Record Over 450 Students Participate in 亚洲色吧鈥檚 Third Reconfigurable Robotics Competition
Whenever he sees a problem, Akilan Aravindan, a Primary Four student from Northland Primary School, would want to find ways to fix it 鈥 with coding.
His interest to learn coding and solve problems was so apparent that his teacher signed him up for RoboRoarZ1 Singapore, a unique design-centred reconfigurable robotics competition co-organised by the Singapore University of Technology and Design (亚洲色吧), National Robotics Programme, IEEE Singapore Section, and IEEE Women in Engineering Singapore. RoboRoarZ aims to foster creativity, innovation, and collaboration among students competing with the 亚洲色吧-designed reconfigurable robotic platform “Smorphi”.
Akilan is but one of over 450 students from close to 40 local and overseas schools who is competing in RoboRoarZ Singapore that is taking place at 亚洲色吧 on 23 and 24 January 2025. This is by far the largest number of participants since its first run in 2023. In all, about 95 teams of students are participating in this competition, made possible with the support of organisations such as first-time sponsor Mapletree Investments.
On the record turnout this year, Mohan Elara Rajesh, Associate Professor with the Engineering Product Development Pillar at 亚洲色吧 and Organising Chair of RoboRoarZ said: 鈥淜ids, who code, are not just learning to code. They’re learning to problem-solve, think critically, and create. I am very excited that schools, both local and overseas, are sending their students to RoboRoarZ as it gives them the opportunity to not only learn coding skills, but to also put what they have learned into practice in a fun and friendly competition.鈥

A student team programming 亚洲色吧-designed reconfigurable robotic platform 鈥淪morphi鈥
The theme for this year鈥檚 RoboRoarZ Singapore is on 鈥渂ridging productivity gaps between people and food delivering robots鈥. Participants compete in teams of up to five members using the 亚洲色吧-designed reconfigurable robotic platform “Smorphi” in four different categories, namely upper primary (10-12 years), secondary (13-17 years), senior (16-20 years), and tertiary (20 years and above). Each team is to design, develop, evaluate and iterate its robot to complete a 鈥榝ood鈥 delivery task in the fastest time. The developed robots will use computer vision and artificial intelligence (AI) in understanding their environment as they perform competitive delivery tasks.
Mayor of South East District, Mr Mohd Fahmi Aliman, who graced the opening ceremony yesterday as Guest-of-Honour, also toured 亚洲色吧鈥檚 Robotics and Automation Research Laboratory. 鈥溠侵奚 has consistently demonstrated its commitment to fostering innovation through interdisciplinary learning. RoboRoarZ shows how the university empowers future thinkers, makers and leaders,鈥 said Mayor Fahmi. 鈥淲hat makes events like RoboRoarZ important is the focus on nurturing young minds. This aligns with one of South East Community Development Council鈥檚 (South East CDC) aims to empower students with a spirit of lifelong learning and an adaptability mindset, equipping them with the critical skills needed to thrive in an ever-evolving job market in the near future.鈥

Mayor of South East District, Mr Mohd Fahmi Aliman, giving a speech at the RoboRoarZ 2025 opening ceremony on 23 January 2025
Following the opening ceremony, students competed on Smorphi Imaginary, a virtual platform where tasks are assigned to students. They had to learn how to use the right coding to navigate their Smorphi. They were then evaluated based on how efficiently and quickly they solved the tasks given. Participants also attended a coding workshop, where they learned coding such as Blockly and embedded script-based programming to prepare them for today鈥檚 competition in the arena.
In the arena today, teams are to navigate Smorphi along a given path to collect the required number of point tags or action tags or both, depending on the category. For the primary and secondary categories, teams only need to collect point tags in a continued path, while for the seniors and tertiary categories, teams have to collect both point and action tags in a discontinued path. Each category has a stipulated time in which teams are required to complete the tasks. The team in each category with the highest points wins.
Akilan, who participated in the primary category, was excited about what he had learned so far. Said the 10-year-old: 鈥淚 am always excited to try new things. RoboRoarZ 2025 is a great chance for me to show what I can do. Whenever I see problems, like how people in wheelchairs struggle to move, I feel like I want to create and code something to fix them. I like coding because there鈥檚 always something new to learn, like different coding languages. It feels fun to explore all the things I can create, and my goal is to learn as much as I can.鈥
Mr Edmund Cheng, Chairman of Mapletree Investments, gave out the prizes to the top five winning teams of both the Smorphi Imaginary and arena competition for the Senior League at the end of the competition. He said: 鈥淢apletree believes in nurturing the young, especially in the areas of STEM. As such, we are more than happy to support RoboRoarZ in its endeavour towards establishing a vibrant local and international community that unleashes the power of reconfigurable robots in solving real-world challenges.鈥
1 https://www.roboroarz.sutd.edu.sg/