Everest Engineering College Gears Up for the Tech X Robotics Championship 2026

Sibesh Pandey June 19, 2026
Tech X Robotics Championship 2026

Everest Engineering College Gears Up for the Tech X Robotics Championship 2026

On 19th and 20th June 2026, the SOCISE Robotics Community of Everest Engineering College (EEC) steps onto the Tech X Robotics Championship 2026, organized by Techspire College, New Baneshor, Kathmandu. For two days, the students from EEC will be in competition with the students from several other countries to put their machines to the test.

About Tech X Robotics Championship

The Tech X Robotics Championship is a robotics competition that brings together engineering students to showcase their skills in robotics, programming, and engineering. It is a fast-paced, hands-on arena where ideas have to actually work, motors have to actually move, and code has to actually run when it counts. For a college built around computer, software, and IT engineering, it is exactly the kind of challenge EEC students are made for.

Everest Engineering College Competing in Three Categories

Team EEC is entering three categories. Each one tests a completely different set of engineering muscles, and together they cover the full range of what our robotics builders can do.

Sumo Bot

The Sumo Bot category is a test of strength and tactics, where two robots face off and try to push each other out of a circular ring. It demands raw power, balance, and strategy to shove your rival out of the ring.

Line Following Robot (LFR)

The Line Following Robot challenge is the opposite kind of problem, demanding patience, sensor calibration, and code that stays accurate even on tricky curves. Precise sensors and clean, reliable code are what separate the winners from the rest.

Robo Race

Robo Race is all about velocity, where the fastest, best-controlled machine wins. Pure speed and tight control against the clock is what it takes to come out on top.

Why This Matters for EEC Students?

Events like the Tech X Robotics Championship are where classroom theory finally meets the workshop floor. Our students do not simply read about sensors, motors, and control systems. They wire them, program them, watch them fail, and then fix them, sometimes minutes before a match.

Designing a robot that works in a quiet lab is one thing. Defending that design in a noisy arena, against a clever opponent, with a clock running, is another challenge entirely. It builds the kind of practical confidence and resilience that no textbook can teach on its own.

This is the engineering culture that the SOCISE Robotics Community and Everest Engineering College are proud to nurture. Win or lose, every match makes our builders sharper, and every competition helps shape the next generation of Nepali engineers.

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