Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
Tournament

Tournament:Super Smash Bros. Invitational 2018

Revision as of 18:21, September 13, 2021 by Sniffnoy (talk | contribs) (→‎Trivia: add Twitter cite for Sakurai shaking head story)
Super Smash Bros. Invitational 2018
E3 2018 Invitational.png
Dates June 12th, 2018
Venue The Belasco Theater
Address/City 1050 S Hill St
Los Angeles, California USA
Attendance 8
Entry fees
Results
Super Smash Bros. Ultimate winners Chile ZeRo

The Super Smash Bros. Invitational 2018 was an invitational tournament held by Nintendo at E3 2018, that took place on the night of June 12th, 2018. The tournament was announced on March 22nd, 2018 via Nintendo's YouTube channel. Much like Super Smash Bros. Melee and Super Smash Bros. 4, the upcoming Super Smash Bros. Ultimate was showcased prior to its release at this tournament. The tournament was held following the conclusion of the Splatoon 2 World Championship.

Players

According to Nintendo's E3 website and a post from their What's New blog, top players from across the globe will be participating. A few people who are "dressed as their favorite Nintendo character" and other invited guests[1] will be able to play on-stage in exhibitions.

Challengers

Smasher Characters chosen
  Leonardo "MkLeo" Perez       
  Gonzalo "ZeRo" Barrios      
  Adam "Armada" Lindgren       
  Yuta "Abadango" Kawamura       
  Justin "Plup" McGrath       
  Ramin "Mr.R" Delshad      
  Jose "Lucky" Aldama      
  Joseph "Mango" Marquez      
  • Both Nairo and Leffen were back-up contestants. Nairo would ultimately play as Snake in a 1v3 exhibition match against three guest stars, which he won, and Leffen played ZeRo in a set for Nintendo Treehouse Live.
  • Mr.R and Lucky only played two matches, so were unable to use Little Mac and Fox respectively.
  • No player included Donkey Kong, Pikachu, Ness, Ice Climbers, Zelda, or Mega Man in their character bank.

Guests

  • Zelda Williams
  • Alanah “Charalanahzard” Pearce
  • Devin “devinsupertramp” Graham
  • Andre “Black Nerd” Meadows

VIP Attendees

Announcers

Rulesets

  • Winners Round 1 was a doubles match with 3 stocks, 7 minutes, and the Smash Ball on.
  • Elimination Round 1 was a doubles match with 4 stocks, 6 minutes, and all items on.
  • Winners Rounds 2 and 3 were singles matches with 3 stocks, 6 minutes, and the Smash Ball on. In Round 3[citation needed], stage hazards were disabled[citation needed].
  • Elimination Round 2 was a free-for-all four-player match on[citation needed] Battlefield with 4 stocks, 6 minutes, and all items on. Only the 1st place finisher advanced.
  • Elimination Round 3 was a singles match with 4 stocks, 6 minutes, and all items on.
  • Grand Finals was a best-of-three set of singles matches on[citation needed] Battlefield Ω with 3 stocks, 6 minutes, and all items off.

Results

Super Smash Bros. Ultimate

(8 entrants)
Grand Finals

Place Name Character(s) Earnings
1st   ZeRo    
2nd   MkLeo    
3rd   Plup    
4th   Armada    
4th   Abadango    
4th   Mango    
7th   Lucky   
7th   Mr.R   

Trivia

  • ZeRo was the only invited player to return from the first Invitational, which he won.
  • The match pitting MkLeo (Bayonetta) against Plup (Ridley) was controversial, as the match was hugely in MkLeo's favor. This is mostly due to him using Bayonetta, who is a highly controversial character in general, as people considered her to be broken in Smash 4. However, another crucial element was the fact that Plup was using Ridley, who is a new character that he wasn't very familiar with, and possessed a massive hurtbox that made him easy to juggle with a character like Bayonetta.
    • Reportedly, even Masahiro Sakurai was shaking his head in disappointment due to how Bayonetta dominated the match.[2]
  • In a doubles match with Mr.R and Lucky against Plup and Abadango, Lucky repeatedly mistakenly attacked Mr.R, due to believing the match was a free-for-all instead of a 2v2.[3][4] It's likely that, as a Melee player, Lucky simply forgot about the ability to choose costumes in teams (which was added in Smash 4).

External links

References