000, called "Sir Killalot Vs. Robo Babe - Robot Wars (Android Love)".[21]

Transmissions

Domestic

Series Start date End date Episodes
1 20 February 1998 27 March 1998 6
2 6 November 1998 5 March 1999 15
3 3 December 1999 21 April 2000 19
4 22 September 2000 23 February 2001 19
5 6 May 2002 27 May 2002 15
6 16 September 2002 4 October 2002 15
7 2 November 2003 7 March 2004 19

Extreme

Series Start date End date Episodes
1 8 October 2001 26 October 2001 15
2 13 January 2003 31 January 2003 15

Specials

Date Entitle
31 December 1998 The Making of Robot Wars
12 March 1999 The Grudge Matches
19 March 1999 The Best of Robot Wars
15 September 2000 International League Championship
27 December 2000 Celebrity Special
28 December 2000 Tag Team Terror
29 December 2000 Northern Annihilator
30 December 2000 Southern Annihilator
31 December 2000 War of Independence
16 November 2001 First World Championship
14 December 2001 Second World Championship
21 December 2001 The Forces
10 January 2003 UK vs. Germany
7 February 2003 European Championship
14 March 2004 Annihilator
21 March 2004 All Star Championship
28 March 2004 Third World Championship

US Robot Wars

A forerunner to the UK Series, The 1994 Robot Wars in San Francisco, California featured three different 'games' for each of three robot weight classes:

The FACE-OFF paired robots to battle through an elimination tournament. A robot won a match by immobilizing its opponent, either by damage or by pinning. If both robots were still mobile at the end of ten minutes, they both advanced to the next round of the tournament.
The MOB SCENE was a free-for-all melee fight amongst multiple robots. There were two Mob Scene fights: one for lightweight robots, and a never-repeated 'all weight classes' melee.
The ESCORT event had a single competitor robot escort a defenseless "drone" robot across the arena while a "house robot" attempted to attack the drone. The successful escort with the lowest time was declared the winner. The Escort event was contested only in 1994.

Weight classes for the first event were:

Lightweight: 10 to 40 pounds
Middleweight: 41 to 70 pounds
Heavyweight: 71 to 100 pounds
Superheavyweight 101 to 170 pounds

The competition format remained much the same through 1997. Additional safety regulations were implemented each year, match length was trimmed to 5 minutes, a 'featherweight' weight class was added, and weight allowances crept upward; by 1997 the heavyweight maximum was 170 pounds.

The 1997 judging criteria removed pinning an opponent for 30 seconds as an automatic win and required such immobilization techniques to be limited to one minute. The 1997 judging criteria also removed 'audience applause' for selection of a winner when a match ended with both robots still mobile. Robots were judged by a panel based upon a point system that took into account three factors: damage, aggression, and control. Of these three factors, damage was the primary criteria for determining a winner.

Nickelodeon Robot Wars

In 2002, the American television network Nickelodeon created Nickelodeon Robot Wars, in which children operated combat robots provided by American teams.

See also

References

  1. TV.com. "Robot Wars: Grand Champions". TV.com. Retrieved 2013-12-01.
  2. 1 2 "Robot Wars Activated on Xbox". BBC. Retrieved 2013-12-01.
  3. "Roaming Robots News".
  4. "BBC NEWS - Entertainment - Robot Wars leaves BBC".
  5. "Robot Wars rebooted for BBC Two". bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 2016-01-13.
  6. "BBC Press Office on Twitter". Twitter.
  7. 1 2 "Robot Wars History". Marc Thorpe. Retrieved 2006-11-19.
  8. 1 2 "Robot Wars History". RobotCombat.com. Retrieved 2006-11-19.
  9. "Interview with Craig Charles". outlineonline.co.uk. Retrieved 2016-03-07.
  10. "VIDEO: Robot Wars set to return to our screens ... filmed in a warehouse in Renfrew". Herald Scotland. 7 February 2016. Retrieved 2016-03-21.
  11. "Saturday night switch for Robot Wars". The Guardian. 21 November 2003. Retrieved 2016-03-13.
  12. 1 2 "Robot Wars". SphereTV. Retrieved 2006-11-18.
  13. 1 2 "The Presenters". Robots Rule. Retrieved 2006-11-18.
  14. "Dave Lister Biography". The SadGeezers Guide. Archived from the original on 2006-10-21. Retrieved 2006-11-19.
  15. "Philippa Forrester". BBC Radio Bristol. Retrieved 2006-11-19.
  16. "Philippa Forrester". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved 2006-11-19.
  17. metrowebukmetro (2009-10-27). "Jonathan Pearce | Metro News". Metro.co.uk. Retrieved 2013-12-01.
  18. "Robot Wars is Finally Coming Back to BBC After 12 Years". screenrant.com. 13 January 2016. Retrieved 2016-03-03.
  19. "Robot Wars returns: How well do you remember the House Robots?". Metro. 14 January 2016. Retrieved 2016-03-01.
  20. "Robot wars battle arena case decided". The Daily Telegraph (London). 8 February 2010.
  21. http://www.theofficialcharts.com/search-results-album/_/Robot+Wars+(Android+Love)#single

External links

Wikiquote has quotations related to: Robot Wars (TV series)
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Robot Wars.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, May 05, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.