Delhi Technological University (DTU) takes Tech Fest: Roboscor and Samurai Vibes!

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February 22, 2025 is at 06:00

Engineering students from North India participated in DTu’s Tech Fest, Invastus. Some highlights were robotics, chess, hackathon and financial cricket.

Engineering, an engineering student from North India, landed at the Delhi Technological University (DTU) annual Tech Fest, where this year’s theme brought the Japanese Samurai-inspired Dhar to the campus, increasing the Sword of Innovation. From Samrai-Theme decorations to high-energy competitions, the four-day Extravaganza saw more than 15,000 students engaged in 80+ programs in 22 societies-a true battleground of conscience and technical talent.

DTu’s Invictus 2024 was an ideal mix of state -of -the -art technology, terrible rivalry and electrification energy. (Photo: htbs/manoj verma)

Conducted by DTu’s Technical Council, Fests had an exciting lineup of events including robotics, chess, hackathon, financial cricket and even a square game-inspired mathematics competition.

The chess competition saw some intense battle between young minds strategy and a striking performance of skills. (Photo: Manoj Verma/HT)
The chess competition saw some intense battle between young minds strategy and a striking performance of skills. (Photo: Manoj Verma/HT)

The robotics segment stole the show, in which participants to win unique challenges with designing and programming robots. Roboscor, a high-dot al-driven football match between robotic teams, emerged as a crowd preferred, combining accuracy, strategy and automation in an electrification.

Six separate competitions were shown at the robotics event, each required a unique set of skills. (Photo: Manoj Verma/HT)
Six separate competitions were shown at the robotics event, each required a unique set of skills. (Photo: Manoj Verma/HT)

“Every year, the students eagerly counted the days of the internet, where the innovation meets with enthusiasm,” says Sasax, the joint treasurer of the Technical Council. For many people, competition was about to change life. Hardit Singh, a BTech student at the University of ILM, who won Robosocecer, is called a game-changer. “Endless redesign, and rigorous tests.

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