
Voices of the Silicon City
A public-facing flagship where city questions become arguments with a record, a room, and a verdict.
- Venue
- Hall format
- Output
- Report
- Panel
- Senior judges
- Media
- Airwaves desk
Epigram tournaments are run as competitive systems: team intake, motion release, prep clock, adjudication allocation, equity protocol, media desk, rankings, and post-round archive.
Each tournament type has a job: flagship spectacle, ranked league, parliamentary clash, liaison exchange, or civic forum. The page treats them like fixtures, not announcements.

A public-facing flagship where city questions become arguments with a record, a room, and a verdict.

Fast draws, clean roles, ruthless comparative weighing. The room rewards teams that know exactly what they have proven.

Partner societies bring domain heat. Epigram supplies format discipline, moderation, judging, and archive continuity.
ICDL works when everyone can read the stakes: which class is alive, which motion broke the room, who chaired the panel, and where the result sits in history.
The room feels professional only when the invisible machinery works: tab, equity, judges, hospitality, documentation, media, and rapid publishing.
Teams, rooms, breaks, speaker points, conflicts, late entries, and final standings sit under one accountable desk.
Conduct, safety, accessibility, and intervention procedure are visible before the first speech starts.
Airwaves adds pre-round context, room texture, quick interviews, and a clean post-round package.
Panels are assigned by experience, conflict check, feedback burden, and the level of the round.
Speakers, guests, judges, and volunteers know where to report, when to move, and who owns the room.
Motions, results, photos, reports, and notices are captured while the event is still warm.
Published debate events render here as fixtures with room, clock, and format attached.