There’s a few things here.
- De-clutter. This has to be intentional. What I mean by that is that you combine mechanisms in elegant ways. You don’t design beyond your capabilities (IIRC, you’re a 2nd-year team, I think you said), so you build something relatively simple but make it clean-looking.
- Camouflage. A well-placed side panel, solid colored, with nicely-done sponsor graphics does wonders for hiding things at least on first glance. Also think about if you can incorporate functionality into that panel somehow.
- BUMPERS. Take the time to make sure your bumper fabric is tight and secure (as in, do them around Presidents’ Day, not in the pits at your first event, and do them right). Not only does this make the overall robot look good, it prevents some possible bumper issues–and boosts you slightly on pick lists (hint, hint).*
- Pay attention to detail.
- Build a functional robot that is excellent at up to 3 things, one of which is driving, and is reliable. (The other 2 things are intaking and ejecting 1 type of game piece. >1 is optional.) If you do that, “ugly” takes care of itself. And if you really do it well, you can always cover it with a blue banner.
*Speaking of bumpers: Make sure the mounts are solid, the bumpers attach solidly, and all that sort of thing. I can think of two teams within 50 miles of me that I would NOT pick for playoffs, because they have had repeated bumper issues. I name no numbers.









