We attended for the first time this year - although I've been thinking about it since it was started. My husband owns and is a master instructor for a traditional, non-competition, strictly-the-art-of-self-defense style (basically, the same style studied by Chuck Norris, as he was a student with Tom's instructor's instructor). 16 yr old son and myself are both black belts, as well - although I am not in sufficient condition to compete. Might give me something to strive for though - didn't see any other gray-haired ladies competing!!
The facility - the Milkhouse at WWOS - is a wonderful venue. There were about 24 mats on the main floor - with good seating. There were about another 10 off to the side.
There was always at least 3-4 events worth watching at any one time. The had traditional martial arts, kata to music (very acrobatic - movie-style - very talented, but more acrobatic than martial - not that they are mutually exclusive, but, without going into a large digression, fancy moves leave you vulnerable....)
The level of talent was VERY high - especially the Chinese, with weapons - Wu su, tai chi, kung fu. Not surprising, the Peking opera/acrobats had open try-outs in Orlando the day after the festival ended.
The only events that were not that interesting to us were the sparring events. There are specific fighting styles/rules, tae kwon do related. We spar full speed, no contact (you score a point by extending the punch / kick as close to the target as possible - like half an inch - without touching). The sparring events in competitions count points relative to contact. Eighty percent of the time, they look more like wrestlers (to me) than martial artists. We saw many points scored (by our standards - and, apparently, the contender's) that were not called. Not a bad thing, just not something that was as interesting to us as the kata competitions.
As you can see from the pictures, these people had beautiful form!!
Will definitely consider going again - maybe staying longer, seeing more.