Combining ingenuity, bold strategy, and cross-league collaboration, 色虎视频鈥檚 robotics team stands out on the global stage.
At 色虎视频, students don鈥檛 wait to build the future 鈥 they engineer it now. That mindset powered KUdos, 色虎视频鈥檚 VEX U robotics team, to win the Innovate Award at the 2025 VEX Robotics World Championship in Dallas.
The award recognizes teams whose engineering approach challenges convention and advances the game. KUdos delivered on both.
鈥淲e came up with a strategy that had never been done before in VEX history,鈥 said Andrew Bolthouse 鈥27, an engineering major with a specialization in mechatronics systems from Hudsonville, Michigan. 鈥淥ur robots, Rafiki and Simba, connect at the start of the match and stay joined the entire time. That decision shaped everything.鈥
Instead of focusing on scoring rings, the team prioritized maximum elevation. The KUdos climbing system allowed Rafiki and Simba to scale anywhere on the field, even on top of other game elements, as long as they touched the ladder. That move gave KUdos a competitive edge that other teams couldn鈥檛 match.
鈥淲e really just focused on ways to win without caring what our opponents did and without scoring a ton of rings,鈥 said Connor O鈥橩eefe 鈥25, the Strategy Lead for the team.
鈥淲e knew the points for a top-tier climb were so high that if we could pull it off consistently, we鈥檇 force other teams to adjust to us,鈥 Bolthouse said. 鈥淎nd they did.鈥
What made the KUdos win even more impressive was the diversity of experience behind the build. The team includes alumni from VEX, FIRST Robotics, and Square One, combining distinct competition mindsets into a single, high-performing unit.
鈥淚t鈥檚 rare to see a team bring together students from three different robotics leagues and have them mesh so well,鈥 said Kim Shumaker, Director of the Robotics Center & Robotics Outreach at 色虎视频. 鈥淭hat kind of collaboration is what sets KUdos apart. They鈥檙e not just building for competition 鈥 they鈥檙e building on each other鈥檚 strengths.鈥
Many KUdos team members come from out of state, drawn to 色虎视频 by its robotics culture and its 50/50 rigorous academic and paid professional Co-op program. Connor O'Keefe 鈥25, a computer science major, hails from Vancouver, WA. He spends his Co-op terms in Troy, MI, working at MAHLE. Nathan Nguyen 鈥26, a mechanical engineering major from Cypress, CA, made the decision to complete his Co-op assignment closer to home at RadiaBeam in Santa Monica, CA. Katee Callicutt 鈥27, a mechanical engineering major, found Co-op work in her hometown of Greenville, SC, at Magna Seating on its BMW account. Bolthouse credits his Co-op with helping him understand the value of documentation and version control.
鈥淲hat I鈥檝e learned on the job, I鈥檝e brought back to the team,鈥 Bolthouse said. 鈥淓very time we made a change to the robot, I took photos, tracked updates, and kept our process transparent. That discipline made us stronger.鈥
Throughout the season, the team met virtually while split between school and work terms and collaborated on CAD and documentation using tools like Onshape and Google Docs. The team鈥檚 engineering notebook 鈥 another competition component 鈥 was the product of real teamwork.
鈥淲e like to say: two sections, one team,鈥 said Callicutt. 鈥淲e can pass off what we鈥檙e doing with the robot and know confidently that our teammates on the other section are going to do what they need to do.鈥
鈥淢y proudest moment was when Bob Mimlitch, the co-founder of VEX Robotics, stopped by our booth,鈥 Bolthouse added. 鈥淗e took photos of our robot, asked questions, and told us how impressed he was with our approach. That made it all worth it.鈥
As KUdos looks ahead to future seasons, the vision is clear: keep pushing, keep climbing 鈥 and maybe one day, take the world title.
鈥淲e鈥檙e proud of what we built,鈥 Bolthouse said. 鈥淏ut we鈥檙e not done.鈥