Super Smash Bros. Melee
Tournament

Tournament:EVO 2013

Revision as of 11:27, June 1, 2014 by EXemplary Logic (talk | contribs) (fixing category capitalization)
EVO 2013
EVOLogo2013.png
Dates July 12-14, 2013
Venue Paris Las Vegas Hotel & Casino
Address/City 3655 S Las Vegas Blvd
Las Vegas, NV 89109 USA
Attendance 709 (for Melee)
Entry fees Registration:
Melee singles:
Pot size(s) $6960 1v1
+ $1000 pot bonus
Results
Super Smash Bros. Melee winners USA Mango 1v1
USA Mew2King & USA Hungrybox 2v2
Staff
EVO Staff Mr. Wizard, James Chen
VGBootCamp, CLASH Tournaments, Melee It On Me, Team OXY GimR, Chibo, Prog, D1, Scar, TheCrimsonBlur

EVO 2013 was a fighting game event (the latest in the Evolution Championship Series), which featured the return of Super Smash Bros. Melee to the mainstream fighting game tournament scene after a six-year absence from EVO. It is the largest Melee tournament - and the largest tournament of any Smash game - to date, with 709 entrants, over twice the amount of players that attended Pound 4, the previous record holder.

Originally, Melee was not to be a featured game at EVO. However, when looking for an 8th game to add to the roster, the EVO staff held a donation drive for breast cancer research, wherein the game community that donated the most money to the drive would have their game featured as an official game at EVO. Although there was stiff competition from the Skullgirls community, a massive push from the Melee It On Me podcast staff resulted in the Smash community raising nearly $95000 by the final day of the donation drive.

A particular event that sparked outrage among the entire gaming community was when Nintendo attempted to block streaming for Melee at EVO a few days before the tournament was set to begin. However, because of extreme community backlash, Nintendo retracted the ban hours later. It was later revealed that Nintendo had also attempted to shut down the Melee portion of the tournament altogether.

For commentary on the main stage, Prog was joined by famed Street Fighter commentator James Chen.

Ruleset

General rules

  • Items are set to off and none.
  • 4 stocks
  • 8 minute time limit
  • Wobbling is allowed. The freeze glitch and infinite stalling are banned however.
  • Matches that time out will be determined by the remaining number of stocks, then percentage of the current stock if stocks are tied. In the event of a percentage tie, the match should be replayed in full. Sudden Death is not to be played, and will not count.
  • If a player accidentally pauses while stealing a life in doubles, the opposing team may deem that stock forfeit. Pausing may be turned off to prevent this.
  • Stage Striking (in the order 1-2-1) is used the decide the stage on game 1.
  • In a Best of 3 match, a player can ban 1 stage upon winning a game. In a Best of 5 match however, there are no stage bans.
  • Before the next game, the winner of the previous game decides their stage ban and character. The loser will counterpick stages and characters accordingly.
  • A player cannot counterpick the last stage he/she won on unless mutually agreed to by both players.

Stage list

Singles stage list

Starter Counterpick
Yoshi's Story Pokémon Stadium
Fountain of Dreams
Battlefield
Final Destination
Dream Land

Results

For more detailed results, see the results thread link at the bottom of the page.

Official Singles (Top 92)

1.   Mango    $3,205
2.   Wobbles   $1,731
3.   Hungrybox   $796
4.   Armada   $550
5.   Dr. PeePee   $487
5.   Mew2King   $487
7.   Ice   $348
7.   Shroomed   $348
9.   Leffen  
9.   Silent Wolf  
9.   SFAT  
9.   Hax  
13.   Axe  
13.   S2J  
13.   Taj   
13.   Lucien  
17.   Fiction  
17.   Lord   
17.   Fly Amanita  
17.   Westballz   
17.   PewPewU  
17.   Fuzzyness  
17.   DaShizWiz  
17.   Zhu  
25.   Darkrain  
25.   Reno  
25.   Eddy Mexico  
25.   Tomber  
25.   Darrell  
25.   OkamiBW  
25.   aMSa  
25.   Nite  
33.   Bladewise  
33.   Swift   
33.   Jman  
33.   I.B  
33.   Cyrain  
33.   MattDotZeb  
33.   Redd  
33.   Lovage  
33.   Phish-It  
33.   Dart!  
33.   Bob$  
33.   Jace  
33.   SilentSpectre  
33.   Mr. F   
33.   Kounotori  
33.   DEHF  
49.   Bacon  
49.   Azusa  
49.   Swedish Delight  
49.   Sung666   
49.   Flow  
49.   HugS  
49.   Chad  
49.   Tafokints  
49.   Hyprid  
49.   Lucky  
49.   SummonedFist  
49.   Vist  
49.   Milkman  
49.   Sidefx  
49.   Ken  
65.   L  
65.   J666  
65.   Tai  
65.   Cosmo  
65.   Bizzarro Flame  
65.   MacD   (taking JTB's place)
65.   Vudujin  
65.   Yakal  
65.   Neon  
65.   Eval   (taking LK007's place)
65.   G$   
65.   Kels  
65.   Zoso  
65.   Aza  
79.   Baka4moe  
79.   Isis  
79.   Omgage  
79.   Stab  
79.   Everlasting Yayhuhzz  
79.   Hectohertz  
79.   Icer  
79.   Crush   
79.   Pi   (under the name 'Smash 4 is gonna suck')
79.   Choknater  
79.   Eggz  
79.   Android  
79.   StriCNYN3  
79.   Meta  

Doubles (Side Event, Top 6)

1.   Mew2King    &   Hungrybox  
2.   Mango    &   Lucky  
3.   PewPewU   &   SFAT  
4.   Armada   &   Android  
5.   Ice   &   Leffen  
5.   Hax   &   Jman  

Trivia

  • Melee was the oldest featured game at the tournament.
  • Melee was one of three games that broke the EVO record for the most watched fighting game of all time, with roughly 134,000 viewers on the official live-stream.
    • Melee was the first of the three games to break the record, and is currently the second-most watched fighting game of all time.
  • Taylor Hicks, winner of the fifth season of American Idol, tied for 257th place for the Melee tournament.
  • During the finals set between Wobbles and Hungrybox, neither player knew that it was a Best of 3 set. EVO founder Tom Cannon informed the two before a fourth match could ensue.
  • Three matches that were played in Losers' were not accurately reflected in the bracket; in Quarter-Finals Pool I57, the bracket shows that Darkrain defeated Fiction and proceeded to lose to Shroomed, while Axe defeated Lord. In actuality, Fiction defeated Darkrain and proceeded to lose to Axe, while Lord lost to Shroomed. Due to how the brackets work, this seems to have been the players accidentally playing the wrong matches rather than any actual fault of the bracket.

External links