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Thursday, November 8, 2007

ROBOT

A robot is a mechanical or virtual, artificial agent. It is usually an electromechanical system, which, by its appearance or movements, conveys a sense that it has intent or agency of its own. The word robot can refer to both physical robots and virtual software agents, but the latter are usually referred to as bots to differentiate.[1]

While there is still discussion[2][3][4] about which machines qualify as robots, a typical robot will have several, though not necessarily all of the following properties.


Defining characteristics

The last property (above), the appearance of agency, is important when people are considering whether to call a machine a robot. In general, the more a machine has the appearance of agency, the more it is considered a robot.

KITT is mentally anthropomorphic
KITT is mentally anthropomorphic

Mental agency
For robotic engineers, the physical appearance of a machine is less important than the way its actions are controlled.[6] The more the control system seems to have agency of its own, the more likely the machine is to be called a robot. An important feature of agency is the ability to make choices. So the more a machine could feasibly choose to do something different, the more agency it has. For example:

  • a clockwork car is never considered a robot[7]
  • a remotely operated vehicle is sometimes considered a robot[8] (or telerobot).
  • a car with an onboard computer, like Bigtrak, which could drive in a programmable sequence might be called a robot.
  • a self-controlled car, like the 1990s driverless cars of Ernst Dickmanns, or the entries to the DARPA Grand Challenge, which could sense its environment, and make driving decisions based on this information would quite likely be called robot.
  • a sentient car, like the fictional KITT, which can take decisions, navigate freely and converse fluently with a human, is usually considered a robot.
ASIMO is physically anthropomorphic
ASIMO is physically anthropomorphic

Physical agency
However, for many laymen, if a machine looks anthropomorphic or zoomorphic (e.g. ASIMO and Aibo), especially if it is limb-like (e.g. a simple robot arm), or has limbs, or can move around, it would be called a robot.

For example, even if the following examples used the same control architecture:

  • a CNC milling machine is very occasionally called a robot.
  • a factory automation arm is usually called a robot.
  • a zoomorphic mechanical toy, like Roboraptor, is usually called a robot.[10][11]
  • a humanoid, like ASIMO, is almost always called a robot.

Interestingly, while a 3-axis CNC milling machine may have a very similar or identical control system to a robot arm, it is the arm which is almost always called a robot, while the CNC machine is usually just a machine. Having a limb can make all the difference. Having eyes too gives people a sense that a machine is aware (the eyes are the windows of the soul). However, simply being anthropomorphic is not sufficient for something to be called a robot. A robot must do something, whether it is useful work or not. So, for example, a rubber dog chew, shaped like ASIMO, would not be considered a robot.

Official definitions and classifications of robots

Robotics Institute of America

Countries have different definitions of what it means to be a robot. For example, the Robotics Institute of America (RIA) defines a robot as:

A re-programmable multi-functional manipulator designed to move materials, parts, tools, or specialized devices through variable programmed motions for the performance of a variety of tasks.[12]

and also recognizes four classes of robot:

  • A: Handling devices with manual control
  • B: Automated handling devices with predetermined cycles
  • C: Programmable, servo-controlled robots with continuous of point-to-point trajectories
  • D: Capable of Type C specifications, and also acquires information from the environment for intelligent motion

Japanese Industrial Robot Association

In contrast, the Japanese Industrial Robot Association (JIRA) recognizes as many as six classes:[13]

  • 1: Manual - Handling Devices actuated by an operator
  • 2: Fixed Sequence Robot
  • 3: Variable-Sequence Robot with easily modified sequence of control
  • 4: Playback Robot, which can record a motion for later playback
  • 5: Numerical Control Robots with a movement program to teach it tasks manually
  • 6: Intelligent robot: that can understand its environment and able to complete the task despite changes in the operation conditions

International Standards Organization

Such variation makes it difficult to compare numbers of robots in different countries. Japan has so many robots partly because it counts more machines as robots. For this reason, the International Standards Organization gives a single definition to be used when counting the number of robots in each country.[14] International standard ISO 8373 defines a "robot" as:

An automatically controlled, reprogrammable, multipurpose, manipulator programmable in three or more axes, which may be either fixed in place or mobile for use in industrial automation applications.[15]

Other definitions of robot

There is no one definition of robot which satisfies everyone, and many people have their own. [16] For example,

Joseph Engelberger, a pioneer in industrial robotics, once remarked:

I can't define a robot, but I know one when I see one.[17]

The Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary defines "robot" as:

A machine used to perform jobs automatically, which is controlled by a computer[18]

Etymology

Karel Čapek who introduced the word robot in his 1920 play R.U.R. (Rossum's Universal Robots).
Karel Čapek who introduced the word robot in his 1920 play R.U.R. (Rossum's Universal Robots).

The word robot was introduced by Czech writer Karel Čapek in his play R.U.R. (Rossum's Universal Robots), which premiered in 1920. The play begins in a factory that makes 'artificial people' - they are called robots, but are closer to the modern idea of androids or even clones, creatures who can be mistaken for humans. They can plainly think for themselves, though they seem happy to serve. At issue is whether the "Robots" are being exploited and, if so, what follows? (see also Robots in literature for details of the play)[19]

However, Karel Čapek was not the originator of the word; he wrote a short letter in reference to an article in the Oxford English Dictionary etymology in which he named his brother, painter and writer Josef Čapek, as its actual inventor.[20] In an article in the Czech journal Lidové noviny in 1933, he also explained that he had originally wanted to call the creatures laboři (from Latin labor, work). However, he did not like the word, seeing it as too artificial, and sought advice from his brother Josef, who suggested "roboti".

The word robot comes from the word robota meaning literally serf labor, and, figuratively, "drudgery" or "hard work" in Czech and Slovak. The origin of the word is the Old Church Slavonic rabota "servitude" ("work" in contemporary Russian), which in turn comes from the Indo-European root *orbh-. Robot is cognate with the German word Arbeiter (worker).

History

Main article: History of robots
Cadmus Sowing the Dragon's teeth, by Maxfield Parrish, 1908
Cadmus Sowing the Dragon's teeth, by Maxfield Parrish, 1908

Ancient developments

The idea of artificial people dates at least as far back as the ancient legends of Cadmus, who sowed dragon teeth that turned into soldiers, and the myth of Pygmalion, whose statue of Galatea came to life. In Greek mythology, the deformed god of metalwork (Vulcan or Hephaestus) created mechanical servants, ranging from intelligent, golden handmaidens to more utilitarian three-legged tables that could move about under their own power. Medieval Persian alchemist Jabir ibn Hayyan, included recipes for creating artificial snakes, scorpions, and humans in his coded Book of Stones. Jewish legend tells of the Golem, a clay creature animated by Kabbalistic magic. Similarly, in the Younger Edda, Norse mythology tells of a clay giant, Mökkurkálfi or Mistcalf, constructed to aid the troll Hrungnir in a duel with Thor, the God of Thunder.

In ancient China, a curious account on automata is found in the Lie Zi text, written in the 3rd century BC. Within it there is a description of a much earlier encounter between King Mu of Zhou (1023-957 BC) and a mechanical engineer known as Yan Shi, an 'artificer'. The latter proudly presented the king with a life-size, human-shaped figure of his mechanical handiwork.

The king stared at the figure in astonishment. It walked with rapid strides, moving its head up and down, so that anyone would have taken it for a live human being. The artificer touched its chin, and it began singing, perfectly in tune. He touched its hand, and it began posturing, keeping perfect time...As the performance was drawing to an end, the robot winked its eye and made advances to the ladies in attendance, whereupon the king became incensed and would have had Yen Shih [Yan Shi] executed on the spot had not the latter, in mortal fear, instantly taken the robot to pieces to let him see what it really was. And, indeed, it turned out to be only a construction of leather, wood, glue and lacquer, variously coloured white, black, red and blue. Examining it closely, the king found all the internal organs complete—liver, gall, heart, lungs, spleen, kidneys, stomach and intestines; and over these again, muscles, bones and limbs with their joints, skin, teeth and hair, all of them artificial...The king tried the effect of taking away the heart, and found that the mouth could no longer speak; he took away the liver and the eyes could no longer see; he took away the kidneys and the legs lost their power of locomotion. The king was delighted.[21]

Concepts akin to a robot can be found as long ago as the 4th century BC, when the Greek mathematician Archytas of Tarentum postulated a mechanical bird he called "The Pigeon" which was propelled by steam. Yet another early automaton was the clepsydra, made in 250 BC by Ctesibius of Alexandria, a physicist and inventor from Ptolemaic Egypt.[22] Hero of Alexandria (10-70 AD) made numerous innovations in the field of automata, including one that allegedly could speak.

Al-Jazari's programmable humanoid robots.
Al-Jazari's programmable humanoid robots.

Medieval developments

Al-Jazari (1136-1206), an Arab Muslim inventor during the Artuqid dynasty, designed and constructed a number of automatic machines, including kitchen appliances, musical automata powered by water, and the first programmable humanoid robot in 1206. Al-Jazari's robot was a boat with four automatic musicians that floated on a lake to entertain guests at royal drinking parties. His mechanism had a programmable drum machine with pegs (cams) that bump into little levers that operate the percussion. The drummer could be made to play different rhythms and different drum patterns by moving the pegs to different locations.[23]

One of the first recorded designs of a humanoid robot was made by Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519) in around 1495. Da Vinci's notebooks, rediscovered in the 1950s, contain detailed drawings of a mechanical knight able to sit up, wave its arms and move its head and jaw. [19] The design is likely to be based on his anatomical research recorded in the Vitruvian Man. It is not known whether he attempted to build the robot (see: Leonardo's robot).

Early modern developments

An early automaton was created 1738 by Jacques de Vaucanson, who created a mechanical duck that was able to eat and digest grain, flap its wings, and excrete. [19]

The Japanese craftsman Hisashige Tanaka, known as "Japan's Edison," created an array of extremely complex mechanical toys, some of which were capable of serving tea, firing arrows drawn from a quiver, or even painting a Japanese kanji character. The landmark text Karakuri Zui (Illustrated Machinery) was published in 1796. (T. N. Hornyak, Loving the Machine: The Art and Science of Japanese Robots [New York: Kodansha International, 2006])

In 1898 Nikola Tesla publicly demonstrated a radio-controlled (teleoperated) boat, similar to a modern ROV. Based on his patents U.S. Patent 613,809 , U.S. Patent 723,188 and U.S. Patent 725,605 for "teleautomation", Tesla hoped to develop the "wireless torpedo" into a weapon system for the US Navy. (Cheney 1989) See also the PBS website article (with photos): Tesla - Master of Lightning

Modern Developments

In the 1930s, Westinghouse Electric Corporation made a humanoid robot known as Elektro, exhibited at the 1939 and 1940 World's Fairs.

The first electronic autonomous robots were created by William Grey Walter of the Burden Neurological Institute at Bristol, England in 1948 and 1949. They were named Elmer and Elsie. These robots could sense light and contact with external objects, and use these stimuli to navigate. [24]

Unimate's PUMA arm
Unimate's PUMA arm
George C. Devol circa 1982
George C. Devol circa 1982

The first truly modern robot, digitally operated, programmable, and teachable, was invented by George Devol in 1954 and was ultimately called the Unimate. It is worth noting that not a single patent was cited against his original robotics patent (U.S. Patent 2,988,237 ). The first Unimate was personally sold by Devol to General Motors in 1960 and installed in 1961 in a plant in Trenton, New Jersey to lift hot pieces of metal from a die casting machine and stack them.[22]

Robot Fatalities

The first human to be killed by a robot was Robert Williams who died at a casting plant in Flat Rock, MI (Jan. 25, 1979). [25]

A better known case is that of 37 year-old Kenji Urada, a Japanese factory worker, in 1981. Urada was performing routine maintenance on the robot, but neglected to shut it down properly, and was accidentally pushed into a grinding machine.[26]


Timeline

Date Significance Robot Name Inventor
Third century B.C. Automata activated by clocks at preset times
Ctesibius of Alexandria
Third century B.C. During a parade organized by Ptolemy II Philadelphus, a statue of Nysa could stand up by itself from a sitting position, pour libations of milk and sit down again.
Ctesibius of Alexandria?
First century A.D. In two works (Pneumatica and Automata) Heron of Alexandria describes many machines and automata (mainly from previous sources)
Ctesibius of Alexandria, Philo of Byzantium, Heron of Alexandria
1206 First programmable humanoid robot mechanical boat with four automatic musicians Al-Jazari
~1495 One of the first recorded designs of a humanoid robot mechanical knight Leonardo da Vinci
1738 Early automaton, a mechanical duck that was able to eat grain, flap its wings, and excrete.
Jacques de Vaucanson
1920 Word robot coined.[27]
Josef Čapek
1930s Early humanoid robot. It was exhibited at the 1939 and 1940 World's Fairs Elektro Westinghouse Electric Corporation
1942 The word robotics appears in the science fiction short story Runaround.[28]
Isaac Asimov
1948 Simple robots which exhibit biological like behaviours.[29] Elsie and Elmer William Grey Walter
1954 Patent submitted for first digitally controlled robot and first teachable robot, (U.S. Patent 2,988,237 )
George Devol
1956 First robot company, Unimation, is founded by George Devol and Joseph Engelberger based on Devol's seminal patents; first commercial robot.[30] Unimate George Devol
1956 Phrase artificial intelligence is coined at a conference in Dartmouth, Massachusetts.[31]
Marvin Minsky and John McCarthy
1961 First industrial robot installed. Unimate
1963 First Palletizing Robot.
Fuji Yusoki Kogyo
1975 Programmable Universal Manipulation Arm (a Unimation product) Programmable Universal Machine for Assembly Victor Scheinman
1981 Kenji Urada, a Japanese factory worker, is killed by a robot.[32]

2000 A humanoid robot that can recognize human faces, see stereoscopically, walk and run on different types of ground (including stairs), and respond (in words and in actions) to English and Japanese commands. ASIMO Honda Corporation

Contemporary uses

Main articles: Industrial robot and Domestic robot

Robots can be placed into roughly two categories based on the type of job they do:

  • Jobs which a robot can do better than a human. Here, robots can increase productivity, accuracy, and endurance.
  • Jobs which a human could do better than a robot, but it is desirable to remove the human for some reason. Here, robots free us from dirty, dangerous and dull tasks.

Increased productivity, accuracy, and endurance

German KUKA Industrial robots doing vehicle under body assembly
German KUKA Industrial robots doing vehicle under body assembly

Jobs which require speed, accuracy, reliability or endurance can be performed far better by a robot than a human. Hence many jobs in factories which were traditionally performed by people are now robotized. This has led to cheaper mass-produced goods, including automobiles and electronics. Robots have now been working in factories for more than fifty years, ever since the Unimate robot was installed to automatically remove hot metal from a die casting machine. Since then, factory automation in the form of large stationary manipulators has become the largest market for robots. The number of installed robots has grown faster and faster, and today there are more than 800,000 worldwide (42% in Japan, 40% in the European Union and 18% in the USA).[33]

Pick and Place robot, Contact Systems C5 Series
Pick and Place robot, Contact Systems C5 Series[34]

Some examples of factory robots:

  • Car production: This is now the primary example of factory automation. Over the last three decades automobile factories have become dominated by robots. A typical factory contains hundreds of industrial robots working on fully automated production lines - one robot for every ten human workers. On an automated production line a vehicle chassis is taken along a conveyor to be welded, glued, painted and finally assembled by a sequence of robot stations.
  • Packaging: Industrial robots are also used extensively for palletizing and packaging of manufactured goods, for example taking drink cartons from the end of a conveyor belt and placing them rapidly into boxes, or the loading and unloading of machining centers.
  • Electronics: Mass produced printed circuit boards (PCBs) are almost exclusively manufactured by pick and place robots, typically with "SCARA" manipulators, which remove tiny electronic components from strips or trays, and place them on to PCBs with great accuracy.[35] Such robots can place several components per second (tens of thousands per hour), far out-performing a human in terms of speed, accuracy, and reliability.[36]
  • Automated Guided Vehicles: Large mobile robots, following markers or wires in the floor, or using vision[37] or lasers, are used to transport goods around large facilities, such as warehouses, container ports, or hospitals.[38]

Tasks such as these suit robots perfectly because the tasks can be accurately defined and must be performed the same every time. Very little feedback or intelligence is required, and the robots may need only the most basic of exteroceptors to sense things in their environment, if any at all.


Dirty, dangerous, dull or inaccessible tasks

The Roomba domestic vacuum cleaner robot does a menial job
The Roomba domestic vacuum cleaner robot does a menial job

There are many jobs which a human could perform better than a robot but for one reason or another the human either does not want to do it or cannot be present to do the job. The job may be too boring to bother with, for example domestic cleaning; or be too dangerous, for example exploring inside a volcano[39]. These jobs are known as the "dull, dirty, and dangerous" jobs. Other jobs are physically inaccessible. For example, exploring another planet[40], cleaning the inside of a long pipe or performing laparoscopic surgery.[41]

  • Robots in the home: As their price falls, and their performance and computational ability rises[42], making them both affordable and sufficiently autonomous, robots are increasingly being seen in the home where they are taking on simple but unwanted jobs, such as vacuum cleaning, floor cleaning and lawn mowing. While they have been on the market for several years, 2006 saw an explosion in the number of domestic robots sold. Currently, more domestic robots have been sold than any other single type of robot.[43] They tend to be relatively autonomous, usually only requiring a command to begin their job. They then proceed to go about their business in their own way. At such, they display a good deal of agency, and are considered true robots.
A laparoscopic robotic surgery machine.
A laparoscopic robotic surgery machine.
  • Telerobots: When a human cannot be present on site to perform a job because it is dangerous, far away, or inaccessible, teleoperated robots, or telerobots are used. Rather than following a predetermined sequence of movements a telerobot is controlled from a distance by a human operator. The robot may be in another room or another country, or may be on a very different scale to the operator. A laparoscopic surgery robot such as da Vinci allows the surgeon to work inside a human patient on a relatively small scale compared to open surgery, significantly shortening recovery time.[41] An interesting use of a telerobot is by the author Margaret Atwood, who has recently started using a robot pen (the Longpen) to sign books remotely. The Longpen is similar to the Autopen of the 1800s. This saves the financial cost and physical inconvenience of traveling to book signings around the world.[44] At the other end of the spectrum, iRobot ConnectR robot is designed to be used by anyone to stay in touch with family or friends from far away. Such telerobots may be little more advanced than radio controlled cars. Some people do not consider them to be true robots because they show little or no agency of their own.
  • Military robots: Teleoperated robot aircraft, like the Predator Unmanned Aerial Vehicle, are increasingly being used by the military. These robots can be controlled from anywhere in the world allowing an army to search terrain, and even fire on targets, without endangering those in control.[45] Currently, these robots are all teleoperated, but others are being developed which can make decisions automatically; choosing where to fly or selecting and engaging enemy targets.[46] Hundreds of robots such as iRobot's Packbot and the Foster-Miller TALON are being used in Iraq and Afghanistan by the U.S. military to defuse roadside bombs or improvised explosive devices (IEDs) in an activity known as Explosive Ordnance Disposal (EOD).[47]
  • Elder Care: The population is aging in many countries, especially Japan, meaning that there are increasing numbers of elderly people to care for but relatively fewer young people to care for them.[48][49] Humans make the best carers, but where they are unavailable, robots are gradually being introduced.[50] One robot in use today, Intouchhealth's RP-7 remote presence robot, is being used by doctors to communicate with patients, allowing the doctor to be anywhere in the world. This increases the number of patients a doctor can monitor.


Unusual Robots

Much of the research in robotics focuses not on specific industrial tasks, but on investigations into new types of robot, alternative ways to think about or design robots, and new ways to manufacture them. It is expected that these new types of robot will be able to solve real world problems when they are finally realised.

A nanocar made from a single molecule
A nanocar made from a single molecule[51]
  • Nanorobots: Nanorobotics is the still largely hypothetical technology of creating machines or robots at or close to the scale of a nanometre (10-9 metres). Also known as nanobots or nanites, they would be constructed from molecular machines. So far, researchers have mostly produced only parts of these complex systems, such as bearings, sensors, and Synthetic molecular motors, but functioning robots have also been made such as the entrants to the Nanobot Robocup contest.[52] Researchers also hope to be able to create entire robots as small as viruses or bacteria, which could perform tasks on a tiny scale. Possible applications include micro surgery (on the level of individual cells), utility fog[53], manufacturing, weaponry and cleaning.[54] Some people have suggested that if nanobots were made which could reproduce, they could have serious negative consequences, turning the earth into grey goo, while others argue that this is nonsense.[55][56]
  • Soft Robots: Most robots, indeed most man made machines of any kind, are made from hard, stiff materials; especially metal and plastic. This is in contrast to most natural organisms, which are mostly soft tissues. This difference has not been lost on robotic engineers, and some are trying to create robots from soft materials (rubber, foam, gel), soft actuators (air muscles, electroactive polymers, ferrofluids), and exhibiting soft behaviours (fuzzy logic, neural networks).[57] Such robots are expected to look, feel, and behave differently from traditional hard robots.
Molecubes in motion
Molecubes in motion
  • Reconfigurable Robots: A few researchers have investigated the possibility of creating robots which can alter their physical form to suit a particular task,[58] like the fictional T-1000. Real robots are nowhere near that sophisticated however, and mostly consist of a small number of cube shaped units, which can move relative to their neighbours, for example SuperBot. Algorithms have been designed in case any such robots become a reality.[59]
A swarm of robots from the Open-source micro-robotic project
A swarm of robots from the Open-source micro-robotic project[60]
  • Swarm robots: Inspired by colonies of insects such as ants and bees, researchers hope to create very large swarms (thousands) of tiny robots which together perform a useful task, such as finding something hidden, cleaning, or spying. Each robot would be quite simple, but the emergent behaviour of the swarm would be more complex.[61] The whole set of robots can be considered as one single distributed system, in the same way an ant colony can be considered a superorganism. They would exhibit swarm intelligence. The largest swarms so far created include the iRobot swarm, and the Open-source micro-robotic project swarm, which are being used to research collective behaviours.[62] Swarms are also more resistant to failure. Whereas one large robot may fail and ruin the whole mission, the swarm can continue even if several robots fail. This makes them attractive for space exploration missions, where failure can be extremely costly.[63]
  • Evolutionary Robots: is a methodology that uses evolutionary computation to help design robots, especially the body form, or motion and behaviour controllers. In a similar way to natural evolution, a large population of robots is allowed to compete in some way, or their ability to perform a task is measured using a fitness function. Those that perform worst are removed from the population, and replaced by a new set, which have new behaviours based on those of the winners. Over time the population improves, and eventually a satisfactory robot may appear. This happens without any direct programming of the robots by the researchers. Researchers use this method both to create better robots,[64] and to explore the nature of evolution.[65] Because the process often requires many generations of robots to be simulated, this technique may be run entirely or mostly in simulation, then tested on real robots once the evolved algorithms are good enough.[66]
  • Virtual Reality: Robotics has also application in the design of virtual reality interfaces. Specialized robots are in widespread use in the haptic research community. These robots, called "haptic interfaces" allow touch-enabled user interaction with real and virtual environments. Robotic forces allow simulating the mechanical properties of "virtual" objects, which users can experience through their sense of touch.[67]


Dangers and fears

Although current robots are not believed to have developed to the stage where they pose any threat or danger to society,[68] fears and concerns about robots have been repeatedly expressed in a wide range of books and films. The principal theme is the robots' intelligence and ability to act could exceed that of humans, that they could develop a conscience and a motivation to take over or destroy the human race. (See The Terminator, The Matrix, I, Robot) Robots would be dangerous if they were programmed to kill or if they are programmed to be so smart that they make their own software, build their own hardware to upgrade themselves or if they change their own source code.

Frankenstein (1818), sometimes called the first science fiction novel, has become synonymous with the theme of a robot or monster advancing beyond its creator. Probably the best known author to have worked in this area is Isaac Asimov who placed robots and their interaction with society at the center of many of his works. Of particular interest are Asimov's Three Laws of Robotics. Currently, malicious programming or unsafe use of robots may be the biggest danger. Although industrial robots may be smaller and less powerful than other industrial machines, they are just as capable of inflicting severe injury on humans. However, since a robot can be programmed to move in different trajectories depending on its task, its movement can be unpredictable for a person standing in its reach. Therefore, most industrial robots operate inside a security fence which separates them from human workers. Manuel De Landa has theorized that humans are at a critical and significant juncture where humans have allowed robots, "smart missiles," and autonomous bombs equipped with artificial perception to make decisions about killing us. He believes this represents an important and dangerous trend where humans are transferring more of our cognitive structures into our machines.[69] Even without malicious programming, a robot, especially a future model moving freely in a human environment, is potentially dangerous because of its large moving masses, powerful actuators and unpredictably complex behavior. A robot falling on someone or just stepping on his foot by mistake could cause much more damage to the victim than a human being of the same size. Designing and programming robots to be intrinsically safe and to exhibit safe behavior in a human environment is one of the great challenges in robotics. Some theorists, such as Eliezer Yudkowsky, have suggested that developing a robot with a powerful conscience may be the most prudent course of action in this regard.

Literature

Isaac Asimov's book I, Robot
Isaac Asimov's book I, Robot
Main article: Robots in literature
See also: List of fictional robots and androids

Robots have frequently appeared as characters in works of literature; the word robot comes from Karel Čapek's play R.U.R. (Rossum's Universal Robots), premiered in 1920. Isaac Asimov wrote many volumes of science fiction focusing on robots in numerous forms and guises, contributing greatly to reducing the Frankenstein complex, which dominated early works of fiction involving robots. His three laws of robotics have become particularly well known for codifying a simple set of behaviors for robots to remain at the service of their human creators.

The first reference in Western literature to mechanical servants appears in The Iliad of Homer. In Book XVIII, Hephaestus, god of fire, creates new armour for the hero Achilles. He is assisted by robots. According to the Rieu translation, "Golden maidservants hastened to help their master. They looked like real women and could not only speak and use their limbs but were endowed with intelligence and trained in handwork by the immortal gods." Of course, the words "robot" or "android" are not used to describe them, but they are nevertheless mechanical devices human in appearance.

Numerous words for different types of robots are now used in literature. Robot has come to mean mechanical humans, while android is a generic term for artificial humans. Cyborg or "bionic man" is used for a human form that is a mixture of organic and mechanical parts. Organic artificial humans have also been referred to as "constructs" (or "biological constructs").

In science fiction, the Three Laws of Robotics are a set of three rules written by Isaac Asimov, which almost all positronic robots appearing in his fiction must obey. Introduced in his 1942 short story "Runaround", although foreshadowed in a few earlier stories, the Laws state the following:

  1. A robot may not injure a human being or, through inaction, allow a human being to come to harm.
  2. A robot must obey orders given to it by human beings except where such orders would conflict with the First Law.
  3. A robot must protect its own existence as long as such protection does not conflict with the First or Second Law.

Later, Asimov added the Zeroth Law: "A robot may not harm humanity, or, by inaction, allow humanity to come to harm"; the rest of the laws are modified sequentially to acknowledge this.

According to the Oxford English Dictionary, the first passage in Asimov's short story "Liar!" (1941) that mentions the First Law is the earliest recorded use of the word robotics.[1] Asimov was not initially aware of this; he assumed the word already existed by analogy with mechanics, hydraulics, and other similar terms denoting branches of applied knowledge.[2]

Competitions

See also: Robot competition
Robot Plen practicing for Robocup
Robot Plen practicing for Robocup

Botball is a LEGO-based competition between fully autonomous robots. There are two divisions. The first is for high-school and middle-school students, and the second (called "Beyond Botball") is for anyone who chooses to compete at the national tournament. Teams build, program, and blog about a robot for five weeks before they compete at the regional level. Winners are awarded scholarships to register for and travel to the national tournament. Botball is a project of the KISS Institute for Practical Robotics, based in Norman, Oklahoma.

The FIRST Robotics Competition (FRC) is a multinational competition that teams professionals and young people to solve an engineering design problem. These teams of mentors (corporate, teachers, or college students) and high school students collaborate in order to design and build a robot in six weeks. This robot is designed to play a game that is developed by FIRST and changes from year to year. FIRST, or For Inspiration and Recognition of Science and Technology, is an organization founded by inventor Dean Kamen in 1992 as a way of getting high school students involved in and excited about engineering and technology.

The FIRST Vex Challenge (FVC) is a mid-level robotics competition targeted toward high-school aged students. It offers the traditional challenge of a FIRST competition but with a more accessible and affordable robotics kit. The ultimate goal of FVC is to reach more young people with a lower-cost, more accessible opportunity to discover the excitement and rewards of science, technology, and engineering.

FIRST LEGO League (also known by its acronym FLL) is a robotics competition for elementary and middle school students (ages 9-14, 9-16 in Europe), arranged by FIRST. Each year the contest focuses on a different topic related to the sciences. Each challenge within the competition then revolves around that theme. The students then work out solutions to the various problems that they're given and meet for regional tournaments to share their knowledge and show off their ideas.

Competitions for robots are gaining popularity and competitions now exist catering for a wide variety of robot builders ranging from schools to research institutions. Robots compete at a wide range of tasks including combat, fire-fighting [70], playing games [71], maze solving, performing tasks [72] and navigational exercises (eg. DARPA Grand Challenge).

A contest for fire-fighting is the Trinity College Fire-Fighting Robot Contest.[73] The competition in April 2007 was the 14th annual. There are many different divisions for all skill levels. Robots in the competition are encouraged to find new ways to navigate through the rooms, put out the candle and save the "child" from the building. Robots can be composed of any materials, but must fit within certain size restrictions.

Most recently, Duke University announced plans to host the Duke Annual Robo-Climb Competition aimed to challenge students to create innovative wall-climbing robots that can autonomously ascend vertical surfaces.[74]

Since 2004, DARPA Grand Challenge tests driverless cars in an obstacle course across the desert.

External links

Wednesday, October 17, 2007

Voltron

Voltron is a giant mecha robot first featured in the 1980s animated television series Voltron: Defender of the Universe. There has since been a second series, made in the 1990s using CGI techniques. The 1980s Voltron series was based on two vaguely-related Japanese anime series GoLion and Dairugger XV (both originally produced by Toei Animation & Bandai, who also produced the popular Super Sentai series in Japan).

The anime was later dubbed into English and edited by the North American television production and distribution company World Events Productions. The adaptation was not a straight dub, however, as much violence as possible was removed from the original Japanese series.

Voltron variations

Lion Voltron (Voltron of the Far Universe)

Lion Voltron
Lion Voltron

The first episodes were based on the 1984 series Hyakujuu-ou Golion (百獣王ゴライオン - Hyakujūō Goraion, Hundred Beast King GoLion/FiveLion), and they featured a team of five (six when later Princess Allura replaced Sven) young pilots commanding five robot lions, which could be combined to form Voltron. In this undefined future era, the Voltron Force was in charge of protecting the planet Arus (ruled by Princess Allura) from the evil King Zarkon, his son Lotor, and the witch Haggar, who would create huge Robeasts to terrorize the people of Arus. (This storyline is similar to those of the Toei Super Sentai shows, which formed the basis for Mighty Morphin Power Rangers.) Despite being the first of the two robots to appear on American television, the "GoLion" version of Voltron was regarded as "Voltron III" within the toyline because, within the original planned "three-Voltron" continuity, Arus was the furthest setting from Earth's side of the universe ("Voltron I" being intended for the Near Universe, and "Voltron II" for the Middle Universe).

Voltron, in the comic book series published by Devil's Due, was originally a unified machine intelligence. He did not break into five pieces, and had "normal" hands and feet. Voltron was tricked by Haggar into landing on a black comet with nearly the gravitational attraction of a singularity. This comet was either a reference to, or itself actually WAS the Omega Comet from the animé, which had identical properties, and which appeared in the TV show. Voltron was then attacked by Haggar, and somehow blown into five pieces. They became the five "lions." (Much of this was presented in the "History of Voltron" back-up stories written by Mark Waid, which were ended early due to the cancellation of the series. Therefore, the Devil's Due origin is incomplete.)

Vehicle Voltron (Voltron of the Near Universe)

Vehicle Voltron
Vehicle Voltron

Later episodes were based on the 1982 series Armored Fleet Dairugger XV (機甲艦隊 ダイラガーXV - Kikō Kantai Dairagā XV), and they changed the storyline considerably. In this iteration of Voltron, the Galaxy Alliance's home planets have become overcrowded, and a fleet of explorers has been sent to search for new planets to colonize. Along the way, they attract the attention of the evil Drule Empire, long engaged in an ongoing war against the Alliance, and the Drules proceed to interfere in the mission of the explorers and the colonists. Since the Voltron of Planet Arus was too far away to help the explorers, a totally new Voltron is constructed to battle the Drule threat.

This Voltron team consisted of 15 members, who were divided into three teams of five, known respectively as the Land, Sea and Air Teams. Each team was specialized in gathering data or fighting in their area of expertise. Each team could also combine their vehicles into a bigger machine, with each combined vehicle differing amongst the three teams. These fighters were:

  • The Aqua Fighter (Sea Team)
  • The Turbo Terrain Fighter (Land Team)
  • The Strato Fighter (Air Team)

When necessary, all 15 vehicles combine to form the mighty Voltron. This Voltron in the toyline was referred to as Voltron I (also called the Vehicle Team), possibly due to it being closer to Earth than the more popular Voltron III (or Lion Force Voltron).

According to the backstory provided by World Events Productions, the Vehicle Voltron was constructed after consultations by the Galaxy Alliance with Planet Arus's King Alfor before his death, with the new Voltron's designs retrofitted in part from the original, much older, Lion Voltron schematics. However, in the continuity of the recent comic by Image and Devil's Due Publishing, the Vehicle Voltron came about through the capture and study of the original Voltron on Arus by forces from Earth itself. Thus, while machines cannot truly be cloned, this new Voltron could be considered an imperfect clone of the original Lion Voltron. The machine was referred to in one issue as V-15, and was actually attacked by the Lion Voltron in order to repair itself. Unlike the animated series, which only had two crossovers with the Lion Force (once at the end of the Lion Force run, and the other in the "Fleet of Doom" special, which brought both Voltrons together), and which depicted the two Voltron Forces as being longstanding friends, the comics showed Keith and Jeff as having an antagonistic relationship with one another, particularly with regard to the Lion Voltron's supposed "sneak attack" on the Vehicle Voltron.

In early episodes, it was mentioned that the Vehicle Voltron, once assembled, had only five minutes of nuclear operational capability. This angle promptly vanished during later episodes.

Gladiator Voltron (Voltron of the Middle Universe)

Gladiator Voltron
Gladiator Voltron

There were plans for yet another Voltron, which would have been based on the series Light Speed Electric God Albegas (光速電神アルベガス - Kōsoku Denjin Arubegasu). This series would have featured three smaller humanoid robots (named Alpha, Beta, and Gamma) that combined to form one larger robot — Voltron. It was housed in a mountain base and wielded an energy sword, much like the other Voltrons. Due to the strong popularity of the Lion Voltron, the unenthusiastic response to the Vehicle Voltron, and Albegas's lack of popularity in Japan, World Events Productions, (the St. Louis, Missouri based company who owns the rights for both Voltron series) ultimately decided against another parallel Voltron saga. Matchbox released a toy of Gladiator Voltron labeled Voltron II, in addition to Voltron I (Vehicle Voltron) and Voltron III (Lion Voltron).

To appease fans who wanted to see a spawned feature from the Voltron II toy, Gladiator Voltron made a brief, one-panel appearance in the Devil's Due comic in 2004.

The Black, Blue, and Red Gladiators form Voltron in six different combinations, each having a specialty area.

  • Black Gladiator > Blue Gladiator > Red Gladiator — The primary form of Gladiator Voltron, and the form which would have utilized the Gladiator Voltron's Blazing Sword.
  • Black Gladiator > Red Gladiator > Blue Gladiator — This form would have been optimized for use in space.
  • Blue Gladiator > Black Gladiator > Red Gladiator — This form would have been optimized for use in atmospheric flight.
  • Blue Gladiator > Red Gladiator > Black Gladiator — This form would have been optimized for use underground.
  • Red Gladiator > Black Gladiator > Blue Gladiator — This form would have been optimized for use in the water.
  • Red Gladiator > Blue Gladiator > Black Gladiator — This form would have been optimized for rescue actions.

New projects

  • Voltron: The Fleet of Doom — In 1986, World Events had Toei Animation produce some additional footage to create this crossover television special, which had entirely new animation, containing very little recycled GoLion and Dairugger footage. Made for the international markets, this special has not been released in Japan.
Voltron: The Third Dimension
Voltron: The Third Dimension
  • Voltron: The Third Dimension — After some initial interest, a computer-generated series was released in 1998 (set five years after the end of the original Lion Voltron series) to a mixed response, because of its departure from the original Lion Voltron's anime look, as well as some character changes (such as the physical appearance of Prince Lotor, now voiced by Tim Curry, taking over the role originally voiced by Lennie Weinrib). Two of the most infamous scenes coming from this series are the scene where Keith pulls a gun on Lance in a fight between the two Lion Force pilots over authority in the episode "A Rift in the Force," and the destruction of the Voltron lions brought on by Amalgamus, the computer leader of the Galaxy Alliance in "The Troika Moons" saga. It served as a sequel to the Lion Voltron series, and among the tools used to bridge the gap was an official starmap as designed by Shannon Muir, and finalized in partnership with World Events Productions. After Voltron: The Third Dimension, World Events Productions went back to the drawing board to develop a more traditionally animated series, in an attempt to recapture the spirit of the original.
  • Interactive Voltron Series — A new animated series originally slated to be released in the fall of 2005, it was set to be produced by Kickstart Productions, with Tom Pugsley and Greg Kline writing the episodes.

DVD releases

Australian-based distributor Madman Entertainment has released all episodes of Voltron on DVD. The original series was released in five volumes under the name "Voltron: Defender of the Universe". Each box is in the color and style of one of the lions. These were released between August 2004 and July 2005. Another three volumes of "Vehicle Force Voltron" were released between August and December 2005. Additionally a "Best of" 2-DVD set was released in November 2006 featuring five episodes from each series.[1]

New York–based distributor Media Blasters has announced the commercial release of Voltron in its original broadcast form on DVD in Region 1. Volume 1 was released on September 26, 2006, followed by Volume 2 on December 19, 2006, and Volume 3 on May 8, 2007. Volume 4 has a target release date of September 25, 2007. The volumes contain 15 episodes each, along with special features such as documentaries featuring interviews with producer and director Franklin Cofod, and various others involved in the original and current productions.

Additionally, the Fleet of Doom special was released on DVD early in 2007, as an online Voltron.com exclusive. Fleet of Doom was a special crossover film where the Vehicle and Lion Voltrons joined forces to defeat the "Fleet of Doom" (Galra and Drule Empires). The special was originally released in 1986, but was never released in Japan.

Media Blasters also plans to release the two Japanese shows that made up VoltronHundred Beast King FiveLion (GoLion), and Armored Fleet Dairugger XV — each in their original, unedited Japanese form, with English subtitles. The releases are scheduled to begin in the near future, though no official release date has been posted.

Comic books

In 1985, Modern Comics, an imprint of Charlton Comics, produced a three-issue mini-series based on the Lion Voltron television show.

Lion Voltron recently was temporarily revived in print through a hit comic book series from Devil's Due Publishing, under the imprint of Image Comics. After a five-issue mini-series (with a preview issue #0 from Dreamwave), Devil's Due Publishing began to self-publish Voltron as Vol. 2 of the series. The series lasted another eleven issues, as well as two trade paperbacks collecting Vol. 1 and Vol. 2 Issues #1-5. The line was placed on hiatus in 2005, due to poor sales and lack of public interest. At this time, Devil's Due does still retain the rights to publish comics using the likeness of Voltron.

Action figures

Voltron was originally released in Japan under the name GoLion. The figure line is based on the U.S. version of the Japanese cartoon series, where five pilots combine their lion vehicles to form a super robot. Matchbox distributed the first series of die cast toys, which included Voltron I, II and III (some of the Matchbox toys were subject to a recall due to the use of lead paint), with earlier packaging referring to the Vehicle Voltron as the Warrior Voltron.

Panosh Place then purchased the rights, and released the 3 3/4" line of vehicles and action figures based around the Voltron III GoLion robot (a catalogue also showed action figures of the three Vehicle Team leaders, though these and additional action figures from the Lion Force remained unreleased).

LJN took over near the end of the series to release various versions of the Voltron III robot, and only a couple of Vehicle Voltron toys.

In the 1990s, Trendmasters started up the line with an all-new look for the Lion Voltron, then continued on to produce Stealth Voltron and Voltrex, the "Dino" Voltron.

Currently, Toynami holds the license. They have produced I-Men mini-figures of the pilots and the lions, as well as a fully articulated Masterpiece Voltron.

Though not under the Voltron license, a version of Vehicle Voltron sporting a different color scheme was released under a different name to Toys R' Us in the late 1990s. The variation was packaged as fully combined in robot mode behind a clear plastic window box. Prior to the Voltron series, GoLion and the New Super Abega were part of Bandai America's Godaikin toyline. The Lion Voltron robot toy was also widely released as Lionbot which was essentially a Hong Kong produced bootleg version of the toy, identical to the Godaikin version.

Characters of Lion Voltron/GoLion

American names are first, followed by the Japanese names. (Note: full names taken from Devil's Due comic series.)

Based on the American version of Voltron: Defender of the Universe:

Voltron Force

  • Commander Keith/Akira Kogane (黄金旭 Kogane Akira?): Commander and leader of the Voltron Force, who pilots the Black Lion that forms the bulk of Voltron, and wears a red uniform in the original series, and a black uniform in Voltron: The Third Dimension. He is approximately 21-23 years of age. Keith is a quiet individual who spends much of his time pondering his decisions, thinking up new strategies, and simply being a leader. He also has a hobby of reading books. He can often be found doing so either in the pilot's lounge, or in his room. He seemingly likes Princess Allura and is thought to be somewhat protective of her; his worst fear, according to Voltron: The Third Dimension, was that she would be forced to marry the evil Prince Lotor. Keith was played by Neil Ross (US) & Kazuhiko Inoue (Japan).
  • Lance Charles McClain/Isamu Kurogane (黒鋼勇 Kurogane Isamu?): Second-in-command of Voltron, who pilots the Red Lion that forms the right arm of Voltron, and wears a blue uniform in the original series, and a metallic red uniform in Voltron: The Third Dimension. He is a tall man, both wiry and wily, about 21-23 years of age. Lance is always cracking jokes and teasing others whenever he gets the chance. He is the only one in the group who has the guts to contest any of Keith's commands. He is also a ladies' man, and a great pilot, though a bit too daring at times. Lance was voiced by Michael Bell (US) & Yuu Mizushima (Japan).
  • Darrell "Pidge" Stoker/Hiroshi "Chibi" Suzuishi (錫石「チビ」宏 Suzuishi "Chibi" Hiroshi?): Pidge is the youngest and smallest of the group; he pilots the Green Lion that forms the left arm of Voltron, and wears a green uniform. He is approximately 12 years old. Pidge graduated from the academy at a young age, and his specialty is science. Like the others, he is well-trained in martial arts, and uses his size and agility to his advantage. Pidge is not afraid to speak his mind, especially to the villains, and his heart is often in his words. Pidge has a twin brother, Chip, who is a member of the Vehicle Voltron Air Team. Pidge was voiced by Neil Ross (US) & Masako Nozawa (Japan). In Voltron: The Third Dimension, Pidge was voiced by Billy West.
    • Note: Pidge is the only member of the Voltron Force whose uniform did not get a color change in Voltron: The Third Dimension.
  • Sven Holgersson/Takashi Shirogane (銀貴 Shirogane Takashi?): Sven, a Norwegian pilot, was the original second-in-command, who piloted the Blue Lion, and wore a black uniform in the very beginning of the series. In episode 6, he was badly injured during an attack by Haggar, and was sent away to the planet Ebb to be healed. He was killed in the Japanese version, with his younger brother appearing later in the series. Allura replaced him as the Blue Lion's pilot. His age is about the same as Keith's. Ebb was eventually attacked and raided by Lotor's Forces and Sven (his brother in Japan) was captured. He spent time in prison with Allura's cousin from the Planet Pollux, Princess Romelle. After their escape, Sven was reassigned to the Planet Pollux with Princess Romelle and Prince Bandor, another royal cousin of Allura. Sven was always very quiet and reserved, and spoke only when he had something important to say. Though he may not show it, he is a very emotional person, and his heart is always leading his mind in any decision. Sven was voiced by Michael Bell (US) & Ryusei Nakao (Japan).
    • Note: Sven does not appear in nor is mentioned in Voltron: The Third Dimension.
  • Princess Allura/Princess Farla (ファーラ姫 Fāra-hime?): Princess Allura of the planet Arus is the ruler of the Kingdom of Altair (as well as the entire planet, for the most part) and is also the object of Lotor's affections. She takes over for Sven as the pilot of the Blue Lion that forms Voltron's right leg, and wears a pink uniform in the original series, and a metallic blue uniform in Voltron: The Third Dimension. Her age is about 18-20. Though a bit naïve, especially with matters of romance, Allura is a strong-willed person, and is very capable of ruling her planet, though some like Coran and Nanny tend to disagree. She is capable of invoking the dead, particularly her father, the late King Alfor. Allura's voice was played by B.J. Ward (US) & Rumiko Ukai (Japan).
  • Tsuyoshi "Hunk" Garett/Tsuyoshi Seidō (青銅強 Seidō Tsuyoshi?): Hunk is the strong-man of the group, piloting the Yellow Lion that forms Voltron's left leg, and wearing an orange uniform in the original series, and a metallic yellow uniform in Voltron: The Third Dimension. He is about 24-26 years old. He may look tough and mean, but he has a soft heart, especially when it comes to children. He is never late for a meal. Though his friends tease him about his appetite, most of Hunk's bulk is muscle. It is revealed that he eats "-'Fruit Loops' (almost)every morning". Hunk was voiced by Lennie Weinrib (US) & Tesshô Genda (Japan). In Voltron: The Third Dimension, Hunk was voiced by Kevin Michael Richardson.

Allies

  • Space Mice: The Space Mice are pastel-colored mice displaying an above-animal level of intelligence, who were Princess Allura's friends as a child. They are often mischievous, but sometimes helpful. There are five Space Mice, though the fifth mouse is rarely seen until later episodes, perhaps not being born, or being too young to leave the nest at first. There is a large light blue mouse, a large pink mouse, two medium-sized light blue mice, and the fifth is a much smaller light blue mouse. The cartoon was very inconsistent with the names of the mice, and names used for various mice included Chitter, Cheddar, Cheeser, Cheesy, Pip, Squeek, Mousie, Prince, Toady, Inky, and Suki. Toward the end of the Lion Force Voltron series, the Space Mice wear little orange Voltron Force uniforms and pilot a machine called the Mouse Plane, which can transform into a comic-looking Mouse Voltron. In the comic from Image and Devil's Due, the Space Mice were cybernetic robots constructed for Princess Allura by her father.
  • Princess Romelle (Princess Omuvei): Princess Romelle is Allura's cousin, who lives on the planet Pollux, where she co-rules with her brother, Prince Bandor. She is a dead-ringer for Princess Allura, in terms of physical appearance. Though once a slave of Lotor, Sven came to her rescue, and together they fight for her people against the Drule Empire. She and Sven fall in love and live "happily ever after" on Pollux (a sharp contrast from the original ending of GoLion, in which the character of Shirogane Takashi's brother dies).
  • Coran (Raible): Coran is Allura's royal advisor, and is in charge of the Castle Control. He also advises the Voltron Force, and is very wise, though he can be very overprotective and opinionated at times. He is also the commander of the Castle of Lions crew, once the Castle became battle-worthy, and especially once it transforms into the Mecha Fortress. Coran is voiced by Peter Cullen (US) & Yuji Fujishiro (Japan). In Voltron: The Third Dimension, Coran was voiced by Michael Bell.
  • Nanny (Hisu): Nanny is Allura's over-protective caregiver, who always wants to make all of Allura's decisions for her. Like Coran, Nanny fusses over the Princess, and is bent on keeping her away from all harm. She dies near the finale of GoLion, shot to death by Garret while protecting Coran; this scene was cut from the U.S. version. Nanny was voiced by B.J. Ward (US) & Kazuyo Aoki (Japan).
  • King Alfor (King Raimon): King Alfor is Allura's deceased father, and the previous ruler of planet Arus. Years ago, King Alfor went forth to battle against King Zarkon and his forces in the Valley of Zohar on Planet Arus. He was tragically killed on that day. His body was placed in a royal tomb, located directly beneath the castle. Nowadays, he returns to the world of the living every so often in a ghostly form to give advice to his daughter to help her in her struggles to maintain peace on Arus and the surrounding galaxy. King Alfor is credited with being the designer of Voltron in the American version, but not in the Japanese. Also in Voltron The Third Dimension he and Hagar had a relationship and their break up caused her to become evil. Alfor is voiced by Peter Cullen (US) & Mahito Tsujimura (Japan). In Voltron: The Third Dimension, King Alfor was voiced by Tim Curry.

Mecha

  • Voltron (Golion): Combination of the five Lions, was once a sentient being before being separated into the five Lions.
    • Black Lion (Kuro Shishi): Piloted by Commander Keith. Piloted by Allura in one episode. Unlike the other Lions, the Black Lion did not have a "closed" hangar. Throughout the series, it was assumed that the Black Lion's hangar was located on the large tower fronting the castle, which was previously occupied by a winged lion statue which hid it. When the Black Lion was first activated, this statue crumbled apart to reveal it, and the Black Lion folded it's seldom used wings.
    • Red Lion (Aka Shishi): Piloted by Lance. Piloted by Princes Allura in one episode since Lance was using the Blue Lion to find the cure for the deadly flowers. The Red Lion's hangar was located inside a volcano near the castle.
    • Green Lion (Midori Shishi): Piloted by Pidge. Piloted by Keith in its first launch, before the Black Lion was recovered. The Green Lion's hangar was located in a forest near the castle.
    • Blue Lion (Aoi Shishi): Piloted by Sven up to episode 6, and thereafter by Princess Allura (although Sven would return to pilot the Blue Lion on one more occasion in the second season episode "Who's Flyin' Blue Lion?") Piloted in one episode each by Keith, Coran and Nanny together, and a replacement pilot (who turned out to be an agent of Zarkon). Piloted once by Lance when he went off to a distant planet to find the cure for some deadly flowers to heal the Princess. Lance piloted the Blue Lion because the planet had a special magnetic field that only the Blue Lion could overcome.The Blue Lion's hangar was located underneath the moat that surrounded the castle.
    • Yellow Lion (Ki Shishi): Piloted by Hunk. The Yellow Lion's hangar was located inside a cave located in a desert near the castle.
  • Mouse Plane / Mouse Voltron (Gonezumi): piloted by the Space Mice.
  • Castle of Lions (Mechafortress) / Flying Fortress (Flying Mechafortress): The Lion Voltron force's base of operations and their home, which near the finale can transform into a flying fortress piloted by Coran.

Villains of Voltron/GoLion

  • King Zarkon (Emperor Daibazaal): King Zarkon of the Planet Doom is one of the rulers of the Drule Empire, though by no means the absolute ruler. He is constantly using others as scapegoats for his own failures (à la Zanbazir using Prince Heinel as a scapegoat); more often than not, his son Lotor when his own plans fail. In the Japanese version, however, he is the evil ruler of his own Empire, absolutist without anybody controlling him. This differs from the American version, where he is a king with a Senate advisory body, with none daring to oppose him; very similar to Voltes V 's Emperor Zanbazir in his treatment of slaves (ex. whipping, starving, killing them on the spot, which is typical in super-robot shows). In the Japanese version, his character was eventually killed by GoLion. Zarkon was voiced by Jack Angel (US) & Kousei Tomita (Japan). In Voltron: The Third Dimension, Zarkon managed to redeem himself prior to his final defeat, and became a member of the Galactic Council. His redemption though was a ruse and he and his son worked together to take over the alliance. In this version, he was voiced by Kevin Michael Richardson.
  • Prince Lotor (Prince Sincline): Prince Lotor is the evil son of the Drule King Zarkon. He dislikes his father greatly, and wishes to rule in his place along with Princess Allura, to whom he's developed a strong and obsessive attraction, often commenting on how good of a Queen she'd be or how beautiful she is. Lotor is a very sly, smart, smooth, powerful man, who exudes force and emanates what seems to be pure evil. In GoLion, Sincline's obsession with Farla is because she resembles his mother, whom Emperor Daibazaal (a.k.a. King Zarkon) had killed, with Princess Farla/Allura becoming his major psychological weakness. In other words, this is basically an Oedipus complex. He hates his father, and plans to rule the Universe for himself. He was killed in the last episode of GoLion, something that is typical for super-robot shows. Lotor was voiced by Lennie Weinrib (US) & Akira Kamiya (Japan). In Voltron: The Third Dimension, Lotor was mortally wounded in a battle, and was converted into a cyborg after he was placed in prison. However, he escaped and perpetrated his revenge on the heroes, though he still has feelings for Allura. In this version, he was voiced by Tim Curry.
  • Haggar (Honerva): Haggar the witch is the one responsible for creating all of the Robeasts (or Galran Beast Fighters) Voltron must go up against. She is also notorious for using her dark magic to cast hypnotizing spells over people. Though she was once good and beautiful, she is now evil and ugly. It was Haggar who was responsible for originally splitting Voltron into five components in the American version. In the Japanese version, she was one of Daibazaal's old love interests, and possibly a concubine. Haggar's voice was played by B.J. Ward (US) & Masako Nozawa (Japan). In Voltron: The Third Dimension, Haggar went into hiding after the final battle, but rejoined Lotor in his conquest schemes. They strike a deal in which, if Lotor conquers the universe, she gets the magic in the lions while he gets the universe and the lions themselves.
  • Dragons/Dracotron: Evil counterparts to the lions based on dragons, the Dragons lived in an alternate dimension, but were so ferocious and destructive that they left it a desolate wasteland, forcing them to travel to other dimensions to steal food as well as structures within which to protect their eggs from their atmosphere. The most powerful Dragon is Draco, the black dragon. Five Dragons can merge to form Dracotron, an evil incarnation of Voltron with a superblast attack so strong, it is indirectly stated in Third Dimension that two blasts can destroy Voltron. In Third Dimension, the Dragons and Dracatron make multiple appearances and are destroyed each time, indicating that possibly any five Dragons can merge into a Dracotron.
  • Yurak: Commander of the Galran/Doom Forces. In both versions, he is sentenced to death. He is transformed into a gigantic beast fighter in hopes of redeeming himself. However, he is killed by GoLion/Voltron. Yurak's death is one of the few onscreen character deaths that were retained for the American Voltron release.
  • Queen Merla: A villainess exclusive to the US version, she was voiced by Tress MacNeille.
  • Lafitte: Exclusive to Voltron: The Third Dimension, she and her partner were drafted by Lotor for grunt work. Lafitte was voiced by Tress MacNeille.
  • Igor: a robotic figure who was commander of Lotor's army. Never seen after Lotor's conquest of the galactic administrative council.
  • Cossack: A replacement for Yurak, he was generally ineffective against Voltron, though like Yurak, he often went into battle throwing everything he could think of against the robot, including various robeasts given to him by Haggar for the purpose of battling Voltron.

Vehicle Voltron Characters

Air Team

Air Team uniforms were dark blue and white.

  • Jeff Dukane: Leader of the Air Team and the entire vehicle Voltron Force, Jeff is hot-headed, occasionally quick-tempered, yet still brave and a very capable leader, even if he doesn't always follow the rules. Although dialogue early in the series hints at something going on between him and Ginger, later episodes suggest a relationship between him and Lisa, much as there was with their Dairugger XV counterparts. He pilots the Command Jet Explorer (#1), which becomes the head of Voltron.
  • Rocky: Brooklyn-accented member of the Air Team, usually described by fans as the "Hunk" of the Vehicle Voltron Force. He pilots the Strato Weapons Module (#2) that forms the upper torso of Voltron.
  • Wolo: A blue-skinned member of the Air Team with very little character development. He pilots the Advanced Recon Helicopter (#3) that becomes the right upper arm of Voltron.
  • Chip Stoker: Member of the Air Team, and the youngest member of the Vehicle Voltron Force, Chip happens to be Pidge's twin brother, despite the fact that they are visibly different heights. Although not often prominently featured except in one episode, Chip can be described as the brains of the Vehicle Force, much like Pidge is to the Lion Force. He pilots the Advanced Recon Helicopter (#4) that becomes the left upper arm of Voltron.
  • Ginger: Member of the Air Team. Despite her high, girlish voice, Ginger is a brave and capable pilot, and has fought for a worthy cause ever since she helplessly watched her family destroyed in an astro-ship explosion when she was a little girl. She pilots the Falcon VT Fighter (#5) that forms the chest plate of Voltron.

Sea Team

Sea Team uniforms were navy blue and aqua.

  • Cric: Hailing from an unnamed water planet, Cric is appropriately the leader of the Sea Team. Speaking with an otherworldly alien accent, he has clairvoyant powers that tend to tell him when something bad is about to happen. He is the pilot of the Communications Module (#6) that becomes the torso mid-rif section of Voltron.
  • Lisa: Kind and compassionate member of the Sea Team. She is very knowledgeable in ancient cultures, and always seems to know the right thing to say to others. It is most likely she is in a relationship with Jeff, much like their Dairugger XV counterparts. She pilots the Space Prober (#7) that becomes the right thigh of Voltron.
  • Tagor: One of the members of the Vehicle Voltron Force who are usually treated as unmentionable background characters. Tagor pilots the Space Prober (#8) that forms the left thigh of Voltron.
  • Shannon: Irish-accented member of the Sea Team. Like Ginger, he too fights for a worthy cause, as his brother is a prisoner of the Drule Empire, on Planet Doom. He pilots the Multi-Wheeled Explorer (#9) that becomes the right lower leg of Voltron.
  • Zandee: One of the members of the Vehicle Voltron Force who are usually treated as unmentionable background characters. Zandee pilots the Multi-Wheeled Explorer (#10) that becomes the left lower leg of Voltron.

Land Team

Land Team uniforms were white and red.

  • Cliff: Leader of the Land Team. He has a strong Australian accent, and sometimes tends to have a wry sense of humor. He pilots the Jet Radar Station (#11) that forms the lower torso/hips of Voltron.
  • Cinda: Member of the Land Team. Like Lisa, she too is kind and compassionate, especially when it comes to nature. She comes from the same water planet as Cric. She pilots the Rotating Personnel Carrier (#12) that forms the right forearm of Voltron.
  • Modoch: Large member of the Land Team, who can best be described as a "gentle giant." He pilots the Armored Equipment Carrier (#13) that forms the left forearm of Voltron.
  • Marvin & Hutch: Good buddies and members of the Land Team, these two are often seen together, either playing cards or brawling with each other. While Marvin is usually comedic, Hutch is a regular tough guy, always looking for a good fight. They pilot the All-Terrain Space Vehicles (#14 and #15) that form the right and left feet of Voltron, respectively.

Allies

  • Commander James Hawkins: Commander of the S.S. Explorer, it is Commander Hawkins who gives all the orders to the vehicle Voltron Force. Firm and strict, Hawkins is determined to make peace with the Drule Empire, despite how many times they attempt to backstab him in the process. Voiced by Peter Cullen.
  • Space Marshal Graham: Supreme commander of the Galaxy Alliance. Along with Commander Steele, he is usually conducting meetings discussing current situations involving the ongoing conflict with the Drule Empire.
  • Commander Steele: High-ranking official of the Galaxy Alliance. Along with Space Marshal Graham, he is usually conducting meetings discussing current situations involving the war with the Drule Empire. He takes a more active role in the conflict towards the end of the series.
  • Captain Newley: Captain of the S.S. Explorer, and good friend to Commander Hawkins. Midway through the series, he gets transferred back to Galaxy Garrison on Earth, but that doesn't stop his fight against the Drules.
  • Professor Page: The S.S. Explorer 's chief scientist and acting physician, he can tell you all about a planet and even its cultures simply by examining a mere sample or artifact.

Mecha

  • Voltron (Dairugger XV, Dairugger Fifteen)
    • Strato Fighter (Kuu Rugger): Piloted by the Air Team.
      • Command Jet Explorer (Rugger 1): Piloted by Jeff.
      • Strato Weapons Module (Rugger 2): Piloted by Rocky.
      • Advanced Recon Helicopter (Rugger 3, the red one): Piloted by Wolo.
      • Advanced Recon Helicopter (Rugger 4, the blue and red one): Piloted by Chip.
      • Falcon VT Fighter (Rugger 5): Piloted by Ginger.
    • Aqua Fighter (Kai Rugger): Piloted by the Sea Team.
      • Communications Module (Rugger 6): Piloted by Cric.
      • Space Prober (Rugger 7, the red one): Piloted by Lisa.
      • Space Prober (Rugger 8, the blue and yellow one): Piloted by Tagor.
      • Multi-Wheeled Explorer (Rugger 9, with red markings): Piloted by Shannon.
      • Multi-Wheeled Explorer (Rugger 10, with yellow markings): Piloted by Zandee.
    • Turbo-Terrain Fighter (Rikku Rugger): Piloted by the Land Team.
      • Jet Radar Station (Rugger 11): Piloted by Cliff.
      • Rotating Personnel Carrier (Rugger 12, with blue markings): Piloted by Cinda.
      • Armored Equipment Carrier (Rugger 13, with red markings): Piloted by Modoch.
      • All-Terrain Space Vehicle (Rugger 14, the yellow one): Piloted by Marvin.
      • All-Terrain Space Vehicle (Rugger 15, the black one): Piloted by Hutch.

Drules

  • Commander Hazar: High-ranking warlord of the Drule Empire. At the beginning of the series, he was a typical Drule leader bent on galactic conquest. However, midway through the series, he begins to have a change of heart, and becomes more compassionate in his quest; and, like Commander Hawkins, tries time and time again to arrange for peace between the Drule Empire and the Galaxy Alliance. Throughout the series, he has had to put up with demotions, imprisonment, and worst of all, treacherous underlings who repeatedly and deliberately disobey his direct orders of helping bring peace, in favor of attacking the Alliance.
  • Dorma: Hazar's kindhearted sister, who appears towards the end of the series. When she is kidnapped by the Drule U.R.F. (Underground Rebel Force), she agrees to join in their fight for peace and freedom on planet Drule.
  • Chancellor Mozak: Hazar and Dorma's father, and kindhearted member of the Drule Supreme Council, he wishes nothing more than for peace and freedom on planet Drule. He often clashes in his views with Viceroy Throk.
  • Commander Kwork: An early opponent of the Explorer and its crew. Persistent but ultimately ineffective against the Voltron force. He causes the destruction of an uninhabited planet that the Drules and humans were competing over. Curiously, his death scene is included in the American Voltron release but the scene was incongruously dubbed over with Kwork saying "I'll be back" before his ship explodes. A member of the Voltron force later states that "Kwork got away again!"
  • Captain Mongo: One of the Drule Empire's best officers, and loyal friend to Hazar. When Hazar began to have a change of heart, Mongo was one of the few Drules who supported him, and he continued to loyally support him, until he eventually went into exile midway through the series.
  • Bakki: Founder of the U.R.F., Bakki is a kind-hearted Drule, who hopes to liberate his homeworld's citizens from the tyranny of the Drule rulers.
  • Captain Nerok: Cruel and heavyset Drule officer. A natural-born kiss-up and backstabber, he lives for nothing more than destroying the Galaxy Alliance and making Hazar look like a fool.
  • Marshall Keezor: Wicked and crafty member of the Drule Supreme Council. He first arrived personally to give Hazar the news of his demotion, then appeared to take on Hazar's duties of eliminating the Voltron Force. In the Lion Voltron series, it was also Keezor who arranged for Zarkon to be stripped of his powers and to have those powers handed over to Lotor.
  • Viceroy Throk: Possibly the worst of the worst, Throk is at bitter ends with Mozak and Hazar, and the loyalist supporter of Emperor Zeppo. Throk becomes the main baddie under Zeppo towards the very end of the series, especially during the impending arrival of the Voltron Force on planet Drule to aid Hazar in liberating the homeworld, and overthrowing Zeppo. Later, Throk would join forces with Zarkon in building the universe's most feared space armada, the Fleet of Doom.
  • Captain Twyla: A female Drule officer who is captured by the Explorer crew. She is confused by Commander Hawkins' treatment of her as a guest instead of a prisoner. Hawkins' explains to her that willingness to discuss peace negotiations is not the same thing as selling out her race. Her final fate is unknown but Hawkins hoped that she communicated to others a new alternative.
  • Zandu: A Drule pilot who is captured by the Explorer crew. Commander Hawkins, in usual form, treats the pilot as a guest instead of a prisoner. However, this upsets Shannon, a member of the Voltron force Sea Team who has a brother being held prisoner as the Drules. Shannon, upon getting to know Zandu, realizes that Zandu, despite being on the side of the enemy, is only following orders and unaware of the evil nature of his masters. Zandu is allowed to return to his ship but is shot down by a Drule commander who believes it is a trick by the humans. In the American version, he crashlands on a planet and though badly wounded, apparently survives. As is the usual case, he dies in the original Japanese version.
  • Emperor Zeppo: Through most of the series, all we ever see of Zeppo is a portrait of him adorning every Drule command ship. It is not until much later that he is introduced in the flesh, attending meetings of the Drule Supreme Council. No other Drule holds higher royal rank than the Emperor. When the liberation of planet Drule finally came, Zeppo quietly stood by as Hazar personally overthrew his rule. Hazar thus immediately became Drule's rightful emperor, though he then decreed that their world would no longer have any Emperors, but that leaders would from then on be elected. Zeppo and Throk proceeded to quietly flee the dying planet. Shortly after the inevitable destruction of planet Drule, the liberated citizens were moved to a new planet by the Galaxy Alliance. As soon as they settled in, Zeppo and Throk set up a decoy to distract the Voltron Force, while the remnants of the Drule Empire swept in on the planet and retook control of their people. Emperor Zeppo was in control again. This possibly would have lead to a second season of the Vehicle series, had WEP decided to animate their own episodes of it, as they had with the Lion Force series.

Gladiator Voltron Characters

The Japanese names of the three Gladiator pilots are Enjoji Daisakau (the leader), Jin Tetsuya (the taller boy), and Mizuki Hotaru (the girl). What their names would have been in the Voltron mythos is unknown. They piloted the Alpha Robo (Black Gladiator), Beta Robo (Blue Gladiator), and Gamma Robo (Red Gladiator), respectively. In the beginning of the series, each would have also piloted a small aircraft, the Jet Alpha, Jet Beta, and Jet Gamma. These three aircraft were flown through small hatches into the backs of the Gladiators in order to pilot the Gladiators. The three aircraft could also combine into a single jet called the Super Abega. They were very quickly replaced by a different set of small aircraft that could transform into different bipedal droid forms, called the New Jet Alpha/Jetrobo Alpha, New Jet Beta/Jetrobo Beta, and New Jet Gamma/Jetrobo Gamma. They combined into the New Super Abega. It is completely unknown what these smaller jets or their combined forms would have been called in the Voltron mythos.

There was also a fourth pilot character, Kumai Goro, who piloted a large robot called the Gori Robo. This would have been a "Gorilla Gladiator" in comedy-relief style, on the same level as the Space Mice and their Mouse Plane/Mouse Voltron.

[edit] Changes from the Japanese version

Besides the name changes, and to conform to the stricter standards of American children's television, some modifications were made to both series.

Content edits

  • Shots of shooting/explicit torture (e.g., whipping) prisoners/civilians/slaves), and some shots of corpses removed.
  • Bloody arena battles were lessened.
  • Grunts (known as Robeasts in Voltron) being shot (as infantry) or being blown up (when in ships/fighters) were sometimes referred to as "robots," as were space fleets on occasion.
  • In the case of special characters, they sometimes ejected/were rescued, and taken to treat their injuries, even though they died in the original Japanese series. Since this was the case with Sven (Shirogane), the scenes of his funeral and of his friends saying their tearful farewells were thus cut, as well. Similarly, in the original version of the episode "Coran's Son Runs Amok," Nanny (Hisu) is shot and mortally wounded by Garret while protecting Coran; WEP also cut the scenes of Allura and Coran visiting Nanny's grave afterwards.
  • The commands to form the robot were not mentioned in GoLion.

Technical modifications

  • Lion Voltron featured redubbed sound effects (Vehicle Voltron used the original Japanese effects).
  • Both Lion and Vehicle Voltron used different background music from their original counterparts.

Plot changes

[edit] GoLion

  • Both shows begin with the five pilots as pilots sent by the Galaxy Alliance, whose space-exploration mission takes them to a planet devastated by war. In Voltron, the pilots arrive on Arus, and are captured and taken to Planet Doom. They then escape and return to Arus, and become the pilots of the robot lions and Voltron. In GoLion, the initial scenes are actually of Earth, as the pilots have returned from their mission in the year 1999 to find that the entire population of Earth has been killed in a nuclear war. They are then captured and taken to Planet Galra, where the plot proceeds similarly.
  • Shirogane Takashi (Sven) was killed when he battled Honerva (Haggar), whereas in Voltron he was severely injured and later returned to help the Voltron Force. His younger brother Sho was the one who fought Sincline (Lotor) at the siege of Planet Galra (Doom). Sho and Sincline fell to their deaths, whereas in Voltron they fell into a body of water and survived.
  • It was a goddess, not Honerva (Haggar), that split up GoLion due to his arrogance (GoLion is supposedly sapient, although this was subtly discarded in the series).
  • Voltron 's "Queen Merla" arc never existed in the original Japanese run, and was created by Toei at the request of World Events Productions (with the animation work farmed out to Korean studios). The Japanese GoLion series ended with the destruction of the giant Daibarzaal (Zarkon) Beast Fighter, which killed him.
  • The Mecha Fortress could only transform one-way into the Flying Mecha Fortress, unlike the ability the Flying Fortress of Voltron had to transform back into the Castle of Lions in the second season of Voltron.
  • Lotor/Sincline kills Hagar/Honerva. She dies a very painful death.

Dairugger XV

  • Manabu (Jeff) has a serious relationship with Haruka (Lisa).
  • Chip was never Pidge's brother.
  • All the Galaxy Alliance officers a given episode focused on were killed, unless it was explicitly shown they survived (i.e., they are in succeeding episodes); likewise, this is also the condition for Drule officers and leaders.
  • The Voltron series starts with the Drules and the Galaxy Alliance having tense relations, with the Drules attacking the Explorer, on the grounds it violated their space. In the Japanese series, both powers were unaware of each other, and there was no overcrowding within the Alliance; the Explorer is merely an exploratory vessel, and the Drules are stretching their power, not looking for a new world. It is by fate that they meet, and that Dairugger XV is given a new mission.
  • Emperor Zeppo was killed in Dairugger XV. Also, Hazar died a martyr's death, and his body destroyed along with the Drule homeworld.

Devil's Due comic book

From 2003 until its hiatus in 2004/5, Devil's Due began publishing an updated version of Voltron for modern audiences. The characters remained the same, but were given further backgrounds and character development. Stylistic changes were also made. In the cartoon, Keith, Lance, Sven, Hunk, and Pidge were all members of the Galaxy Alliance, and knew the Vehicle team quite well from their academy days. In the comic book, each member was a nobody of sorts, scrounged together by Colonel Hawkins (later demoted to Commander) to search for Voltron, and did not meet the Vehicle team until the second story arc. In the cartoon, the team's search for Voltron was a result of mere chance. The characters are also possibly slightly older than in the cartoon, but then, ages for the characters in the cartoon were never officially given. Also, in the cartoon, Zarkon was described as a renegade of the Drule Empire, and Queen Merla was queen of an unknown kingdom. In the comic book, the Drule Empire is instead the Drule Supremacy, consisting of 10 kingdoms, with Zarkon ruling the Ninth Kingdom and Merla ruling the Seventh Kingdom. Another stylistic change went to Allura's space mice, who are now bio-mechanical, created by King Alfor when Allura was little to be her companions. Their familiar mischievous tendencies don't emerge until Pidge modifies them into diagnostic tools ("sensors on legs", as he puts it). These modifications appear to have set up "a few unexpected behaviors".

Comic book bios

  • Keith Akira Kogane: The comic book version of Keith depicts him as 26 and a very anti-social character in the beginning. Born to a Japanese father and a Chinese mother, his father trained him in kung fu until Keith's parents died tragically in an accident when he was 12. Afterwards, Keith continued to practice many other forms of martial arts until he turned 18 and enrolled in the United States Marine Corps, spending several years as a reconnaissance specialist. When he was 24, he met and proposed to Beverly Hagel, who died 7 weeks before their wedding date in a plane accident. Two years later, he was approached by Colonel Hawkins to join a team of outcasts to search for the legendary robot Voltron on the distant planet Arus. During the course of the series, he begins to form a comradeship with his teammates, and begins to develop feelings for Princess Allura and vice-versa.
  • Lance Charles McClain: The comic book version of Lance depicts him as 24 with a criminal record. For most of his life, Lance grew up as an adolescent daredevil and drag-racer. His life changed forever when he won a gift certificate for 10 free flying lessons in a radio contest. These lessons displayed that he had a natural talent for flying. At age 18, he joined the navy, and flying became his obsession, but his hot-headedness landed him in deep water when his jetstar buzzed the penthouse of a vindictive senator. Three months into his five-year sentence in a military prison, Lance was approached by Colonel Hawkins to join a team of outcasts to search for the legendary robot Voltron on the distant planet Arus. The comic book version of Lance is given the catchphrase of exclaiming "holy cats!", or sometimes "ho-leeee cats!".
  • Tsuyoshi "Hunk" Garrett: The comic book version of Hunk depicts him as 24 and born to an American father and Japanese mother. His nickname "Hunk" comes from his 4 brothers, of whom he's ironically the smallest of, despite his own great size. While his brothers sought activities to take advantage of their physical prowess such as football and sumo, Hunk found a knack for all things mechanical. He was not very social, though, and would spend most of his time tinkering in garage workshops. Later he put himself through college on the G.I. bill, and after gaining a Master's in engineering, he discovered the equipment that fascinated him most was military in nature. However, he remained rather anti-social, establishing himself as someone whom it was unwise to harass, until he was approached by Colonel Hawkins to join a team of outcasts to search for the legendary robot Voltron on the distant planet Arus.
  • Darrell "Pidge" Stoker: The comic book version of Pidge depicts him as a growth-stunted 16-year-old, and as an Earthling (as opposed to his cartoon counterpart hailing from the planet Balto). He's also depicted as an orphan abandoned outside a covenant when he was six weeks old (however, he may yet have a family because later he talks with Vehicle team member Chip about the similarities that exist between the two of them, he remarks that '[they]'re one DNA test short of discovering [they]'re brothers' which is a nod to the cartoon establishment of Pidge and Chip as twins). During his years at the orphanage, his scores on a state-mandated IQ test caught the eye of the New West Point military academy, who promptly enrolled him to put his awe-inspiring understanding of computer systems to good use. However, his life at NWP turned out to be worse than at the orphanage, and was the subject of regular beatings by his intellectually-threatened peers, until he was approached by Colonel Hawkins to join a team of outcasts to search for the legendary robot Voltron on the distant planet Arus. Pidge didn't have to be asked twice, and promptly agreed.
  • Sven Holgersson: The comic book version of Sven depicts him as 27, the oldest member on the team. Unlike his cartoon counterpart, the comic book Sven is given much further depth, and plays a major role. Much of Sven's past remains unknown, except that he was a former member of an elite Navy squad similar to the SEALS. During an insurrection in a small South American country, a serious miscommunication caused a foreign national Sven was supposed to extract to believe Sven was an assassin and opened fire. Sven was left with no choice but to fire back, protecting himself and eliminating the extraction target. He was then placed on "administrative leave" until he was approached by Colonel Hawkins to join a team of outcasts to search for the legendary robot Voltron on the distant planet Arus. Sven was possibly the most anti-social of the group, but this is possibly due to being the oldest and most mature. Unlike in the cartoon, Sven never got a chance to properly form Voltron, or even get to wear his classic black uniform (the only comic book image of Sven in his uniform is in a promotional picture in the back of Issue #0, although Allura did offer to find him a uniform, possibly in black, when the team plus Allura finally attained their own familiar uniforms). This is due to him having a brain defect that caused the magic of Voltron to somehow reject him. This brain defect caused him to fall under the influence of Queen Merla and Hagger, under which he betrayed his friends and Arus by stealing files from the Castle of Lions' control room. He was then placed on a mission alongside Prince Lotor, during which the two found themselves having to survive together and try to trust each other. During a conflict that erupted later, Sven apparently crash-landed on planet Pollux, where he was discovered by Princess Romelle. Due to the comic's hiatus, what path Sven's tale would have taken from that point remains a mystery.
  • Princess Allura: The comic book version of Allura places her at age 19, and depicts her with a much stronger backbone than her cartoon counterpart. When her home planet Arus was ravaged by the forces of Zarkon and her parents murdered by Zarkon's own hand, she was taken in and raised by Coran,a retired combat instructor in the royal army, and was forced to grow up much too fast. Years later, she would renounce her title of "princess", answering only to "Allura", until he people are liberated from Zarkon's tyranny. Visions while she slept showed the spirit of her father King Alfor promising that five young men would come to Arus in search of the legendary robot Voltron. When Keith, Lance, Hunk, Pidge, and Sven arrive on Arus and speak of the mighty robot, Allura instantly knows that they are the ones spoken of in her visions, and helps them to find the five hidden lions that will unite to form Voltron. When Voltron fails to combine properly due to a brain defect within Sven, Allura mans his Blue Lion, and with her royal Arusian blood, the unification of Voltron is finally a success, and she becomes a member of the Voltron Force. During the course of the comic, she begins to develop feelings towards Keith and vice-versa.

References in other media

As Voltron was a popular and distinctive cartoon in the United States during the 1980s, many artists who grew up watching the show have recently started referencing the show in more modern works.

Music

  • Voltron was mentioned in a song by Murphy Lee, Nelly and P. Diddy "Shake Ya Tailfeather" with the line "Come on, you know the 'Tics connect like Voltron"
  • Voltron is referred to often by the hip-hop group, Wu-Tang Clan.
  • Voltron is referenced in the song "Funky Voltron" from Edan's 2005 album "The Beauty and the Beat."
  • Voltron is mentioned in the chorus of a song by the former Christian ska band Five Iron Frenzy, entitled "The Wizard Needs Food Badly." The song examines the differences between the sexes by referencing popular culture of the seventies and eighties.
  • In the song "This D.J." by Warren G, the second verse starts with, "Verse two, (uh-huh), now what the fuck I do? Catch the bus to Cal State, or chill with the Voltron crew."
  • In the song "I Just Don't Give A FUCK" by Eminem, the second verse contains "This is a lyrical combat, gentlemen hold your pistols/But I form like Voltron, and blast you with my shoulder missiles."
  • There is a band called Voltron whose lyrics are based around the series, as well as a ska-punk band called Let's Form Voltron.
  • In "The Second Coming" by Juelz Santana (used for Nike's "Second Coming" commercial), says "... Together we stand, divided we fall, united we form Voltron and take on all".
  • Voltron is mentioned in a song by Busta Rhymes, "Everything Remains Raw". Part of the second verse says, "On and on, hey, on and on and on/You won't understand when I form Voltron".
  • In Chamillionaire's "Mixtape Messiah Pt 2" on the track "Let Em Know" he states, "Got everybody staring at the car components/It look like Voltron with the door don't it?"
  • In The Moldy Peaches' song "Nothing Came Out" Kimya Dawson sings "I want you to watch cartoons with me; He-Man, Voltron, and Hong Kong Phooey."

Comics

  • Voltron was featured in the satirical web-based cartoon strip Get Your War On.
  • In the comic book series Gold Digger, there are regular appearances by a group of Leprechaun heroes called the Vaultron Force. They pilot five mechanical shoes that combine to form the giant robot Vaultron (It's only giant by Leprechaun scale, only being about five feet tall, overall).
    • They are menaced by both a direct parody of Lothar/Haggar, (Oompa Loompas), and their enemies the Pirate/Ninja Leprechauns. What is remarkable is that the Pirate/Ninja Leprechauns have a background of their own, and unique characteristics beyond the jokes their name gives. (Captain (Mc)Morgan, and his girlfiend big-breasted O'Mommah being the stand-out members).
  • In the webcomic Sluggy Freelance, main characters Torg and Riff are accidentally teleported to a parallel universe, where they encounter a team of superheroes similar to Gatchaman, who form a Voltron-like robot named Gofotron.
  • In the webcomic Perry Bible Fellowship, characters who look much like the Voltron characters form a unit called "Guntron" to destroy a giant robot scorpion. At the end of the strip, the blue character is missing, since his contribution to Guntron was the blue bullet that destroyed the scorpion. The next bullet in the chamber is green, and now the green character wears a much more worried expression than in the first panel. (The other three characters form the gun itself and are safe)
  • In the comic "Ursa Minors" #2, General Kien Lo Mein tries to convince The Bears to hand over the rights to their magical suits in order to employ nanite transformation converting the three Bears into a giant mecha bear. The Bears politely decline, saying "Look, not that we don't appreciate it, but you're preaching Voltron to the uninterested."

TV

  • In a sketch on Robot Chicken, "You got Robo-Served", Voltron is forced into a dance competition against a Robeast and loses. Voltron proceeds to kill the Robeast with his sword. Both of the songs danced to (the original "Work It Out on the Floor" and its legally-necessitated replacement) contain references to the cartoon series.
  • Voltron was also mentioned in episode three of the machinima series Red vs. Blue, comparing them to women, in that "the more you hook up, the better it gets".
  • In an episode of Sealab 2021, five mice are placed inside the empty bodies of five Sealab crewmembers, who were now robots. The mice are all wearing Lion Voltron flight suits and shout "GO, MOUSETRON!!" after they are all placed inside.
  • The Lion Force's combination sequence is constantly playing on monitor screens in the TV show Butt-Ugly Martians.
  • Voltron was referenced in the VH1 anthology series I Love the 80s 3-D.
  • A large Voltron toy is shown as a Christmas present during a 1980s-era flashback on Lost.
  • In an Episode of Home Movies, five kids can be seen forming Voltron in the background during the battle between the kids from the Sci-Fi Convention and the kids from the Renaissance Faire.
  • In the television show, Dexter's Laboratory, Dexter and his family form a Super Robot in order to stop a monster from destroying Tokyo—in order to combine vehicles, Dexter uses a key similar to the one used to initiate the combination for GoLion/Voltron.
  • In the animated television show Megas XLR (episode 18 — "S-Force S.O.S"), a complete parody is done of Voltron, including similar character designs, and differing animal mechs that join together.
  • In an episode of Taz-Mania, upon readying a trap for Taz, Bull Gator confirms with his partner Axle that all preparations are in order. Axle responds affirmatively and emphatically "Mega Thrusters are GO!"
  • In the film Vice Versa starring Judge Reinhold and Fred Savage, Judge Reinhold plays with a large size, remote controlled Lion Voltron toy.
  • Sprite used Voltron in a series of hip-hop-themed commercials in 1998. Each of the five lions were piloted by a prominent hip-hop artist or group: Goodie Mob (representing Southern hip-hop) piloted the Blue Lion, Mack 10 (representing West-Coast hip-hop) piloted the Yellow Lion, Fat Joe (representing East-Coast hip-hop) piloted the Green Lion, Common (representing Midwest hip-hop) piloted the Red Lion and Afrika Bambaataa (a hip-hop legend and pioneer) rode in the Black Lion with his own pilot. Instead of his trademark Blazing Sword, Voltron uses his "Blazing Mic".
  • In an episode of "The Fairly Oddparents" called "Smarty Pants", Timmy Turner mentions King Zarkon's name while playing a "Crash Nebula" game.
  • In the Family Guy Episode No Meals on Wheels Joe along with other handicapped people come back to Peter's restaurant and form "Cripple-Tron" in a manner similar to Voltron.
  • On X-Play's salute to Boss Characters in Video Games, Morgan Webb talked about Jo Slade, the fat, lesbian security guard rapist from Dead Rising, saying "she's like if weight, gender, and sexual preference stereotypes formed Voltron and tryed to taser you."
  • The 2 X-Play hosts, Adam Sessler and Morgan Webb said that together they form Voltron... a pathetic, one-armed, one-legged Voltron with no torso.

Miscellaneous

  • A Gizmodo computer review describes the Itronix GoBook III laptop as looking "like Voltron's underwear."
  • In the Nintendo GameCube game Gotcha Force, the character Metal Hero is arguably modeled after Voltron, with a helmet resembling that of a lion or tiger, and wielding a "blazing sword." Also, the motions used by Metal Hero to perform his special attack are identical to the motions used by Voltron to summon the Blazing Sword. Voltron is also referenced by the Borg Victory King, who utilizes gatlings fired from his legs.
  • In the collectible card game Magic: The Gathering, the Visions expansion featured robotic Chimera creatures, which added their abilities interchangeably to one another. Though the deck built around the Chimera creatures was never particularly powerful, it was and is still well known as the "Voltron Deck," and the game mechanic from the Chimera as the "Voltron Mechanic."
  • Voltron was mentioned in a quote by New York Giants Linebacker Lavar Arrington about the potential of the team's defense for the 2006 season: "Voltron still hasn't formed yet... I can only imagine what we will be once we get everybody out there."
  • In the 2006 Halloween cartoon of Homestar Runner, the character Strong Bad states, "we'll form into a giant robotic Halloween Night-finding space panther!"
  • The Lion Voltron appears as a playable unit in the Nintendo DS game Super Robot Wars W, under its GoLion name. GoLion's story is slightly changed to allow interaction of the GoLion cast with the other characters included in the game (i.e. Honerva/Haggar offering her service to Dr. Hell of MazinKaiser, King Zarkon's empire forming an alliance with the enemies of GaoGaiGar).
  • In Jim Butcher's Dresden Files novel Blood Rites, Harry Dresden refers to the merged form of a bunch of flying monkey demons as "Monkey Voltron." (on page 4).
  • In the opening scene of Hot Rod (film) Dave orders his food under the name "Vultron"
  • In Juelz Santana's "The Second Coming" song, he mentiones that "together we stand, divided we fall, united we form Voltron and take on all."

Broadcast history

Film adaptation

In July 2005, producer Mark Gordon announced a collaboration with producer Pharrell Williams as well as producers Mark Costa and Frank Oelman to make a live-action film adaptation of the franchise. Pharrell Williams was also reported to score the film.[2] The project's development was funded by Jim Young's Animus Films.[3] In December 2006, screenwriter Justin Marks was announced to have completed a script for Gordon.[4]

In August 2007, the production entity New Regency entered negotiations with Mark Gordon Co. to adapt Voltron. Interest in the property heightened after the box office success of Transformers, another film involving robots. Marks's script was described as "a post-apocalyptic tale set in New York City and Mexico... [in which] five ragtag survivors of an alien attack band together and end up piloting the five lion-shaped robots that combine and form the massive sword-wielding Voltron that helps battle Earth's invaders."[3]

Anime staff

  • Director: Kazushi Nomura, Kazuyuki Okaseko, Hiroshi Sasagawa, Katsuhiko Taguchi
  • Scenarists: Ryo Nakahara, Masaaki Sakurai, Susumu Takahisa
  • Music: Asei Kobayashi
  • Theme Song Performance (Golion): Ichiro Mizuki (OP- Tatakae! Goraion, ED- Gonin de Hitotsu)
  • Production: Toei Animation Co., Ltd. / TV Tokyo

References

  1. ^ Madman website. [1]
  2. ^ Stax. "Voltron Targets Hollywood", IGN, 2005-07-26. Retrieved on 2006-12-29.
  3. ^ a b Marc Graser. "'Voltron' gets bigscreen go", Variety, 2007-08-09. Retrieved on 2007-08-10.
  4. ^ Pamela McClintock, Nicole Laporte. "'Street Fighter' packs Hyde Park punch", Variety, 2006-10-29. Retrieved on 2006-12-29.

External links