1.6       This Document & Its Conventions

The 2026 Game Manual is a resource for all FIRST Robotics Competition teams for information specific to the 2026 season and the REBUILT game. Its audience will find the following detail:

-        a general overview of the REBUILT game,

-        detail about the REBUILT playing FIELD,

-        a description of how to play the REBUILT game,

-        rules (related to safety, conduct, game play, inspection, event, etc.), and

-        a description of how teams advance at 2026 tournaments and throughout the season.

The intent of this manual is that the text means exactly, and only, what it says. Please avoid interpreting the text based on assumptions about intent, implementation of past rules, or how a situation might be in “real life.” There are no hidden requirements or restrictions. If you’ve read everything, you know everything.

Specific methods are used throughout this manual to highlight warnings, cautions, key words, and phrases. These conventions are used to alert the reader to important information and are intended help teams in constructing a ROBOT that complies with the rules in a safe manner.

Links to other section headings in this manual, external articles, and rule references appear in blue underlined text.

Key words that have a particular meaning within the context of the FIRST Robotics Competition and REBUILT are defined in the Glossary and indicated in ALL CAPS throughout this document.

The rule numbering method indicates the section, subsection, and position of the rule within that subsection. The letter indicates the section in which the rule is published.

-        Q for 6.7.1 Question Box (Q)

-        G for 7 Game Rules (G)

-        R for 8 ROBOT Construction Rules (R)

-        I for 9 Inspection & Eligibility (I)

-        T for 10 Tournaments (T)

-        C for 13 FIRST Championship Tournament (C)

-        E for 14 Event Rules (E)

The following digit(s) represents the subsection in which the rule can be found. The final digits indicate the rule’s position within that subsection.

Figure 1‑3 Rule numbering method

Diagram showing rule numbering method with identifiers for each digit.

Warnings, cautions, and notes appear in blue boxes. Pay close attention to their contents as they’re intended to provide insight into the reasoning behind a rule, helpful information on understanding or interpreting a rule, and/or possible “best practices” for use when implementing systems affected by a rule.

While blue boxes are part of the manual, they do not carry the weight of the actual rule (if there is an inadvertent conflict between a rule and its blue box, the rule supersedes the language in the blue box).

Imperial dimensions are followed by comparable metric dimensions in parentheses to provide metric users with the approximate size, mass, etc. Decimal values are rounded in order to limit the number of decimal places shown and the number of significant figures. Metric conversions in rules round such that the metric dimension is compliant with the rule (i.e. maximums round down, minimums round up). The metric conversions are offered for convenient reference only and do not overrule or take the place of the imperial dimensions presented in this manual and the official drawings (i.e. dimensions and rules will always defer to measurements using imperial units).

Rules include colloquial language, also called headlines, in an effort to convey an abbreviated version of the rule or rule set. There are two versions of headline formatting.

Evergreen rules, or rules which are expected to go relatively unchanged from season to season, are indicated with a leading asterisk and their rule number and headline are presented in bold green text. “Relatively unchanged” means that the overall intent and presence of the rule from season to season is constant, but game specific terms may be updated as needed (e.g.  changing Power Cells to FUEL in a rule about what COACHES may not contact during a MATCH). These rules also start their respective section, so their rule number is not expected to change from season to season.

All other rule headlines use bold blue text. Any disagreement between the specific language used in the rules and the colloquial language is an error, and the specific rule language is the ultimate authority. If you discover a disparity, please let us know at [email protected] and we will correct it.

Team resources that aren’t generally season specific (e.g., what to expect at an event, communication resources, team organization recommendations, ROBOT transportation procedures, and award descriptions) can be found on the FIRST Robotics Competition website.