Tournament:Smash Summit (series): Difference between revisions
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| ssbmwinner = {{Sm|Armada|Sweden}} (1, 2, 3, Spring 2017)<br>{{Sm|Hungrybox|USA}} (5, 7, 9)<br>{{Sm|Mew2King|USA}} (6)<br>{{Sm|Axe|USA}} (8)<br>{{Sm|Zain|USA}} (10 Online)<br>{{Sm|Mango|USA}} (11, 14)<br>{{Sm|iBDW|USA}} (12, 13) | | ssbmwinner = {{Sm|Armada|Sweden}} (1, 2, 3, Spring 2017)<br>{{Sm|Hungrybox|USA}} (5, 7, 9)<br>{{Sm|Mew2King|USA}} (6)<br>{{Sm|Axe|USA}} (8)<br>{{Sm|Zain|USA}} (10 Online)<br>{{Sm|Mango|USA}} (11, 14)<br>{{Sm|iBDW|USA}} (12, 13) | ||
| ssbuwinner = {{Sm|MkLeo|Mexico}} (1, 2)<br>{{Sm|Tweek|USA}} (3)<br>{{Sm|Sparg0|Mexico}} (4)<br>{{Sm|ProtoBanham|Japan}} (5)<br>{{Sm|acola|Japan}} (6) | | ssbuwinner = {{Sm|MkLeo|Mexico}} (1, 2)<br>{{Sm|Tweek|USA}} (3)<br>{{Sm|Sparg0|Mexico}} (4)<br>{{Sm|ProtoBanham|Japan}} (5)<br>{{Sm|acola|Japan}} (6) | ||
| player(s) with most wins = {{Sm|Armada|Sweden}} ( | | player(s) with most wins = {{Sm|Armada|Sweden}} (4 events) | ||
| | |organizer = {{Team|Beyond the Summit}} | ||
}} | }} | ||
The '''Smash Summit''' series, | The '''Smash Summit''' series, often referred to in the ''Smash'' community as just '''Summit''', was a series of major [[invitational]]s focusing on ''[[Super Smash Bros. Melee]]'' and ''[[Super Smash Bros. Ultimate]]'' that was held between 2015 and 2023. Summit tournaments span several days, with singles and doubles on the final days. The first days feature various side events focusing on its main Smash game as well as other games, in addition to other activities such as Mafia, all of which is streamed on Beyond the Summit's Twitch channel. The series featured a total of 20 Summit events, 14 for ''Melee'' and 6 for ''Ultimate''. | ||
The Smash Summit series became the premier invitational series for both ''Melee'' and ''Ultimate'', as it often featured the best players of each game. As such, the series repeatedly reached major and supermajor levels for both games and were highly anticipated events. Following the series' conclusion, many other invitational events have copied their format. | |||
== | ==Background== | ||
The Summit series began in 2014 with the ''{{iw|wikipedia|Dota 2}}'' invitational [https://liquipedia.net/dota2/The_Summit/1 The Summit]. However, the first ''Smash'' event wouldn't take place until the namesake {{Trn|Smash Summit}} from November 5th-8th, 2015. Since then, two Summit events were held every year with the exception of the series' final few years, where there were three held in 2021 (2 ''Melee'' and 1 ''Ultimate'') and four held in 2022 (2 ''Melee'' and 2 ''Ultimate''). In addition, two Summit events were also planned but were later cancelled: a crossover Summit between ''Melee'' and ''Ultimate'' was planned for 2020, but was cancelled due to the [[COVID-19 pandemic and its impact on competitive Smash|COVID-19 pandemic]] and later scrapped.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://twitter.com/BTSsmash/status/1299421498034262030|title=BTS on the remaining Summits}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.reddit.com/r/smashbros/comments/o7wj8q/were_bts_organizers_of_smash_summit_11_ama/h31inlc?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x&context=3|title=BTS confirmation that Crossover Summit is no longer possible}}</ref>, while Smash Summit 15 was planned for ''Melee'' in June 2023,<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.start.gg/tournament/mainstage-2022/details|title=Smash Summit 15 and Smash Ultimate Summit 6 announced}}</ref> but was cancelled after Beyond the Summit decided to shut down following {{Trn|Smash Ultimate Summit 6}}.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://docs.google.com/document/d/e/2PACX-1vSX8YPz-HFJmt1TWhtNwiM0YawmUCiywuw9yK0GZFjRxhFkki1_tVfmkAv80l_kMjpz_OU15YzkR8Dn/pub|title=On the Future of Beyond the Summit}}</ref> | |||
Smash Summit tournaments typically ran over four days, from Thursday through Sunday. The first day is often referred to as a "Media Day", as it is mostly dedicated to filming comedic skits with the invited players, which are aired throughout the event, as well as lighter side events. Pool play and side events are scheduled for Friday and Saturday while the final singles bracket is played out on Sunday. Side events include doubles brackets, commentator brackets, secondary/low-tier brackets, [[Squad Strike]], unique rulesets (such as the "swag bracket", where fans vote for the "most entertaining" player to advance to the next round), and non-''Smash''-related events such as ''Mario Party''; party games, such as Mafia; and athletic competitions. | |||
Smash Summit presents itself as a unique opportunity for fans to watch the players interact with each other on a personal level. The competitors are invited to commentate other sets and give interviews after each set. Each Summit has its own theme and art design, often based around a real-life event or holiday occurring at a similar time. | Smash Summit presents itself as a unique opportunity for fans to watch the players interact with each other on a personal level. The competitors are invited to commentate other sets and give interviews after each set. Each Summit has its own theme and art design, often based around a real-life event or holiday occurring at a similar time. | ||
Smash Summit tournaments | ===Attendees=== | ||
Typically, 16 different players are selected to participate in each Smash Summit. 8 to 10 players are automatically invited based on their placement in preceding major tournaments, or based on power rankings such as [[SSBMRank]]. The other competitors qualify through either a voting phase or through qualifiers, the latter first introduced for {{Trn|Smash Summit 5}}. In the former, fans can buy merchandise or donate cash, which grants them the opportunity to cast votes for certain players; the money then contributes to the event's prize payout. At the end of each voting deadline, two players are eliminated, while starting from the third voting round, two players are invited; this repeats until all vote-ins have been selected. Although the invitation process remained roughly the same, there has been irregularities such as in {{Trn|Smash Summit 10 Online}}, where the majority of players qualified through qualifiers. | |||
Smash Summit | |||
===Format=== | |||
The format for Smash Summit events has changed over time. Initially, the event was a simple double-elimination event. The group phase was first introduced in {{Trn|Smash Summit Spring 2017}}, beginning as a swiss bracket where all eliminated players beginning on the loser's side of the final bracket. The [[Tournament:Smash Summit 5|following Summit event]] briefly switched to a the four-pool round robin format for the group phase, where the bottom two players of each round robin began on the loser's side of the final bracket, before future Summit events returned to the swiss bracket up until {{Trn|Smash Ultimate Summit 2}}, which reintroduced the round robin format. Although {{Trn|Smash Summit 9}} briefly returned to the swiss format, the Summit series stuck with the round robin format from {{Trn|Smash Summit 10 Online}} onward. Finally, the gauntlet stage was introduced in {{Trn|Smash Summit 11}}, where all players who did not win their round robin pools faced off against each other in a new set of single-elimination brackets, and all players who lost began the final bracket on the loser's side. The first match of each gauntlet phase is between a player who was third in their round robin and a player who was fourth, and the winner of that set faces off against a player who was second. | |||
==Champions== | ==Champions== | ||
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|2022||{{Trn|Smash Ultimate Summit 5}}||Naoto Tsuji||{{Sm|ProtoBanham|Japan}}||{{head|Lucina|g=SSBU|s=20px}}{{head|Min Min|g=SSBU|s=20px}}|||{{Sm|Light|USA|p=Connecticut}}||{{Head|Fox|g=SSBU|s=20px}} | |2022||{{Trn|Smash Ultimate Summit 5}}||Naoto Tsuji||{{Sm|ProtoBanham|Japan}}||{{head|Lucina|g=SSBU|s=20px}}{{head|Min Min|g=SSBU|s=20px}}|||{{Sm|Light|USA|p=Connecticut}}||{{Head|Fox|g=SSBU|s=20px}} | ||
|- | |- | ||
|2023||{{Trn|Smash Ultimate Summit 6}}||Mashita Hayato||{{Sm|acola|Japan}}||{{head|Steve|g=SSBU|s=20px}}|||{{Sm|Tweek|USA}}||{{Head| | |2023||{{Trn|Smash Ultimate Summit 6}}||Mashita Hayato||{{Sm|acola|Japan}}||{{head|Steve|g=SSBU|s=20px}}|||{{Sm|Tweek|USA}}||{{Head|Sephiroth|g=SSBU|s=20px}}{{Head|Diddy Kong|g=SSBU|s=20px}} | ||
|} | |} | ||
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*Mango and Hungrybox played against each other at every odd-numbered Smash Summit for ''Melee'' starting with {{Trn|Smash Summit 7}}. | *Mango and Hungrybox played against each other at every odd-numbered Smash Summit for ''Melee'' starting with {{Trn|Smash Summit 7}}. | ||
*Only seven players - {{Sm|Armada}}, {{Sm|Leffen}}, {{Sm|Mew2King}}, Mango, Plup, {{Sm|ESAM}}, and Hungrybox - have attended a Smash Summit for both ''Melee'' and ''Ultimate''. | *Only seven players - {{Sm|Armada}}, {{Sm|Leffen}}, {{Sm|Mew2King}}, Mango, Plup, {{Sm|ESAM}}, and Hungrybox - have attended a Smash Summit for both ''Melee'' and ''Ultimate''. | ||
*The winner of each offline Smash Summit were invited to the following Summit with the exception of {{Trn|Smash Ultimate Summit 3}}, where the winner {{Sm|Tweek}} qualified for {{Trn|Smash Ultimate Summit 4}} at {{Trn|Mainstage 2021}} before anyone was invited | *The winner of each offline Smash Summit were invited to the following Summit with the exception of {{Trn|Smash Ultimate Summit 3}}, where the winner {{Sm|Tweek}} qualified for {{Trn|Smash Ultimate Summit 4}} at {{Trn|Mainstage 2021}} before anyone was invited. | ||
*Tweek and {{Sm|Sparg0}} are the only players to place both last and first in a given game's Smash Summit (both for ''Ultimate''): | *Tweek and {{Sm|Sparg0}} are the only players to place both last and first in a given game's Smash Summit (both for ''Ultimate''): | ||
**Tweek is the only player to place last at a Summit that would go on to win a Summit, placing 13th at {{Trn|Smash Ultimate Summit 2}} before winning {{Trn|Smash Ultimate Summit 3}}. | **Tweek is the only player to place last at a Summit that would go on to win a Summit, placing 13th at {{Trn|Smash Ultimate Summit 2}} before winning {{Trn|Smash Ultimate Summit 3}}. | ||
**Sparg0 is the only player to win a Summit that would go on to place last at another Summit, winning {{Trn|Smash Ultimate Summit 4}} before placing 13th at {{Trn|Smash Ultimate Summit 6}}. | **Sparg0 is the only player to win a Summit that would go on to place last at another Summit, winning {{Trn|Smash Ultimate Summit 4}} before placing 13th at {{Trn|Smash Ultimate Summit 6}}. | ||
*Dabuz placed 9th from Smash Ultimate Summit | *Dabuz placed 9th at every Summit he attended aside from Smash Ultimate Summit. | ||
*Although {{Sm|SluG}} never competed in a Smash Summit, he qualified for the cancelled Smash Summit 15 at Mainstage 2022. | *Although {{Sm|SluG}} never competed in a Smash Summit, he qualified for the cancelled Smash Summit 15 at Mainstage 2022. | ||
*Mango is the only player to compete in every ''Melee'' Smash Summit, and {{Sm|MkLeo}} is the only player to compete in every ''Ultimate'' Smash Summit. | *Mango is the only player to compete in every ''Melee'' Smash Summit, and {{Sm|MkLeo}} is the only player to compete in every ''Ultimate'' Smash Summit. | ||
*{{Sm|Light|p=Connecticut}} and Plup are the only players to make multiple Grand Finals appearances without winning a Smash Summit. | |||
== References == | == References == |
Latest revision as of 16:17, November 9, 2024
Smash Summit | |
---|---|
Info | |
Founded | 2015 |
Region | California, United States |
Format | Double elimination |
winners | Armada (1, 2, 3, Spring 2017) Hungrybox (5, 7, 9) Mew2King (6) Axe (8) Zain (10 Online) Mango (11, 14) iBDW (12, 13) |
winners | MkLeo (1, 2) Tweek (3) Sparg0 (4) ProtoBanham (5) acola (6) |
Most successful player(s) | Armada (4 events) |
Staff | |
Organizer(s) | Beyond the Summit |
The Smash Summit series, often referred to in the Smash community as just Summit, was a series of major invitationals focusing on Super Smash Bros. Melee and Super Smash Bros. Ultimate that was held between 2015 and 2023. Summit tournaments span several days, with singles and doubles on the final days. The first days feature various side events focusing on its main Smash game as well as other games, in addition to other activities such as Mafia, all of which is streamed on Beyond the Summit's Twitch channel. The series featured a total of 20 Summit events, 14 for Melee and 6 for Ultimate.
The Smash Summit series became the premier invitational series for both Melee and Ultimate, as it often featured the best players of each game. As such, the series repeatedly reached major and supermajor levels for both games and were highly anticipated events. Following the series' conclusion, many other invitational events have copied their format.
Background[edit]
The Summit series began in 2014 with the Dota 2 invitational The Summit. However, the first Smash event wouldn't take place until the namesake Smash Summit from November 5th-8th, 2015. Since then, two Summit events were held every year with the exception of the series' final few years, where there were three held in 2021 (2 Melee and 1 Ultimate) and four held in 2022 (2 Melee and 2 Ultimate). In addition, two Summit events were also planned but were later cancelled: a crossover Summit between Melee and Ultimate was planned for 2020, but was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic and later scrapped.[1][2], while Smash Summit 15 was planned for Melee in June 2023,[3] but was cancelled after Beyond the Summit decided to shut down following Smash Ultimate Summit 6.[4]
Smash Summit tournaments typically ran over four days, from Thursday through Sunday. The first day is often referred to as a "Media Day", as it is mostly dedicated to filming comedic skits with the invited players, which are aired throughout the event, as well as lighter side events. Pool play and side events are scheduled for Friday and Saturday while the final singles bracket is played out on Sunday. Side events include doubles brackets, commentator brackets, secondary/low-tier brackets, Squad Strike, unique rulesets (such as the "swag bracket", where fans vote for the "most entertaining" player to advance to the next round), and non-Smash-related events such as Mario Party; party games, such as Mafia; and athletic competitions.
Smash Summit presents itself as a unique opportunity for fans to watch the players interact with each other on a personal level. The competitors are invited to commentate other sets and give interviews after each set. Each Summit has its own theme and art design, often based around a real-life event or holiday occurring at a similar time.
Attendees[edit]
Typically, 16 different players are selected to participate in each Smash Summit. 8 to 10 players are automatically invited based on their placement in preceding major tournaments, or based on power rankings such as SSBMRank. The other competitors qualify through either a voting phase or through qualifiers, the latter first introduced for Smash Summit 5. In the former, fans can buy merchandise or donate cash, which grants them the opportunity to cast votes for certain players; the money then contributes to the event's prize payout. At the end of each voting deadline, two players are eliminated, while starting from the third voting round, two players are invited; this repeats until all vote-ins have been selected. Although the invitation process remained roughly the same, there has been irregularities such as in Smash Summit 10 Online, where the majority of players qualified through qualifiers.
Format[edit]
The format for Smash Summit events has changed over time. Initially, the event was a simple double-elimination event. The group phase was first introduced in Smash Summit Spring 2017, beginning as a swiss bracket where all eliminated players beginning on the loser's side of the final bracket. The following Summit event briefly switched to a the four-pool round robin format for the group phase, where the bottom two players of each round robin began on the loser's side of the final bracket, before future Summit events returned to the swiss bracket up until Smash Ultimate Summit 2, which reintroduced the round robin format. Although Smash Summit 9 briefly returned to the swiss format, the Summit series stuck with the round robin format from Smash Summit 10 Online onward. Finally, the gauntlet stage was introduced in Smash Summit 11, where all players who did not win their round robin pools faced off against each other in a new set of single-elimination brackets, and all players who lost began the final bracket on the loser's side. The first match of each gauntlet phase is between a player who was third in their round robin and a player who was fourth, and the winner of that set faces off against a player who was second.
Champions[edit]
Melee singles winners[edit]
Year | Event | Player | Tag | Character(s) | Runner-up | Character(s) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2015 | Smash Summit | Adam Lindgren | Armada | Mango | ||
2016 | Smash Summit 2 | Adam Lindgren | Armada | Hungrybox | ||
2016 | Smash Summit 3 | Adam Lindgren | Armada | Hungrybox | ||
2017 | Smash Summit Spring 2017 | Adam Lindgren | Armada | Hungrybox | ||
2017 | Smash Summit 5 | Juan Manuel DeBiedma | Hungrybox | Armada | ||
2018 | Smash Summit 6 | Jason Zimmerman | Mew2King | Armada | ||
2018 | Smash Summit 7 | Juan Manuel DeBiedma | Hungrybox | Leffen | ||
2019 | Smash Summit 8 | Jeffrey Williamson | Axe | Wizzrobe | ||
2020 | Smash Summit 9 | Juan Manuel DeBiedma | Hungrybox | Plup | ||
2020 | Smash Summit 10 Online | Zain Naghmi | Zain | Mango | ||
2021 | Smash Summit 11 | Joseph Manuel Marquez | Mango | Zain | ||
2021 | Smash Summit 12 | Cody Schwab | iBDW | Mango | ||
2022 | Smash Summit 13 | Cody Schwab | iBDW | Plup | ||
2022 | Smash Summit 14 | Joseph Manuel Marquez | Mango | iBDW |
Melee Doubles Winners[edit]
Year | Event | Player | Tag | Character(s) | Player | Tag | Character(s) | Runner-up | Character(s) | Runner-up | Character(s) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2015 | Smash Summit | Kevin Toy | PewPewU | Zachary Cordoni | SFAT | Armada | Mew2King | ||||
2016 | Smash Summit 2 | Adam Lindgren | Armada | Jason Zimmerman | Mew2King | Hungrybox | Plup | ||||
2016 | Smash Summit 3 | Adam Lindgren | Armada | Jason Zimmerman | Mew2King | SFAT | PewPewU | ||||
2017 | Smash Summit Spring 2017 | Adam Lindgren | Armada | Jason Zimmerman | Mew2King | Leffen | Ice | ||||
2017 | Smash Summit 5 | Adam Lindgren | Armada | William Hjelte | Leffen | Mew2King | Plup | ||||
2018 | Smash Summit 6 | Adam Lindgren | Armada | William Hjelte | Leffen | SFAT | Mango | ||||
2018 | Smash Summit 7 | Jason Zimmerman | Mew2King | Justin McGrath | Plup | Hungrybox | Bananas | ||||
2019 | Smash Summit 8 | Joseph Marquez | Mango | Johnny Kim | S2J | Plup | Zain | ||||
2022 | Smash Summit 14 | Justin McGrath | Plup | James Ma | Duck | Hungrybox | Joshman |
Ultimate singles winners[edit]
Year | Event | Player | Tag | Character(s) | Runner-up | Character(s) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2019 | Smash Ultimate Summit | Leonardo Lopez Perez | MkLeo | Dabuz | ||
2019 | Smash Ultimate Summit 2 | Leonardo Lopez Perez | MkLeo | Samsora | ||
2021 | Smash Ultimate Summit 3 | Gavin Dempsey | Tweek | MkLeo | ||
2022 | Smash Ultimate Summit 4 | Edgar Valdez | Sparg0 | Light | ||
2022 | Smash Ultimate Summit 5 | Naoto Tsuji | ProtoBanham | Light | ||
2023 | Smash Ultimate Summit 6 | Mashita Hayato | acola | Tweek |
Players with multiple appearances[edit]
Melee[edit]
Tag | Appearances |
---|---|
Mango | 14 |
Hungrybox | 13 |
Plup | 13 |
Axe | 12 |
Leffen | 10 |
SFAT | 10 |
Wizzrobe | 9 |
Zain | 9 |
aMSa | 8 |
iBDW | 7 |
Mew2King | 7 |
n0ne | 7 |
S2J | 7 |
Armada | 6 |
Shroomed | 6 |
PewPewU | 5 |
Westballz | 5 |
Ginger | 4 |
KoDoRiN | 4 |
Lucky | 3 |
Magi | 3 |
2saint | 2 |
Duck | 2 |
Hax | 2 |
HugS | 2 |
Ice | 2 |
Jmook | 2 |
Joshman | 2 |
moky | 2 |
Pipsqueak | 2 |
Spark | 2 |
Swedish Delight | 2 |
Ultimate[edit]
Tag | Appearances |
---|---|
MkLeo | 6 |
Dabuz | 5 |
Tweek | 5 |
Glutonny | 4 |
Light | 4 |
Sparg0 | 4 |
VoiD | 4 |
Cosmos | 3 |
Maister | 3 |
ProtoBanham | 3 |
Riddles | 3 |
Zackray | 3 |
Aaron | 2 |
acola | 2 |
Armada | 2 |
Kola | 2 |
Leffen | 2 |
Marss | 2 |
MuteAce | 2 |
Nairo | 2 |
Samsora | 2 |
Tea | 2 |
Trivia[edit]
- Mango and Plup played against each other at every Smash Summit for Melee, with the exception of Smash Summit 6, Smash Summit 12, Smash Summit 13, and Smash Summit 14.
- Hungrybox and aMSa played at every in-person Smash Summit for Melee where both were in attendance (starting with Smash Summit 5), with the exception of Smash Summit 14.
- Hungrybox won every time he played at odd-numbered Summits, whereas the reverse was true for aMSa at even-numbered Summits.
- Mango and Hungrybox played against each other at every odd-numbered Smash Summit for Melee starting with Smash Summit 7.
- Only seven players - Armada, Leffen, Mew2King, Mango, Plup, ESAM, and Hungrybox - have attended a Smash Summit for both Melee and Ultimate.
- The winner of each offline Smash Summit were invited to the following Summit with the exception of Smash Ultimate Summit 3, where the winner Tweek qualified for Smash Ultimate Summit 4 at Mainstage 2021 before anyone was invited.
- Tweek and Sparg0 are the only players to place both last and first in a given game's Smash Summit (both for Ultimate):
- Tweek is the only player to place last at a Summit that would go on to win a Summit, placing 13th at Smash Ultimate Summit 2 before winning Smash Ultimate Summit 3.
- Sparg0 is the only player to win a Summit that would go on to place last at another Summit, winning Smash Ultimate Summit 4 before placing 13th at Smash Ultimate Summit 6.
- Dabuz placed 9th at every Summit he attended aside from Smash Ultimate Summit.
- Although SluG never competed in a Smash Summit, he qualified for the cancelled Smash Summit 15 at Mainstage 2022.
- Mango is the only player to compete in every Melee Smash Summit, and MkLeo is the only player to compete in every Ultimate Smash Summit.
- Light and Plup are the only players to make multiple Grand Finals appearances without winning a Smash Summit.
References[edit]