


Later on, Team Diablo made a heavyweight version of El Diablo named El Diablo Grande, which was originally going to replace the team's middleweight. It never made it to the finals again, but remained consistent in competition. In its debut season, El Diablo made the middleweight finals before losing to Spaz. The drum was replaced by a set of flywheels in Season 5.0.

El Diablo's name translates from Spanish as "The Devil", a theme reflected in the robot's aesthetics. These robots deserve to look cool and take on personality." - Zack Bieber in BattleBots: The Official Guide.Įl Diablo was the first robot built by Team Diablo, a tracked middleweight with a spinning spiked drum at the front and lifting spikes at the rear dubbed "Big Sticker" by builder Zack Bieber. I understand that people can get carried for bounties and they are not violating the ToS, but if the numbers are as off as I think they would be with running such a bot program, that should be a Red Flag." I hate the box-with-wheels syndrome found so often in combat robots. Is there a way to compare the number of caches turned in by a character to the number of bounties completed by that character? It seems that there should be a significant difference for someone using such a NaughtyBot program. This results in the LooksLegit account getting large amounts of bounty materials without ever having to run any bounties, as the bounties are being completed by the bot account whilst they’re running GRs. NaughtyBotAccount sets off to do another full set of 25 bounties.Bounties are handed in and LooksLegit1, LooksLegit2 and LooksLegit3 get caches they’ve contributed absolutely nothing to.NaughtyBotAccount invites LooksLegit1, LooksLegit2 and LooksLegit3 to game.NaughtyBotAccount does a full set of 25 bounties.
