Editing King K. Rool (SSBU)
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''See also: [[:Category:King K. Rool players (SSBU)]]'' | ''See also: [[:Category:King K. Rool players (SSBU)]]'' | ||
*{{Sm|Ball|Japan}} - One of the best King K. Rool players in the post-pandemic metagame, known for his combos with Crownerang. Originally known for his performances on the [[Smashmate]] ladder and his wins on some of the best players in Japan's online metagame, he garnered noteworthy placements | *{{Sm|Ball|Japan}} - One of the best King K. Rool players in the post-pandemic metagame, known for his combos with Crownerang. Originally known for his performances on the [[Smashmate]] ladder and his wins on some of the best players in Japan's online metagame, he garnered noteworthy placements offline events throughout 2023, including placing 25th at {{Trn|Seibugeki 17}}, 33rd at {{Trn|Maesuma TOP 15 "FINAL"}}, and 49th at {{Trn|Kowloon 12 with Kagaribi}}. This eventually culminated in his breakout performance at {{Trn|GSM}}, where he notably defeated {{Sm|Supahsemmie}} and {{Sm|NaetorU}} to finish 7th and became the first King K. Rool player to place top 8 at a major. | ||
*{{Sm|Ben Gold|Australia}} - The best King K. Rool player in the early metagame. He is best known for winning {{Trn|Battle Arena Melbourne 11}}, which remains the largest event won by a King K. Rool player and the character's only superregional win. He also has several other noteworthy results in Australia, such as 5th at {{Trn|Phantom 2019}} and 9th at {{Trn|BigWinChampionship 2}}. He has made a few international appearances, notably placing 17th at {{Trn|Thunder Smash 3: Clash of the Pandas}} and 25th at {{Trn|2GG: Nightmare on Smashville}}. After 2019, he dropped the character in favor of playing {{SSBU|Wolf}} and has seldom competed since. | *{{Sm|Ben Gold|Australia}} - The best King K. Rool player in the early metagame. He is best known for winning {{Trn|Battle Arena Melbourne 11}}, which remains the largest event won by a King K. Rool player and the character's only superregional win. He also has several other noteworthy results in Australia, such as 5th at {{Trn|Phantom 2019}} and 9th at {{Trn|BigWinChampionship 2}}. He has made a few international appearances, notably placing 17th at {{Trn|Thunder Smash 3: Clash of the Pandas}} and 25th at {{Trn|2GG: Nightmare on Smashville}}. After 2019, he dropped the character in favor of playing {{SSBU|Wolf}} and has seldom competed since. | ||
*{{Sm|Bruho|USA}} - One of the best King K. Rool players in the post-pandemic metagame, known for his brutally unforgiving punish game and edgeguards. He first broke out onto the scene after placing 13th at {{Trn|Shine 2022}} defeating {{Sm|MuteAce}}. Although he eventually picked up {{SSBU|Kazuya}} as a co-main, his best performances were still primarily with King K. Rool. These performances include his win at {{Trn|Mash Harder 10}}, only the second ranked event won by a King K. Rool player in the post-pandemic metagame, where he used King K. Rool to defeat {{Sm|Zomba}}; and placing 7th at {{Trn|Max Rez}} using mostly King K. Rool, particularly defeating {{Sm|Syrup}}'s {{SSBU|Steve}} in their first game and ultimately winning the set | *{{Sm|Bruho|USA}} - One of the best King K. Rool players in the post-pandemic metagame, known for his brutally unforgiving punish game and edgeguards. He first broke out onto the scene after placing 13th at {{Trn|Shine 2022}} defeating {{Sm|MuteAce}}. Although he eventually picked up {{SSBU|Kazuya}} as a co-main, his best performances were still primarily with King K. Rool. These performances include his win at {{Trn|Mash Harder 10}}, only the second ranked event won by a King K. Rool player in the post-pandemic metagame, where he used King K. Rool to defeat {{Sm|Zomba}}; and placing 7th at {{Trn|Max Rez}} using mostly King K. Rool, particularly defeating {{Sm|Syrup}}'s {{SSBU|Steve}} in their first game and ultimately winning the set. | ||
*{{Sm|Lukewarm|USA}} - The greatest King K. Rool player of all time, having been the best since 2021. He was ranked 78th on the [[OrionRank Ultimate: Eclipse]], the | *{{Sm|Lukewarm|USA}} - The greatest King K. Rool player of all time, having been the best since 2021. He was ranked 78th on the [[OrionRank Ultimate: Eclipse]], which remains the only time a King K. Rool player was ranked in the top 100 globally. He is best known for winning {{Trn|Anime Houston 2021}}, the largest tournament win from a King K. Rool player in the post-pandemic metagame, and placing 7th at {{Trn|Lost Tech City 2022}} and 17th at {{Trn|CEO 2021}}. Although his attendance has been sparse since Lost Tech City, he still remains one of the character's best representatives, having placed 3rd {{Trn|Comicpalooza Fight Club 2024}} defeating {{Sm|Lima}} and {{Sm|Lui$}} and 49th at {{Trn|Luminosity Makes BIG Moves 2024}} defeating {{Sm|MKBigBoss}}. | ||
===Tier placement and history=== | ===Tier placement and history=== | ||
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However, it quickly became apparent that King K. Rool was not nearly as good as players thought, as he has some of the nastiest downsides in the game to counter his strengths. Compounding this, King K. Rool received nerfs in update 2.0.0 that made his already negative perception even worse, despite being largely irrelevant in retrospect. Because of these factors, almost every top professional saw him as one of the worst characters in the game within months, which was especially notorious among the Japanese top players, many of whom considered him to be the single-worst character in the game. He was simply too inconsistent to be seen as a viable pick in the high-power metagame that ''Ultimate''{{'}}s cast brought to the table. | However, it quickly became apparent that King K. Rool was not nearly as good as players thought, as he has some of the nastiest downsides in the game to counter his strengths. Compounding this, King K. Rool received nerfs in update 2.0.0 that made his already negative perception even worse, despite being largely irrelevant in retrospect. Because of these factors, almost every top professional saw him as one of the worst characters in the game within months, which was especially notorious among the Japanese top players, many of whom considered him to be the single-worst character in the game. He was simply too inconsistent to be seen as a viable pick in the high-power metagame that ''Ultimate''{{'}}s cast brought to the table. | ||
King K. Rool later received a small number of helpful buffs in update 3.0.0 in 2019, although they were not significant enough to address his significant flaws, and his competitive reputation remained poor. Nevertheless, it improved his representation, with {{Sm|Dera}} getting a win against {{Sm|Somé}} during {{Trn|Obasuma OST 4}} and placing 3rd, which was the first glimmer of hope for K. Rool in spite of his then-bottom tier perception. While still typically ranked very low, players such as {{Sm|Ben Gold}}, {{Sm|KirbyKid}}, and {{Sm|Muk}} began to earn cosmopolitan results that made people question King K. Rool's reputation as a low tier character. This was especially evident when Ben Gold managed to win {{Trn|Battle Arena Melbourne 11}}, an Australian B-tier tournament, with King K. Rool as his solo main. While still | King K. Rool later received a small number of helpful buffs in update 3.0.0 in 2019, although they were not significant enough to address his significant flaws, and his competitive reputation remained poor. Nevertheless, it improved his representation, with {{Sm|Dera}} getting a win against {{Sm|Somé}} during {{Trn|Obasuma OST 4}} and placing 3rd, which was the first glimmer of hope for K. Rool in spite of his then-bottom tier perception. While still typically ranked very low, players such as {{Sm|Ben Gold}}, {{Sm|KirbyKid}}, and {{Sm|Muk}} began to earn cosmopolitan results that made people question King K. Rool's reputation as a low tier character. This was especially evident when Ben Gold managed to win {{Trn|Battle Arena Melbourne 11}}, an Australian B-tier tournament, with King K. Rool as his solo main. While still revied rather lowly by top players, 2019 proved to be a decent year for the Kremling King, with players like {{Sm|ESAM}} and {{Sm|MVD}} arguing that he could be mid-tier. | ||
Ben Gold would continue achieving astounding results at | Ben Gold would continue achieving astounding results at PGR-level events well into 2020, such as 17th at {{Trn|Phantom 2020}}, which was the event to truly bring King K. Rool's low-tier status into question. During this period, western players began connecting with the Japanese playerbase, most notably with players such as {{Sm|Chirori}} and {{Sm|Dera}}, where they exchanged knowledge and developed more nuanced, aggressive gameplay lines. As resources continued to improve, the skill floor for King K. Rool began to increase as well. Thus, by the time Ben Gold dropped King K. Rool, {{Sm|KirbyKid}} carried the torch, going on to place 13th at {{Trn|InfinityCON Tally 2021}}. Additionally, Raphy, a German player, placed 5th at {{Trn|Smash Contest: DoKomi 2021}}. While Ben Gold dropped the character, his, Raphy, Dera, and KirbyKid's successes in solo maining King K. Rool from 2020 through 2022, along with repeated significant buffs in hand, led to further conversations about King K. Rool's viability. {{Sm|Dabuz}} went as far as to say that King K. Rool is a high-mid-tier character, and some Japanese players — such as {{Sm|Raito}}, who considered him to be the worst character in the game — stated that K. Rool might be a lot more threatening than initially perceived. | ||
Despite this, after the end of | Despite this, after the end of Ultimate's updates and going into 2023, many of King K. Rool's top players have either decreased in tournament attendance or moved towards different characters. Many of his buffs, while accentuating his strengths, failed to answer many of his weaknesses, such as a poor [[out of shield]] game and lack of non-committal anti-airs. With multiple periods of competitive viability, his staying power at top level can be called questionable, with him fading in and out of top cut lists over months. King K. Rool's true viability is hotly contested, with some arguing his national-level top cut placements prove his potential, while others would call it a fluke. King K. Rool would end up ranking 74th on the first tier list, near the top of the low tier. With a lack of top-level representation throughout 2023, alongside his inherent flaws and inconsistent top-level results, he would fall even further to 80th on the second and current tier list, in the newly created E+ Tier, ranking him among the worst characters in the game. | ||
However, 2024 marked a strong improvement for King K. Rool's results across the board. The start of the year marked the return of KirbyKid, now Lukewarm, who would show sparse yet strong performances at events over the season with multiple wins over top 50 level players and ranking among the top 150. The second half of the 2024 season especially saw a rise in consistency for King K. Rool players at regionals, with {{Sm|Moo}} and especially {{Sm|Bruho}} garnering multiple top 8 finishes and even occassional top 4's, while Bruho's win at Mash Harder 10 defeating {{Sm|Zomba}} in grand finals marked the characters best victory in the current metagame. Finaly, just after the end of the 2024.2 season at the end of the year, King K. Rool made his first appearance in top 8 at a major courtesy of {{Sm|Ball}} who placed 7th at {{Trn|GSM}}. These placements, combined with innovations by players for King K. Rool's punish game and combos, have continued to contest his negative perception. | |||
=={{SSBU|Classic Mode}}: Super Heavyweight Class== | =={{SSBU|Classic Mode}}: Super Heavyweight Class== |