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Tournament:The Luminosity Invitational: Difference between revisions

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m (→‎Tournament summary: bit of a wording cleanup. As for SHADIC, imo the Sonix wins is more important to list not only with how insane it was (defeating Sonix twice despite already losing to him twice in the same day) but it was also the set that led to his victory at the event. He's already defeated the other four in previous events, and he'll likely be ranked significantly higher than all of them sans Light, so I don't see it worth noting, especially for an event this small)
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Controversy arose following the conclusion of the round robin phase, as Pool 2 saw two ties: {{Sm|Light|p=Connecticut}} and {{Sm|Dabuz}} went 3-1 (having lost to Dabuz and MkLeo, respectively) while {{Sm|Tweek}} and {{Sm|MkLeo}} went 2-2 (with Tweek losing to Dabuz and Light and MkLeo losing to Light and Tweek). Initially, it was assumed that head-to-head would be the tie-breaker, which meant Pool B would have Dabuz first, Light second, Tweek third, and MkLeo fourth; this order was presented on-stream and was initially present in-bracket. However, it was later revealed that the actual tie-breaker was game count, and as a result the order was changed to Light first, Dabuz second, MkLeo third, and Tweek fourth. This sudden order shift not only confused many players and spectators, but it also affected the final bracket: most notably, MkLeo went from facing {{Sm|Maister}}, a player MkLeo had a dominant record over; to {{Sm|Riddles}}, one of MkLeo's bracket demons and who eventually defeated MkLeo 3-0, eliminating him at 7th. In addition, many spectators questioned the seriousness of the event, and especially pointed out how MkLeo and Tweek chose to play {{SSBU|Byleth}} and {{SSBU|Sephiroth}}, respectively, for most of the event instead of their current mains.
Controversy arose following the conclusion of the round robin phase, as Pool 2 saw two ties: {{Sm|Light|p=Connecticut}} and {{Sm|Dabuz}} went 3-1 (having lost to Dabuz and MkLeo, respectively) while {{Sm|Tweek}} and {{Sm|MkLeo}} went 2-2 (with Tweek losing to Dabuz and Light and MkLeo losing to Light and Tweek). Initially, it was assumed that head-to-head would be the tie-breaker, which meant Pool B would have Dabuz first, Light second, Tweek third, and MkLeo fourth; this order was presented on-stream and was initially present in-bracket. However, it was later revealed that the actual tie-breaker was game count, and as a result the order was changed to Light first, Dabuz second, MkLeo third, and Tweek fourth. This sudden order shift not only confused many players and spectators, but it also affected the final bracket: most notably, MkLeo went from facing {{Sm|Maister}}, a player MkLeo had a dominant record over; to {{Sm|Riddles}}, one of MkLeo's bracket demons and who eventually defeated MkLeo 3-0, eliminating him at 7th. In addition, many spectators questioned the seriousness of the event, and especially pointed out how MkLeo and Tweek chose to play {{SSBU|Byleth}} and {{SSBU|Sephiroth}}, respectively, for most of the event instead of their current mains.


In spite of the issues, this tournament saw a strong run from {{Sm|SHADIC}}, who managed to obtain wins on {{Sm|Light|p=Connecticut}}, {{Sm|Maister}}, {{Sm|Riddles}} and {{Sm|Marss}}, and then was able to beat {{Sm|Dabuz}} in Losers Finals, before double-eliminating {{Sm|Sonix}} in Grand Finals 3-2 and 3-0 after losing to Sonix in Round Robin pools 2-0 and Winners Finals 3-0, claiming his second major victory. In addition, Dabuz managed to bounce back after several bad tournament runs earlier on in the year, beating Tweek, Light, Riddles and Maister, losing only to MkLeo, Sonix and SHADIC.
On the other hand, despite having been in a slump the last few months, {{Sm|Dabuz}} saw the best runs of his season so far at the invitational, defeating Tweek, Light, Riddles, and Maister to place 3rd. In addition, {{Sm|SHADIC}}, after losing to only Sonix throughout the entire event (losing 0-2 in round robin and 0-3 in Winner's Finals) was able to double-eliminate Sonix in Grand Finals 3-2 and 3-0, winning his second major.


==Results==
==Results==

Revision as of 22:17, April 20, 2024

The Luminosity Invitational
Dates April 20th, 2024
Address/City 15305 S Dixie Hwy
Palmetto Bay, Florida USA
Pot size(s) $10,000
Results
Super Smash Bros. Ultimate winners USA SHADIC
Staff
Organizer(s) Luminosity Gaming

The Luminosity Invitational was a Super Smash Bros. Ultimate invitational held in Palmetto Bay, Florida on April 20th, 2024. The event was announced at the end of an April Fools' Day prank on April 1st, with invited players slowly being announced within the next few weeks, although a few player invites were leaked early. The tournament featured Round Robin Best of 3 pools, and the top four players of each pool will then compete in a final double-elimination bracket, with the 1st and 2nd placers starting on Winners' side, and the 3rd and 4th placers starting on Losers' side.

The tournament was sponsored by the grocery chain Kroger.

Tournament summary

Controversy arose following the conclusion of the round robin phase, as Pool 2 saw two ties: Light and Dabuz went 3-1 (having lost to Dabuz and MkLeo, respectively) while Tweek and MkLeo went 2-2 (with Tweek losing to Dabuz and Light and MkLeo losing to Light and Tweek). Initially, it was assumed that head-to-head would be the tie-breaker, which meant Pool B would have Dabuz first, Light second, Tweek third, and MkLeo fourth; this order was presented on-stream and was initially present in-bracket. However, it was later revealed that the actual tie-breaker was game count, and as a result the order was changed to Light first, Dabuz second, MkLeo third, and Tweek fourth. This sudden order shift not only confused many players and spectators, but it also affected the final bracket: most notably, MkLeo went from facing Maister, a player MkLeo had a dominant record over; to Riddles, one of MkLeo's bracket demons and who eventually defeated MkLeo 3-0, eliminating him at 7th. In addition, many spectators questioned the seriousness of the event, and especially pointed out how MkLeo and Tweek chose to play Byleth and Sephiroth, respectively, for most of the event instead of their current mains.

On the other hand, despite having been in a slump the last few months, Dabuz saw the best runs of his season so far at the invitational, defeating Tweek, Light, Riddles, and Maister to place 3rd. In addition, SHADIC, after losing to only Sonix throughout the entire event (losing 0-2 in round robin and 0-3 in Winner's Finals) was able to double-eliminate Sonix in Grand Finals 3-2 and 3-0, winning his second major.

Results

Super Smash Bros. Ultimate singles

(10 entrants)
Top 8 Bracket

Place Name Character(s) Earnings
1st USA SHADIC Corrin (SSBU)
2nd Dominican Republic Sonix Sonic (SSBU)
3rd USA Dabuz Rosalina (SSBU)Olimar (SSBU)
4th Mexico Maister Mr. Game & Watch (SSBU)
5th USA Light Fox (SSBU)
5th Canada Riddles Kazuya (SSBU)
7th USA Tweek Sephiroth (SSBU)Diddy Kong (SSBU)
7th Mexico MkLeo Byleth (SSBU)
9th* USA Marss Zero Suit Samus (SSBU)Donkey Kong (SSBU)
10th USA Hungrybox Jigglypuff (SSBU)

*Marss won 2-0 over Hungrybox in a tiebreaker set for 9th, and won a Kroger gift card as well.

External links