First-year team.Two-time champions.
We are FTC Team #26336, a robotics team of middle and high school students from Sammamish, Washington. In our first FTC season we won both league meets and captained a playoff alliance, backed by five years of FIRST competition and three trips to the World Championship.
Built on five
years of FIRST.
Most first-year FTC teams spend their first tournament learning to drive. We won ours, then won the next one too. The Incredibots are middle and high school students from Sammamish, Washington, with five seasons of FIRST competition behind us.
Before FTC, our members competed for five seasons in FIRST LEGO League, earning three trips to the World Championship and more than 20 awards. Off the field, we built TeamForge, run our Sea Forest tree-planting program, and held 21 outreach events that reached over 3,500 people this year.
This isn’t where
we started.
Before our FTC team formed, our members competed under three FIRST LEGO League teams across five seasons. Together they earned state championships and competed against teams from more than 30 countries at the World Championship.
Incredibots
- →WA Qualifiers — Champions Award & Robot Performance
- →WA Semifinals — Champions Award
- →WA State Finals — Innovation Award
- →WPI International — Champions Award · beat 30+ countries
Meet 1.
First place.
We won our first league meet, then won the second. We captained a playoff alliance and placed for a top engineering award, all in our rookie FTC season and built on five seasons of FIRST LEGO League.
- 01 · Meet 1First Place
Maxwell League · Meet 1
Our first FTC tournament. We competed against teams with multiple seasons of experience and finished in first place.
- 02 · Meet 2Back-to-Back
Maxwell League · Meet 2
We returned to the Maxwell League for our second meet and took first place again, going back-to-back in our rookie year.
- 03 · InterleagueAlliance Captain
Hawking Interleague
Top-seeded teams choose their playoff partners. We were selected to captain an alliance and led match strategy through the interleague tournament.
- 04 · PlayoffThink Award · 2nd
Capek Semifinal
The Think Award recognizes a team's engineering documentation and design process. Our engineering notebook placed 2nd in the region.
Every point
plants a tree.
For every 100 points a team scores in its best match, we plant a tree. We’ve planted over 3,000 so far, from British Columbia to Kenya. This year we also ran 21 outreach events that reached more than 3,500 people.
Sea Forest
For every 100 points a team scores in its highest-scoring alliance match, we plant one tree. Last year's trees went to British Columbia, tied to our Washington State and European Premier events. This year they go to Kenya. We've planted roughly 3,000 to 4,000 trees so far, wherever we compete.
21 events. 21 sessions.
We ran 21 outreach events and 21 mentor sessions this season, reaching an estimated 3,500 to 4,000 people through school visits, STEM fairs, and live robot demos. We also donated robotics kits to Seattle Children's Hospital.
TeamForge
TeamForge is a free team-management platform we built for FTC and FLL teams. It brings scheduling, task tracking, notebook tools, and season planning into one place. We built it because we needed it, and we make it free for every team that does.
The names
on our robot.
Boeing. T-Mobile. Microsoft. Their support funds our builds, our travel, and our outreach. Every sponsor’s name rides with us on the robot and appears in the engineering notebook we submit at each event.
Put your name on the robot.
Your logo travels with us to every competition, in front of the judges, engineers, and students we meet, and appears in the engineering notebook we submit at each event.
Say hello.
We respond.
Whether you’re interested in sponsorship, joining the team, or our Sea Forest and TeamForge programs, send us a message. We read every one and reply within 48 hours.
