Good morning!
Back when I was younger, I used to watch a show called Robot Wars. Homemade metal robotic monstrosities, usually the size of a Roomba, controlled by participants, would duke it out in a ring. Some had chainsaws. Some shot out fire. Did I understand the rules? Not really. Did I love the show? Absolutely.
It turns out I wasn’t the only one who loved robots fighting each other. Over in East Vancouver, some people have even started their own league…
Let’s dive in.
— Geoff Sharpe, Lookout managing editor and founder
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WEATHER
Wednesday: 27 🌡️ 16 | 🌤️
Thursday: 19 🌡️ 14 | ☁️
Friday: 17 🌡️ 13 | 🌧️
EAST VANCOUVER
Vancouver’s underground robot combat league explodes onto the scene

Audience members enraptured by the robot battle as the robot-duck referee intervenes in the fight. Maddi Dellplain/Vancity Lookout
By Maddie Dellplain. Read the story here.
A chorus of gasps arose as Dumbo’s undercutting blade sliced its opponent’s plastic arm, sending it flying across the arena and colliding with the battle enclosure’s wall with a bullet-like “bang.”
This was the first time that Vancouver’s youngest (and only) registered robot combat league had seen an international competitor — and it stretched the local bots to their limits.
“I'm really nervous for the one-pound bracket now because … all our baby bots are going to get completely destroyed,” Vancouver Combat Robots founder Tara Lee Guild had presciently said ahead of the competition.
Guild is the founder and ring announcer for the league, which she began hosting six months ago at the Vancouver Hack Space, a non-profit workshop near Commercial Drive and Venables.
Even though Dumbo’s presence posed a potentially fatal risk to several of the eight, one-pound robots that Guild had built for the league, she said she takes it as an excellent indication of the group’s growing popularity.
Plus, the audience of roughly 50 enthusiasts of all ages absolutely loved it.
Crowds gather to watch Dumbo face off with Collateral Damage at the Vancouver Combat Robots June 13 battle. Maddi Dellplain/Vancity Lookout
Gasps were replaced by cheers as Dumbo’s victory over his opponent, Collateral Damage, was made official.
Guild’s voice filled the room, an echo reverberating at the end of each word as she thundered into the microphone. “Robot murder happened today… Collateral Damage has been damaged... Collaterally-y-y-y.”
‘We went full bore into this little hobby of ours’
A visual artist by trade, Guild stumbled into the unusual sport after she brought home copies of Make Magazine from the Vancouver Hack Space for her then nine-year-old son, Oscar. “One of the [magazines] just happened to focus on robotics and had this big flaming photo of a robot inside,” she said.
Oscar immediately took to the hobby, and the pair began ordering robot-making kits to build their own, eventually culminating in a trip to Las Vegas, where they got to see large, professional robots fight live during the filming of the TV series BattleBots.
“We were just enthralled…it was almost like a wrestling vibe. There's trash talking and a big walk-in with music, and a lot of showmanship,” said Guild.
Tara Lee Guild, founder and announcer at Vancouver Combat Robots. Maddi Dellplain/Vancity Lookout
When the two returned, Oscar requested a robot-combat-themed birthday party, quickly igniting a robot-battle craze among his classmates at Britannia Elementary School. “[The robot battle birthday party] started a lot of buzz with the kids,” Guild said. “So we just went full bore into this little hobby of ours.”
Launching an underground robot combat league
After building a bulletproof plexiglass arena from materials a volunteer let her dig out of his yard, Guild got approval from the Hack Space to use its workshop as a venue. By mid-January, the Vancouver Combat Robots were officially ready for battle.
Six months later, Guild said local interest in the sport has “really taken off.”
On the 13th of every month, spectators and drivers alike cram into the lower level of the Hack Space, cheering on their favourite robots during roughly 90 minutes worth of three-minute-long battle rounds.
Twenty-seven-year-old Bellingham, Washington, resident Liam Farrington, the builder and driver of June 13’s victorious robot, Dumbo, was delighted to make his way to Vancouver to compete.
“I moved to the Bellingham area about a year ago, and I just assumed there was a Vancouver scene, and [at the time] there wasn't,” said Farrington. “When I heard about this, I was like, ‘Oh, that's perfect. I can go and compete and have some fun.’”
Farrington has been a long-time enthusiast of the BattleBots TV show, which first aired in 2000. He credits a recent resurgence in robot combat fandom to the show’s re-airing in 2015. But he said the hobby has been around since at least the early 1990s, when BattleBots’ successor, Robot Wars, ran in America and the U.K.
Despite his long-term interest in the sport, Farrington only started building his own bots two years ago. In that time, the hobby has led him to travel to five U.S. states and now internationally.
Liam Farrington during and after Dumbo the robot’s victorious battle. Maddi Dellplain/Vancity Lookout
He added that he planned to go to the National Havoc Robot League competition in Connecticut the following week, even though he “didn’t expect to do very well” against the other 152 robots registered.
For Farrington, the down-to-earth atmosphere at Guild’s Vancouver Combat Robots was a major draw when deciding to make the trip across the border.
Dumbo, Farrington’s robot that took the grand prize for the one-pound bracket on June 13 (a $75 gift card to Down Low Chicken Shack), is a roughly foot-long rectangular robot with giant squishy wheels. He has a fierce undercutting blade designed to pop wheels and decimate his opponents, and he added, “the most important weapon” of all — googly eyes.
“I love the underground vibe here. Because the level of competition is maybe a bit lower than, like, Seattle or something, it's safer to try… something that’s wacky and crazy and might not work… and I love that,” said Farrington.
‘Don’t underestimate the kids. Seriously.’
For robot combat hobbyists like Farrington, Guild, and her son, Oscar, a typical one-pound robot can cost about $200 to build, with heavier, more advanced robots costing anywhere from several hundred to tens of thousands of dollars.
But at the Vancouver Robot Combat league’s one-to-three-pound Fairy and AntWeight classes, respectively, most of the materials involved are relatively inexpensive, depending in part on the calibre of the robot’s weapon.
While it's not unusual for professional robot leagues to feature robots with spinning axes, flamethrowers, or massive “flippers” capable of lifting and flipping opponents weighing upwards of 200 pounds, Guild, as a parent and self-proclaimed “safety queen,” tries to keep the contestants' creative imaginings somewhat contained.
“We want you to be as creative as you can… but we have rules like no fire, for example. I had to say no to someone who wanted to make a dry ice robot,” she laughed. “I just was like, I feel like that's gonna have cascading problems.”
But even with limits on the more extreme weapon options, these one-pound robots can really pack a punch. The enclosure for the arena that Guild constructed is made of bulletproof plexiglass and has a lid to keep everyone, particularly the youngest first-row onlookers, safe.
Oscar is frequently among them. “My favourite part is when the exciting fights happen, where bots end up maybe even hitting the roof from large hits,” Oscar told Vancity Lookout.
Oscar and his classmates seated front row at the Vancouver Combat Robots battle. Maddi Dellplain/Vancity Lookout
Even though Oscar’s robot, Game Over, was victorious in the three-pound bracket at the June 13 event, Guild said the kids can build a lot of resilience by weathering the highs and lows of the hobby.
When robots get destroyed or don’t work as planned, it can be “heartbreaking,” she said. “It sucks so much, but that's why, in a month, we could just try again… we’re trying to produce creative ideas and want people to try new things and not be afraid to fail.”
Along with lessons in resilience and a whole lot of fun, Guild said the hobby has a lot to offer kids and adults alike. “You're having fun, and you're also learning about motors and materials … like different types of metals that are stronger, and ways to fabricate them… It’s an entry into [engineering and] robotics for sure.”
For Farrington, “robot combat combines design, engineering, driving, and destruction in a way that nothing else does, and I love all four of those things.”
When asked about some of his younger competitors, Farrington added, “Don’t underestimate the kids. Seriously. Some of the best drivers are kids.”
For those looking to get involved, Guild welcomed anyone to come by to watch or compete for free with their own homemade bot at the Vancouver Hack Space on the 13th of every month.
She is also hoping to secure sponsors for the events and notes that the arena is currently seeking an official name.
Guild encouraged those who are interested to find out more or to watch live streams of the battles on Vancouver Combat Robots’ Instagram and YouTube channel.
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THE VANCOUVER NUMBER
19
I can’t believe we’re even writing this, but this is the number of times a man climbed the Grouse Grind in one day as part of the 2026 Multi Grouse Grind Challenge. He completed that in 15 hours and three minutes. That’s like hiking two Mount Everests. [CTV]
THE AGENDA
👍 Enjoying the Granville Street Pedestrian Zone? The city is in discussions about keeping the street setup beyond the World Cup into August. Read more. [CTV]
🏢 The federal and B.C. governments’ plan to purchase unsold condos and turn them into affordable housing could reduce the unsold condo inventory in Metro Vancouver by 50 per cent. Read more. [Urbanized]
📉 A new analysis suggests there may be an office space shortage in Vancouver, even though the vacancy rate is currently on the high side at 12.9 per cent. But that may drop to 6.2 per cent in 2029, partially due to a decline in future planned office space. Read more. [Urbanized]
🏊 Proponents of building a 50-metre pool at the new Vancouver Aquatic Centre lost their bid for an interim injunction to stop the facility from shutting down at the end of June. That is different from the main legal action, which focused on what they say was a misappropriation of funds authorized in a plebiscite for a 50-metre pool replacement, not the planned 25-metre pool. Read more. [CBC]
📈 In what anyone who lives in B.C. would say is not a surprise, A new report from Royal LePage indicates that not a single community in B.C. is within the top 15 of affordable home ownership in Canada. In Vancouver, it takes at least 80 per cent of monthly income to pay for a mortgage. Read more. [Vancouver Sun]
🪧 A strike by the union that represents 5,000 Coast Mountain Bus Company employees at TransLink has been averted, with both sides reaching a tentative deal. The agreement still needs to be approved by both sides. Read more. [CityNews]
👮 Vancouver police have used drones for years, but recently added new ones that can fly to scenes on their own, and record videos when a pilot enables the camera. Experts expect drone use to expand over time, but it raises questions about what drones are legally allowed to record, and there is little information on whether Canadian appeals courts have ruled on police drone use. Read more. [Vancouver Sun]
❌ As of yesterday, Locarno, Kitsilano, Sunset and English Bay are not suitable for swimming due to E. coli. Be sure to check Vancouver’s beach water quality for updates.
HOME OF THE WEEK

Realtor.ca
I love living in Mount Pleasant. And you can too with this lovely two-bedroom apartment. It’s a decent size at 731 square feet, faces south, which is great for plants (less for summer heat), has a beautiful living room layout, modern kitchen appliances and a patio.
EVENT GUIDE
Black Music Month Festival | City Centre Artists Lodge, 2111 Main St | June 26-27 | A lineup of artists featuring soul, rock, punk and more | Tickets $20+
Seasons Pass - England World Cup | The London Pub | Various dates | Love English football? Then this season’s pass to watch the games at the London Pub is for you | Tickets $150
Vancouver Fruit Tree Project 2026 Season Kickoff Fundraiser | Riley Park Community Garden | June 25, 6:30-8:30 p.m. | Live music, snacks and a great way to connect with the community | Tickets by donation
Listening Party: On Shuffle | VS Creative Lab | June 27, 7-11 p.m. | Intimate listening party for music lovers and creatives, with hip hop, R&B and more | Tickets $23
Run Tacos DJ | Waterfront Station | June 27, 11 a.m.-2 p.m. | 5k run, tacos and music! Tickets $7
Kitsilano Beach Cleanup | Kitsilano Beach | June 29, 5-7:30 p.m. | Community beach cleanup to help protext B.C.’s coast | Free
West End Market | Comx between Bute and Thurlow | Saturdays until Oct. 31, 9 a.m.-2 p.m. | Communited focused farmes market | Free
Vancouver Folk Festival | Jericho Beach Park | July 17-19 | It’s the 49th edition of one of the best music festivals in the city | Tickets $70+
Say Wha?! Readings of Deliciously Rotten Writing | Little Mountain Gallery - 110 Water Street | Tuesday, July 28, 7:30 p.m. | A comedy show where funny people give presentations about terrible books.
Tinariwen | Chan Centre for the Performing Arts | Sept. 4, 8 p.m. | 10 albums and over 45 years into their career, Tuareg musical pioneers and Grammy-winners Tinariwen are coming to the Chan Centre | Tickets $50+
MUSIC
The rise of Vancouver's listening bars
As the city has spent decades losing its independent music venues, a quieter revolution is taking hold in restaurants and bars
COMMUNITY HIGHLIGHTS
You can subscribe for free to our wine expert Brent Gushowaty's monthly newsletter for all the best values, independently reviewed and rated, under $30.00 in BC government liquor stores. winebargainsbc.substack.com [Substack]
Here are some good places to watch the Canada-Switzerland game. [Vancouver is Awesome]
This is what the False Creek Harbour looks like without any boats in it due to the World Cup exclusion zone.
Robson Street is getting a ton of free summer concerts. [Straight]
The Mo Salah videos of the Egyptian soccer legend celebrating in Vancouver are iconic.
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VANCOUVER WORDLE
Think you can guess today’s Vancouver Wordle? Play it here.
PHOTO OF THE DAY

It’s hard not to share photos like this…




