mBot Ultimate | For the mad scientist in you

The mobile and controllable robot kits, we knew. But no one has probably pushed the concept as far as Makeblock with its mBot Ultimate, its hundreds of metal parts, motors and small processor that can build 10 different robots. For enthusiasts and patient do-it-yourselfers only.


WE love

The big box containing the Mbot Ultimate is a ranking model. All parts, screws, cables, motors and tools are well classified, if not clearly, at least logically. The materials, including aluminum, copper, and plastic, are quality, and the half-dozen keys, screwdrivers, and heads needed are included.

With the mBot Ultimate 2.0, we have the materials to build 10 different robots, which can be programmed and controlled by Bluetooth with a mobile application. The only parts not included are the six AA batteries needed to power our robot. The building guide in the box allows you to build three contraptions: a robotic arm on tracks capable of grabbing and carrying objects, a “robotic bartender” who can carry a bottle of wine on his back and pour it into a glass, and a “camera dolly” on which you put a camera or a phone, which moves and rotates 360 degrees while filming.

The other 7 plans are available on the Makeblock website. Confidence here: we did not assemble the 10 robots. Our two completed projects, the robotic arm on tracks and the camera trolley, required both of us 14 hours of assembly, in small doses over several weeks.

Obviously, it takes a lot of patience, organization and sometimes even a handyman’s intuition to pull it off.

Fortunately, during all these hours, we never came across a false indication, even if we sometimes had to try to understand what the guide was telling us. The screws, bolts, and other hardware look awfully similar but are, at least, filed away in little labeled drawers. You have to carefully look at the shape and the number of holes in the metal parts that make up the frame of our robot, otherwise you’ll get a tick or a wrong direction and start assembling again. Good Samaritans have posted videos on YouTube if we get stuck.

Not easy, then, but well done. After 8 hours, we were able to see our robotic arm at work, make it move forward with the mobile application in the middle of the drags it overcomes thanks to its tracks, lower its gripper to pick up a 600 gram speaker on the ground, turn, move and land.

Same fun with the camera trolley which is much simpler: it moves forward and rotates the lens in the direction requested. The most ingenious can also, still on the application, program a series of commands. Initially, we offer predefined orders in which we can change almost all the parameters.

From a software perspective, our two bots behaved very well and obeyed commands with barely a fraction of a second of delay. We got our robotic arm tangled on two occasions with commands that were too fast, but it never froze.

We love less

The guide is only in English.

We have not chosen the path of simplification at all. Almost all modules, even wheels or clamps, must be mounted piece by piece, bolt by nut and screw at a time.

Some instructions, mainly based on icons and graphics, lack clarity. It took us a while to decode Makeblock’s language on what to do and what not to.

One buys ?

This is not a classic Christmas present for children. It takes a good dose of resourcefulness, manual ability and patience to overcome it. The mBot Ultimate is also not recommended for children under 12 years old.

But if you are passionate about robots and DIY, ideally both, this kit has enough to allow you to satisfy your two passions for long hours. We testify that the design is of quality and that two of the robot models featured are 100% functional. Whether this fun is worth $400 is up to you.

mBot Ultimate

Manufacturer : Makeblock

Price: $399.99 (online, including Amazon.ca)

Rating: 8 out of 10


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