Super Smash Bros. Melee
Tournament

Tournament:Revival of Melee 5

Revision as of 17:01, November 2, 2014 by EndGenuity (talk | contribs) (→‎Mew2King vs. Unknown522: Just some changes.)
Revival of Melee 5
Dates November 17th-18th, 2012
Venue Toy Wiz
Address/City 253 West Route 59
Nanuet, New York USA
Attendance 110+
Entry fees Singles: $10
Doubles: $10 per person
Venue: $20 (for competitors) $15 (if setup was brought)
Pot size(s) Singles: $1,140
Results
Super Smash Bros. Melee winners USA Mew2King 1v1
USA Mew2King & USA Chillin 2v2

Revival of Melee 5 or ROM 5 was an Atlantic North Super Smash Bros. Melee regional and Apex 2013 qualifier held by Alukard in Nanuet, New York. The tournament brought together many talented smashers in the Atlantic North such as Mew2King and Hax, as well as the Canadian champions, KirbyKaze and Unknown522. Though the attendance was large and the competition was tough, ROM 5 did not feature major players who attended previous Revival of Melee tournaments, most notably Mango, Dr. PeePee, and Hungrybox.

Schedule

Time Event
Day 1 Both Singles Pools and Doubles Pools, as well as Exhibition Matches.
Day 2 Both Singles and Doubles Bracket.

Results

Singles

(114 entrants)
Bracket

Place Name Character(s) Earnings
1st   Mew2King     $570
2nd   Unknown522     $285
3rd   KirbyKaze    $171
4th   Eggm   $57
5th   Hax   $28.50
5th   Chillin   $28.50
7th   Scar  
7th   DJ Nintendo    
9th   Ether  
9th   SwiftBass   
9th   Nintendude  
9th   Cactuar  
13th   Teczero   
13th   ZoSo  
13th   Sol   
13th   DoH  

Note: A match exchange was held in Winner's Semifinals where Eggm and Unknown522 switched places.

Doubles

(16 teams)
Bracket

Place Name Character(s) Name Character(s) Earnings
1st   Mew2King      Chillin  
2nd   Hax     Scar  
3rd   KirbyKaze     Cactuar  
4th   Weon-X     Unknown522  
5th   T. Webb     SwiftBass  
5th   Cyrain     Ether  
7th   Alukard     DJ Nintendo  
7th   Vist     Wenbo  
9th   Benteezy     Hazz   
9th   Reno     G$   
9th   Eggm     Nando  
9th   Mafia     Diesel  
13th   Crismas     Teczero  
13th   StriCNYN3     UltimaScout  
13th   WarriorKnight      Dan  
13th   Sol     Phish-It  

Mew2King vs. Unknown522

This tournament has caused much controversy among the Smash community due to the winners' semifinals match between Mew2King and Unknown522, as well as the events that occurred afterward.

ROM 5 deviated from all other major tournaments of the year in that it used the Standard Dave's Stupid Rule, which states one cannot counterpick any stage won on, instead of the Modified DSR, which states one cannot counterpick the last stage won on. Some smashers at the tournament were not informed of the unusual rule and in the case of Mew2King caused controversy in matches. In the winners' semifinal match featuring M2K and Unknown522, the match sequence went as follows:

At this point, Mew2King intended to counterpick Final Destination, claiming that the Modified DSR was in effect. Unknown, though skeptical of the claim, agreed and lost the match on Final Destination. After the match, Unknown clarified the claim with the TO Alukard, who stated the standard DSR was in effect. Mew2King and Unknown were then asked to replay match 5. Unknown then won on Yoshi's Story.

There have been several points of controversy in this event. Many players believe that M2K lied to Unknown as to whether Standard or Modified DSR was in effect, and argue that M2K did indeed cheat to win the match, while other argue it was unintentional and that it was Unknown's fault for not clarifying the rules before playing the match. Alukard's decision to replay game 5 was also highly controversial, as the set was already over by the time he was available for clarification (another thing that the community does not understand how it happened), and many players feel that the initial results should have been used, saying that forcing replays can disrupt a player's mindset, as was the case with the final results. There have also been people who argue that Alukard should have made it clearer that the rule was different from all other major tournaments that year, and that players should pay more attention to a tournament's rulesets.

As a result of the replay and possibly its outcome, the rest of the tournament (winners' finals, losers' finals, and grand finals) were all sandbagged by Unknown and KirbyKaze, with KirbyKaze being asked to play out his set despite throwing game 1 and M2K being allowed to 3-0 Unknown in both grand final sets to take the tournament. M2K and Unknown also agreed to split their winnings in public before the grand final even began, creating further controversy.

In discussions following RoM 5 on Smash World Forums, M2K and Unknown both admitted that they were at some fault, with M2K explaining that he did not check the rules but that they were not articulated well enough before the tournament, but that the replay should not have happened as he and Unknown had already decided what would normally have been the outcome, and Unknown admitting that he should have played out his Grand Finals sets. However, when a third party in Cactuar claimed that M2K knew full well that Final Destination was illegal, and that he pestered Unknown to be able to choose Final Destination until he finally caved in and accepted, confusion ensued as people were met with two completely different stories of what happened. During the argument that followed, Alukard posted his argument into the thread that it was all M2K's fault and that he just pulled everyone into the controversy himself, and threatened to ban him from Revival of Melee 6- however, there were then people who argued against him claiming that he made a mistake himself in the bracket and forced Mew2King to move into a different set during Winner's Semifinals. They claimed that if he did not interfere with the bracket in the first place, none of this would have happened. With a myriad of different arguments presented to users on the forum, the entire argument is still something of a gray area, but the general consensus is that Alukard, M2K, and Unknown all made mistakes in organizing or playing out the tournament, and that the community should take this seriously to make sure these mistakes do not happen again in the future.

External links