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Wi-Fi Warrior: Difference between revisions

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==Importance of Wi-Fi Warriors in the ''Smash'' scene==
==Importance of Wi-Fi Warriors in the ''Smash'' scene==
Wi-Fi Warriors are usually some of the most active players in the online scene. While they usually grind through online play, some of them are also capable of being historically significant players in the offline scene. They have ability to transition from online tournaments to offline tournaments. Examples include {{Sm|Sparg0}}, who was not considered a top 100 players before [[COVID-19|quarantine]], is now considered a top 2 player in the world, and {{Sm|acola}}, who is considered the best overall player on the [[Smashmate]] ladder, has become dominant in the Japanese offline scene as well.
Wi-Fi Warriors are usually some of the most active players in the online scene. While they usually grind through online play, some of them are also capable of being historically significant players in the offline scene. They have ability to transition from online tournaments to offline tournaments. Examples include {{Sm|Sparg0}}, who was not considered a top 100 players before [[COVID-19|quarantine]], is now considered a top 2 player in the world, and {{Sm|acola}}, who is considered the best overall player on the [[Smashmate]] {{b|ladder|matchmaking}}, has become dominant in the Japanese offline scene as well.


==See also==
==See also==

Revision as of 04:41, May 9, 2022

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A Wi-Fi Warrior is a term referring to players that are capable of performing well in online tournaments, not including how good their offline results are. It is commonly missconcepted as an insult to players that use Wi-Fi for netplay.

History

In Smash 64 and Melee, players partake in online play thorugh emulators such as Project64k and Slippi (a custom version of the Dolphin emulator) respectively.

In Brawl, players may refer themselves as "Wi-Fi Warriors", the term was often used as an insult or a joke. Although it sometimes can be used to refer players who play online a lot, it was also used as a mockery on players that use Wi-Fi connection. On Nintendo Dojo (formerly All is Brawl), users would receive the "wifi warrior" badge on their profiles after playing enough Wi-Fi matches in the community chat rooms.[1]

In 2018, the first iteration of Wi-Fi Warrior Rank is published for Super Smash Bros. for Wii U, which ranked the best players in the online scene.

Importance of Wi-Fi Warriors in the Smash scene

Wi-Fi Warriors are usually some of the most active players in the online scene. While they usually grind through online play, some of them are also capable of being historically significant players in the offline scene. They have ability to transition from online tournaments to offline tournaments. Examples include Sparg0, who was not considered a top 100 players before quarantine, is now considered a top 2 player in the world, and acola, who is considered the best overall player on the Smashmate ladder, has become dominant in the Japanese offline scene as well.

See also

References