Tournament

John

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In the Smash community, a John is an excuse for a player's underperformance that results in a loss in a Smash Bros. game, such as not using the correct attack, having a poor controller, or narrowly losing a match, among others. It can be considered roughly equivalent to the word "excuse". In addition to its use as a noun, the term can also be used as a verb, where players can be accused of "Johning". "No Johns" has also seen use, primarily to counter players who are said to be Johning. Making excuses for why a player lost is generally frowned upon by the Smash community, and players who repeatedly John are often criticized for making these excuses.

Origin

The term "Johning" was started by the Crystal City Crew from South division. In addition to future professionals such as Caveman and Rob$, another member of the crew was named John; this player became notorious amongst the other members for frequently making excuses for his losses. Eventually, the other members of the crew began to accuse him of "Johning" whenever he made another excuse; the terms "John" and "No Johns" were also eventually used by the players in order to generically refer to excuses.

As the crew began to gain more exposure, including attending tournaments out of state, they still used the term "John" and its variants, spreading usage of the term to other crews and players; the term eventually became widespread throughout the Melee community, and the members of the Crystal City Crew were surprised upon seeing its usage on Smashboards.

The smassher from which the term John originated still plays Melee, under the tag "Kamel".

Regional variants

In Sweden, the term "Yuna" can be used interchangeably with "John", here referring to the smasher Yuna, who became known for similar behaviour to John. Players say "Inga Yunas", pseudo-Swedish for "No Yunas".

Spain has numerous synonyms to the term "John", with the two most common being "No Veyrons", after a smasher from Catalonia, or "No Joshis", after the smasher Joshi from Andalusia. "No Veyrons" is more common in northern Spain, while "No Joshis" is more common in the south.

In Germany, a counterpart called "No Stacos" evolved, leading back to the player Staco. Staco was known in the German community for frequently using excuses both for victories and losses, often claiming he could have performed better in both cases. While Staco later retired from competitive Smash, the phrase is still commonly used. As an extra in written form, especially on the SmashBoards, the digit sequence "<<" was established by him, stressing his disapproval when something was not in his favor; the sequence is called "kleiner als kleiner als", which, in German, roughly translates to "less than less than".

In Mexico, the term "no Miltons" was used as a synonym after a player known as Milton who often made up excuses (like playing with a broken finger) whenever he lost a game in a tournament in 2009.

In Tampico, Tamaulipas, México, the term "Tiesar" was used as a synonym after a player known as Tieso who often made up excuses (like playing with a broken finger) whenever he lost a game in a tournament in 2014.

In Italy, a player living in Florence named demLong (a.k.a Dem) was popular since 2008 as the guy who always invents excuses of any kind of nature when he loses, anybody who was present at that time can't help but remember the first one he ever made "I messed up because my hands are cold". As time passes, his skill of johning increased and eventually became a legend amongst the italian community. His creativity, which is still growing, is actually impressive to the point that it got aknowledged as pure art and the usage of "no Dems" replaced "no Johns" in the whole country, reaching even the neighbour Switzerland.

In Nintendo media

During EVO 2014's Super Smash Bros. Melee singles tournament, a short video was played that featured Nintendo of America's president, Reggie Fils-Aimé, vocalizing Nintendo's support of the tournament. After sharing his appreciation for the Melee players at the event, Reggie wrapped up the video with a challenge for players to face him in the upcoming release of Super Smash Bros. 4; at the conclusion of the video, Fils-Aimé said, "And if we ever do go head-to-head, please, no Johns."[1]

In Super Smash Bros. for Wii U and Super Smash Bros. Ultimate, one of the names that can show up as a random name is "NOJOHNS".

See also

References

  1. ^ Fils-Aimé, Reggie (2014-07-13). Nintendo EVO 2014 Video. Nintendo. Retrieved on 2014-07-14.