Super Smash Bros. series
Tournament

Greatest of all time

Revision as of 00:49, January 9, 2021 by Ac2k (talk | contribs) (see talk page)
Armada (left) and Mango, two players often considered the greatest Melee players of all time.
Mew2King is often considered the greatest overall Smash Bros. player of all time.

Greatest of all time, often shortened to GOAT, is an informal title used by a fanbase to label a person considered the best ever to compete or participate in a particular field. The term is most widely used in professional sports; for example, most basketball players and fans consider either Michael Jordan or LeBron James. It is also used in other competitive fields such as chess or video gaming; Faker is widely seen as the greatest League of Legends player of all time.

The Super Smash Bros. series has been played competitively since 2002 (as early as 1999 in its native Japan), and as the tournament scene has continued to develop, the communities for each game in the series have formed a consensus around one, or several, candidates considered the "greatest of all time" for their particular title.

Common criteria used to judge the greatest of all time include:

  • Level of dominance over the rest of the competition during the player's peak performance.
  • Number of first-place finishes at major or supermajor tournaments, as well as the prestige of the tournaments won. For example, in Melee, EVO titles is widely considered the most prestigious tournament victories.
  • Longevity (length of time spent competing as a top player).
  • Consistency as a top player; for example, how often the player lost to other players ranked below them.
  • Influence on the development of the metagame or the competitive scene.


In Super Smash Bros. 64

Isai is widely considered to be the greatest Smash 64 player of all time. [1] This is due to his extended longevity as a competitor and dominance over the Smash 64 scene across all regions of the world (most famously showcased during his trip to Japan in 2006-2007).

In Super Smash Bros. Melee

Super Smash Bros. Melee is perhaps the only Smash title with significant debate regarding its greatest player of all time.

Most Melee players, commentators, and supporters consider Armada to be the greatest Melee player of all time, due to his consistent level of dominance over all other competitors during his prime. Among Armada's major accomplishments include first place finishes at some of the most prestigious Melee supermajors. He won EVO 2015 and EVO 2017, won three GENESIS titles, two Apex titles, and four Smash Summits in a row.

Armada holds positive set records against all of the other Gods. He was considered a candidate for best player in the world from 2009 until his retirement from Melee in 2018. In the first six editions of SSBMRank, he was ranked 1st in 2015 and 2016, and was ranked 2nd in 2013, 2014, 2017, and 2018, never falling below 2nd place.

Supporters of Armada also point to his unrivaled level of consistency as a competitor; unlike the other Gods, who were known for occasionally losing to lower-ranked players, Armada was known for almost never dropping to a set to players below his skill level. From 2009 to 2018, he never placed below 5th at a major, and lost only three sets to players ranked below the top six: two best of three sets to SilentSpectre and Swedish Delight, and one best of five sets to Amsah. Armada was known as a major roadblock in the path of many players' goals to achieve victory over all five of the Gods, including Axe and Wobbles. Armada achieved much of his dominance using almost entirely Peach, a character considered less viable than other top tiers such as Fox, and also while hailing from Sweden, in a continent with fewer major tournaments and far weaker competition than North America.

A smaller but significant share of the Melee community argues that Mango is the greatest Melee player of all time. His major accomplishments include first place finishes at EVO 2013 and EVO 2014, matching Armada's record of EVO victories, along with wins at Pound 3, GENESIS, The Big House 4, and Get On My Level 2019.

Mango has been considered a top-five player from 2007 to the present, aside from a period in 2010-2011 where he sandbagged as Scorpion Master, and was considered the best player in the world from 2008-2010 and 2013-2014. He was ranked 1st on the 2013 and 2014 SSBMRank.

Supporters of Mango cite his greater longevity compared to Armada with his peaks being just as dominant, if not greater than, Armada's (for example, winning back-to-back EVOs which no other player has done), They also argue that he was able to achieve number one in the world using three different characters (Jigglypuff, Falco, and Fox), all with different playstyles. Mango is often seen as the most influential and recognizable Melee player, as he popularized a highly aggressive and read-based style of play with his space animals, which made him a fan favorite at tournaments, and he boasts the largest Twitch following out of any Melee player; he is often regarded as the "protagonist" of Melee.[2], Mango is commonly nicknamed "the GOAT" or "ManGOAT," even by players who consider Armada the greatest of all time.

Both Armada and Mango have publicly commented on the GOAT debate. Armada has referred to himself as the GOAT on Twitter multiple times since 2018.[3][4] In October 2020, Armada and Mango both replied to a Tweet posted by Tafokints discussing the GOAT of Melee.[5] Armada replied to the Tweet first, arguing in favor of his GOAT status, citing his winning record over the rest of the top six, better placements at events the two both attended and having never placed below 5th at any tournament.[6] Mango argued that Armada was only ranked number one for two years (2015 and 2016), and even then, Mango boasted a winning record over him in 2016. He argued that his performance was superior to Armada's before 2012 and that his consistent performance did not necessarily translate into dominance,[7] suggesting that he could have been declared the undisputed GOAT if he chose to retire in 2015.[8] He also added, "At the end of the day it's dumb to discuss whos the goat when we're only halfway thru the movie... There's so much more melee to be played."[9][10]

Smaller groups have also suggested Ken and Hungrybox as possible outlier candidates. Ken, known today by his nickname "The King of Smash", is considered the undisputed best player of the MLG era before Brawl's release, and was a candidate for best player in the world from 2004 to 2007. During his prime, Ken was considered the best player by a significant margin, winning nearly every event he entered, and dominated competitive Melee to a degree far greater than Armada or Mango did during their peaks. However, it is generally agreed that Ken's short longevity at the top diminishes his claim at the GOAT. It has been suggested that Ken competed in a less advanced era of Melee, and that the overall level of competition has greatly improved since his retirement, as evidence by his failure to place top eight at majors during his return to Smash from 2013-2015.

Hungrybox has been considered a top-five player from 2009 until the present and was seen as the undisputed rank one from 2017 to 2020. Among his major titles is a victory at EVO 2016, the largest Melee tournament of all time. His Jigglypuff has been responsible for major developments in the Melee metagame; his dominance caused many to start seeing Jigglypuff as potentially the best character in the game, and many players, most notably Armada, developed secondary characters specifically in an attempt to counter him. However, Hungrybox's reign as a consistent first-place finisher has been relatively short compared to that of Mango or Armada, and his lowest level of play has also been below them; most notably from Apex 2010 to Paragon Orlando 2015, he went nearly five years without placing 1st at a major title. It is often theorized that Hungrybox could become the greatest of all time if he continues to dominate the Melee scene after several more years of competition.

"The Top 100 Melee Players of All Time"

"The Top 100 Melee Players of All Time" is a project by Smash History creators Edwin Budding and Pikachu942, which subjectively ranks the 100 greatest Melee players throughout the history of the game. The first edition, published in 2018, ranked Armada as the greatest player of all time, with Mango in second, Ken in third, and Hungrybox in fourth. A 2019 update moved Hungrybox up to third, ahead of Ken. The ranking was again updated in 2020, and Hungrybox was again moved up to second, ahead of Mango.

2018 edition

"Top 100 Melee Players of All Time" ranked the top 100 Melee players from 2002 to 2018.

Ranking Smasher Previous rank Movement Character(s)
1   Armada   
2   Mango       
3   Ken   
4   Hungrybox  
5   Mew2King    
6   PPMD   
7   Azen        
8   Leffen  
9   ChuDat      
10   PC Chris     
11   Isai    
12   Plup    
13   KoreanDJ    
14   CaptainJack    
15   Axe     
16   Wobbles  
17   Shroomed    
18   Jman  
19   Chillin   
20   SFAT  
21   Westballz   
22   Hax   
23   KirbyKaze    
24   Fly Amanita   
25   Amsah  
26   HugS  
27   Wizzrobe  
28   Zhu   
29   Lucky  
30   S2J  
31   Sastopher  
32   Cort    
33   Darkrain  
34   DaShizWiz   
35   Vidjogamer  
36   Silent Wolf  
37   Taj   
38   Wes  
39   Kage  
40   Drephen  
41   PewPewU   
42   Lovage  
43   NEO   
44   SilentSpectre  
45   JAVI  
46   Masashi  
47   Bombsoldier  
48   Cactuar   
49   Druggedfox     
50   Ice    
51   DieSuperFly  
52   Colbol  
53   MacD  
54   Nintendude  
55   Duck  
56   Darc  
57   Ek  
58   Rob$   
59   Kei     
60   La Luna  
61   Swedish Delight  
62   Forward   
63   The King  
64   aMSa  
65   n0ne   
66   Dope  
67   Ryan Ford  
68   DA Dave  
69   Scar  
70   Lambchops  
71   Mike G  
72   Mikael  
73   Tink   
74   Eddie   
75   Eggm   
76   Fiction   
77   Tope  
78   Caveman    
79   KrazyJones  
80   Husband  
81   Wife  
82   KillaOR  
83   Ka-Master  
84   Jiano  
85   Zgetto  
86   Overtriforce  
87   Abate  
88   VaNz   
89   Thunders  
90   Crush  
91   Bum  
92   Lucien  
93   Professor Pro  
94   FASTLIKETREE   
95   Kels   
96   Zain  
97   KishCubed  
98   KM   
99   Pink Shinobi  
100   Zelgadis  

Honorable Mentions:   CauthonLuck   ,   The Doug  ,   Zulu   ,   DJ Nintendo     ,   Matt Deezie   ,   Sultan of Samitude  ,   Eduardo  ,   Remen   ,   Recipherus  ,   Bladewise  

2019 edition

Released on February 14th, 2019, this update was titled "All-Time Melee Top 100: Another Year". This update to the Top 50 accounts for every major that occurred since the original list up to GENESIS 6.

Ranking Smasher Previous rank Movement Character(s)
1   Armada 1 0   
2   Mango 2 0       
3   Hungrybox 4 ▲ 1  
4   Ken 3 ▼ 1   
5   Mew2King 5 0    
6   PPMD 6 0   
7   Leffen 8 ▲ 1  
8   Azen 7 ▼ 1        
9   ChuDat 9 0      
10   PC Chris 10 0     
11   Plup 12 ▲ 1    
12   Isai 11 ▼ 1    
13   KoreanDJ 13 0    
14   CaptainJack 14 0    
15   Axe 15 0     
16   Wobbles 16 0  
17   Shroomed 17 0    
18   Jman 18 0  
19   SFAT 20 ▲ 1  
20   Chillin 19 ▼ 1   
21   Zain 96 ▲ 75  
22   Westballz 21 ▼ 1   
23   Hax 22 ▼ 1   
24   Wizzrobe 27 ▲ 3  
25   KirbyKaze 23 ▼ 2    
26   Fly Amanita 24 ▼ 2   
27   S2J 30 ▲ 3  
28   Lucky 26 ▼ 2  
30   Amsah 25 ▼ 5  
31   Sastopher 31 0  
32   Zhu 28 ▼ 4   
33   Cort 32 ▼ 1    
34   PewPewU 41 ▲ 7   
35   DaShizWiz 34 ▼ 1   
36   Darkrain 33 ▼ 3  
37   Vidjogamer 35 ▼ 2  
38   aMSa 64 ▲ 26  
39   Drephen 40 ▲ 1  
40   Wes 38 ▼ 2  
41   Taj 37 ▼ 4   
42   Silent Wolf 36 ▼ 6  
43   NEO 43 0   
44   Kage 39 ▼ 5  
45   Lovage 42 ▼ 3  
46   SilentSpectre 44 ▼ 2  
47   JAVI 45 ▼ 2  
48   Masashi 46 ▼ 2  
49   Bombsoldier 47 ▼ 2  
50   Duck 55 ▲ 5  

2020 edition

Released on March 31st, 2020, this update was titled "All-Time Melee Top 100: Another Year". This update to the Top 50 accounts for every major that occurred since the previous list up to Smash Summit 9.

Ranking Smasher Previous rank Movement Character(s)
1   Armada 1 0   
2   Hungrybox 3 ▲ 1  
3   Mango 2 ▼ 1       
4   Ken 4 0   
5   Mew2King 5 0    
6   PPMD 6 0   
7   Leffen 7 0  
8   Azen 8 0        
9   ChuDat 9 0      
10   PC Chris 10 0     
11   Isai 12 ▲ 1    
12   Plup 11 ▼ 1    
13   Axe 15 ▲ 2     
14   KoreanDJ 13 ▼ 1    
15   Zain 21 ▲ 6  
16   Wizzrobe 24 ▲ 8  
17   CaptainJack 14 ▼ 3    
18   Wobbles 16 ▼ 2  
19   SFAT 19 0  
20   Shroomed 17 ▼ 3    
21   Jman 18 ▼ 3  
22   Chillin 20 ▼ 2   
23   Westballz 22 ▼ 1   
24   Hax 23 ▼ 1   
25   S2J 27 ▲ 2  
26   Lucky 28 ▲ 2  
27   HugS 29 ▲ 2  
28   KirbyKaze 25 ▼ 3    
29   Zhu 32 ▲ 3   
30   Amsah 30 0  
31   Fly Amanita 26 ▼ 5    
32   aMSa 38 ▲ 6  
33   PewPewU 34 ▲ 1   
34   Drephen 39 ▲ 5  
35   Darkrain 36 ▲ 1  
36   Vidjogamer 37 ▲ 1  
37   Sastopher 31 ▼ 6  
38   Cort 33 ▼ 5    
39   DaShizWiz 35 ▼ 4   
40   Wes 40 0  
41   Silent Wolf 42 ▲ 1  
42   Taj 41 ▼ 1   
43   Kage 44 ▲ 1  
44   NEO 43 ▼ 1   
45   Lovage 45 0  
46   SilentSpectre 46 0  
47   JAVI 47 0  
48   Masashi 48 0  
49   Bombsoldier 49 0  
50   Swedish Delight  

In Super Smash Bros. Brawl

Mew2King was widely considered to be the greatest Brawl player of all time. He was by far the most dominant player from 2008-2011, placing first or second at near every event he attended. Although his tournament results slumped from 2012 to 2014, he was still considered a threat to win any major tournament, and no other player was able to match his earlier levels of dominance at that time. Many of Brawl's most memorable sets featured Mew2King being upset by other players, including vs. Ally, OCEAN, and Salem.[11]

In Super Smash Bros. 4

ZeRo was widely considered to be the greatest Smash 4 player of all time. From 2014 to 2017, ZeRo placed first at nearly every tournament he entered, including a 56-tournament winning streak from 2014 to 2015. Taking a set off of ZeRo was often considered one of the highlights of a Smash 4 player's career. Although ZeRo retired from entering Smash 4 tournaments in 2018, no other player was about to match ZeRo's level of dominance and consistency before the end of the game's competitive life, leaving his claim as the Smash 4 GOAT undisputed.

In Super Smash Bros. Ultimate

While the game is only two years old, MkLeo has dominated the competitive scene for its entire lifespan, placing 1st at most of the game's significant tournaments. Widely regarded as the game's strongest player offline, his results have suffered somewhat since the switch to online play due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Nonetheless, his perception as Ultimate's top offline player remains unchanged as the competitive community awaits the return of in-person tournaments.

In Project M

ThundeRzReiGN is generally considered to be the greatest Project M player of all time, due to both his dominance and consistent level of play, placing first at nearly every tournament he entered from 2016 to 2019.

Across all Smash games

Mew2King is often considered the greatest player across all Smash titles. Mew2King is recognized as the greatest Brawl player of all time, a consistent top-five Melee player (considered best in the world in 2007), and a strong Project M and Smash 4 player, having placed top eight at many major tournaments, while also entering Smash 64 and Ultimate events. Mew2King is well known for his enjoyment of every Smash title and is one of the only top players who has spent their career competing in multiple games at once; since 2008, he has simultaneously played Melee and the newest Smash game at the time (Brawl from 2008-2014, Smash 4 from 2014-2018, Ultimate since 2018) (in addition to Project M from 2014-2015). Mew2King is also perhaps the most recognized player across the entire competitive Super Smash Bros. scene.

The tournament series Super Smash Con has run an exhibition event called "Smash Masters", in which players compete against each other across all official Smash titles, in an attempt to determine the best overall Smash player. Mew2King won Smash Masters in 2016 and 2018, Wizzrobe won in 2017, and ZeRo won in 2019.

The Top 100 Smash Bros. Players of All Time was a power ranking produced by reddit user orange_ssbu that subjectively ranked the most successful Super Smash Bros. players from the release of Super Smash Bros. in 1999 to DreamHack Atlanta 2019. The list featured Mew2King ranked in first place, with Armada in second.

Ranking Smasher Character(s)
1   Mew2King                
2   Armada      
3   ZeRo          
4   Isai              
5   Hungrybox  
6   Nairo        
7   Mango          
8   Ally        
9   Wizzrobe        
10   MkLeo            
11   Ken    
12   Dabuz          
13   Leffen      
14   9B    
15   ESAM           
16   PPMD    
17   Azen        
18   wario  
19   Larry Lurr          
20   Jouske  
21   ChuDat    
22   SuPeRbOoMfAn      
23   Salem        
24   Plup        
25   ADHD  
26   Alvin    
27   Tweek            
28   PC Chris      
29   RAIN              
30   Otori  
31   Axe      
32   Nietono          
33   KoreanDJ      
34   Mr.R            
35   Abadango                    
36   Moyashi  
37   Wobbles  
38   Fukurou  
39   ANTi                
40   VoiD      
41   Shroomed      
42   kysk      
43   kameme            
44   Zain  
45   CaptainJack      
46   Kikoushi  
47   SFAT  
48   Samsora    
49   Vinnie        
50   Jman  
51   Westballz      
52   DieSuperFly    
53   Hax    
54   Gerson  
55   aMSa    
56   Amsah  
57   Chillindude  
58   Gnes  
59   KirbyKaze    
60   Cort        
61   Masashi        
62   Ruoka Dancho  
63   S2J  
64   Marss        
65   Fly Amanita  
66   KEN    
67   Zhu    
68   Kurabba  
69   Fiction      
70   Tyrant    
71   komorikiri        
72   wangera  
73   Ranai    
74   NAKAT            
75   Tatsuman    
76   Lucky  
77   Prince  
78   Cosmos    
79   Shuton      
80   PewPewU    
81   HugS  
82   Sastopher  
83   Lima    
84   Mariguas    
85   Glutonny      
86   MVD     
87   tamim    
88   Brood        
89   Wes  
90   Etsuji      
91   Kakera    
92   Zackray            
93   Lovage  
94   Darkrain  
95   Mikeneko  
96   tacos      
97   Rich Brown    
98   Dojo  
99   Duck  
100   DaShizWiz    
HM   Light    
HM   Drephen  
HM   Zinoto      
HM   Kage  
HM   Fatality    
HM   S  
HM   Silent Wolf  
HM   NEO      
HM   Dext3r  
HM   Choco      

References

External links