The Smash Brothers: Difference between revisions
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*[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rCRfSby-Vlo Metagames bloopers] | *[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rCRfSby-Vlo Metagames bloopers] | ||
*[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nap_eTh68MQ&list=PLoUHkRwnRH-IyQPUNlK_di6ZUsZ7vzUfs Metagame update playlist] | *[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nap_eTh68MQ&list=PLoUHkRwnRH-IyQPUNlK_di6ZUsZ7vzUfs Metagame update playlist] | ||
=='Doc Kids'== | |||
'''''Doc Kids''''' are the new generation of players who, as [[Tafokints]] put it, [https://twitter.com/tafokints/status/798669118169722880 "basically represent people who got into the game after Aug 2013 in light of the Smash Documentary"]. With the end of the documentary based around EVO 2013, the tournament marked the dawn of a new age in Melee. The media interest in the event as well as the documentary helped draw in members to the Melee community almost exponentially. [[Fiction]] theorized that - given 3 years of directed effort - a player could reach [[SSBMRank|'top-100']] status. This has been proven by several players who began playing post-documentary, namely; | |||
*[[Fat Goku]] (Began playing in 2013 - Ranked 69th in 2017) | |||
*[[Captain Faceroll]] (Began playing in September of 2013 - Ranked 45th in 2016) | |||
*[[Zain]] (Began playing in May of 2014 - Ranked 66th in 2016) | |||
*[[AbsentPage]] (Began playing in August of 2014 - Ranked 74th in 2017) | |||
==References== | ==References== |
Revision as of 12:06, January 19, 2018
The Smash Brothers is a documentary series directed by Travis "Samox" Beauchamp, released in October 2013, shortly after the then-largest Melee tournament of all time, EVO 2013. It is primarily about the competitive scene of Super Smash Bros. Melee, with nine episodes that detail the competitive scene of the game and its developments since its debut; in addition, the series covers multiple retired and active professional Melee players, as well as their effects on the Melee metagame over the time-span of a decade. Since the documentary came out, competitive Melee has steadily increased in popularity. The seven "Smash Brothers", in order on the poster from left to right are: Azen, Isai, Ken, PC Chris, KoreanDJ, Mew2King, and Mango. The overall total budget series amounts to $12,000.[1]
Episodes
- Episode 1: Show Me Your Moves (Remastered)
- Episode 2: No Johns (Remastered)
- Episode 3: Don't Get Hit (Remastered)
- Episode 4: The King of Smash (Remastered)
- Episode 5: Revolution (Remastered)
- Episode 6: Paper Cuts (Remastered)
- Episode 7: The Robot (Remastered)
- Episode 8: The Natural (Remastered)
- Episode 9: Game! (Remastered)
Smashers interviewed
Other Episodes
Upcoming Episodes
Metagame is an up-an-coming series follow-up that covers the current "Gods of Melee" Mango, Armada, PPMD funded with a Kickstarter of $34,583. [2] As of January 22nd, 2017, only 4 episodes have been completed being done with only half of the series. Amsa and Wes were mentioned as part of a promotion video as well.[3]
'Doc Kids'
Doc Kids are the new generation of players who, as Tafokints put it, "basically represent people who got into the game after Aug 2013 in light of the Smash Documentary". With the end of the documentary based around EVO 2013, the tournament marked the dawn of a new age in Melee. The media interest in the event as well as the documentary helped draw in members to the Melee community almost exponentially. Fiction theorized that - given 3 years of directed effort - a player could reach 'top-100' status. This has been proven by several players who began playing post-documentary, namely;
- Fat Goku (Began playing in 2013 - Ranked 69th in 2017)
- Captain Faceroll (Began playing in September of 2013 - Ranked 45th in 2016)
- Zain (Began playing in May of 2014 - Ranked 66th in 2016)
- AbsentPage (Began playing in August of 2014 - Ranked 74th in 2017)