Editing Bracket manipulation

From SmashWiki, the Super Smash Bros. wiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
Warning You aren't logged in. While it's not a requirement to create an account, doing so makes it a lot easier to keep track of your edits and a lot harder to confuse you with someone else. If you edit without being logged in, your IP address will be recorded in the page's edit history.

The edit can be undone. Please check the comparison below to verify that this is what you want to do, and then publish the changes below to finish undoing the edit.

Latest revision Your text
Line 57: Line 57:


==Major incidents of bracket manipulation==
==Major incidents of bracket manipulation==
*The most notorious incident of splitting in competitive Smash was between {{Sm|Mew2King}} and {{Sm|ADHD}} at [[MLG DC 2010]], when M2K allegedly intentionally lost to ADHD in the tournament's Loser Finals, in exchange for a portion of ADHD's winnings, who would go on to win the tournament after beating {{Sm|Rich Brown}} twice in Grand Finals. If M2K actually threw the set is disputed, with M2K maintaining that he did legitimately try to win, claiming ADHD didn't agree to split his winnings until after the tournament was over, but both did admit to the exchange of prize money, casting doubt over the legitimacy of their set, and calling into question if Rich Brown would have been the tournament's rightful winner if he fought M2K or a more exhausted ADHD after a legitimate LF set instead. While the community largely backed or forgave them at the time, and no other TO would ban them from their tournaments for this incident, this did result in [[MLG]] disqualifying and banning both players from participating in the rest of the 2010 MLG ''[[Brawl]]'' circuit. This incident damaged the reputation of the competitive Smash community to those outside it, especially as it involved two of the game's most prolific players at one of the year's most prolific tournaments, and this incident is speculated as a major reason for why MLG chose to not run any more ''Brawl'' events after the 2010 circuit, with MLG not returning to Smash until four years later with [[MLG Anaheim 2014]].
*The most notorious incident of splitting in competitive Smash was between {{Sm|Mew2King}} and {{Sm|ADHD}} at [[MLG DC 2010]], when M2K allegedly intentionally lost to ADHD in the tournament's Loser Finals, in exchange for a portion of ADHD's winnings, who would go on to win the tournament after beating {{Sm|Rich Brown}} twice in Grand Finals. If M2K actually threw the set is disputed, with M2K maintaining he did legitimately try to win, claiming ADHD didn't agree to split his winnings until after the tournament was over, but both did admit to the exchange of prize money, casting doubt over the legitimacy of their set, and calling into question if Rich Brown would have been the tournament's rightful winner if he fought M2K or a more exhausted ADHD after a legitimate LF set instead. While the community largely backed or forgave them at the time, and no other TO would ban them from their tournaments for this incident, this did result in [[MLG]] disqualifying and banning both players from participating in the rest of the 2010 MLG ''[[Brawl]]'' circuit. This incident damaged the reputation of the competitive Smash community to those outside it, especially as it involved two of the game's most prolific players at one of the year's most prolific tournaments, with this incident being speculated as a major reason for why MLG chose to not run any more ''Brawl'' events after the 2010 circuit, with MLG not returning to Smash until four years later with [[MLG Anaheim 2014]].


*At [[Pound V]], there were reported cases of players bracket manipulating in the tournament's [[round robin]] pools in order to a help a friend in their pool advance into the bracket. The most notorious such case was {{Sm|ADHD}} intentionally losing a set to {{Sm|Doom}} in his round 2 pool after ADHD defeated everyone else 2-0 in the pool and so already secured his own bracket advancement, which artificially improved Doom's pool record enough to make the bracket. This in turn prevented {{Sm|D1AOS}} from advancing into the bracket, the player who would have advanced instead of Doom had ADHD defeated him as expected. The incident caused a large debate on [[Smashboards]] about whether one should "be a friend" and willingly bracket manipulate to help their friend place higher in tournaments, or if one should maintain competitive integrity and sportsmanship, thus treating their friend as any other opponent. This was the primary controversy of the [https://smashboards.com/threads/pound-v-brawl-results.298137/ Pound V results thread] on SmashBoards until {{Sm|Plank}} revealed that he wouldn't be paying out the winners.
*At [[Pound V]], there were reported cases of players bracket manipulating in the tournament's [[round robin]] pools in order to a help a friend of theirs in the same pool advance into the bracket. The most notorious of these was {{Sm|ADHD}} intentionally losing a set to {{Sm|Doom}} in his pool, which allowed Doom to make the bracket. This in turn prevented {{Sm|D1AOS}}, the player who would have advanced had ADHD defeated Doom as expected, from advancing. The incident caused a large debate on whether one should "be a friend" and willingly bracket manipulate to help their friend place higher, or if one should maintain competitive integrity and sportsmanship, thus treating their friend as any other opponent. This was the primary controversy of the [https://smashboards.com/threads/pound-v-brawl-results.298137/ Pound V results thread] on [[SmashBoards]] until {{Sm|Plank}} revealed that he wouldn't be paying out the winners.


*At [[2GG: Prime Saga]] and [[MomoCon 2019]], {{Sm|Captain Zack}} blackmailed {{Sm|Ally}} into intentionally losing against {{Sm|Zackray}} in Winner-Semis of the former tournament and against {{Sm|Nairo}} in a top 8 qualifying set of the latter tournament, via threat to [[Smasher:Ally#Retirement/Ban|publicly expose their relationship]] if Ally didn't abide. After this instance of bracket manipulation was exposed in August 2019, Zack would be promptly banned from [[Super Smash Con 2019]] and all [[2GGaming]] events, with other tournaments following suit. While the length of Zack's ban was under dispute, with many arguing that the [[SSBConductPanel]]'s indefinite ban of Zack, with a chance for appeal after five years, was too harsh, this argument would become moot after [[Smasher:Captain Zack#Manipulated Claims on Nairo|further allegations]] against Zack came out that solidified his indefinite ban from the vast majority of tournaments.
*At [[2GG: Prime Saga]] and [[MomoCon 2019]], {{Sm|Captain Zack}} blackmailed {{Sm|Ally}} into intentionally losing against {{Sm|Zackray}} in Winner-Semis of the former tournament and against {{Sm|Nairo}} in a top 8 qualifying set of the latter tournament, via threat to [[Smasher:Ally#Retirement/Ban|publicly expose their relationship]] if Ally didn't abide. After this instance of bracket manipulation was exposed in August 2019, Zack would be promptly banned from [[Super Smash Con 2019]] and all [[2GGaming]] events, with other tournaments following suit. While the length of Zack's ban was under dispute, with many arguing that the [[SSBConductPanel]]'s indefinite ban of Zack, with a chance for appeal after five years, was too harsh, this argument would become moot after [[Smasher:Captain Zack#Manipulated Claims on Nairo|further allegations]] against Zack came out that solidified his indefinite ban from the vast majority of tournaments.

Please note that all contributions to SmashWiki are considered to be released under the Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported license (see SmashWiki:Copyrights for details). Your changes will be visible immediately. Please enter a summary of your changes above.

Do not submit copyrighted work without permission!

Cancel Editing help (opens in new window)

Templates used on this page: