EVO 2013
EVOLogo2013.png
Dates July 12th-14th, 2013
Venue Paris Las Vegas Hotel & Casino
Address/City 3655 South Las Vegas Boulevard
Las Vegas, Nevada USA
Attendance 709 (for Melee)
Entry fees Registration:
Melee singles: $10
Pot size(s) Melee singles: $6,960
+ $1,000 pot bonus
Results
Super Smash Bros. Melee winners USA Mango
Staff
Organizer(s) Joey "Mr. Wizard" Cuellar
EVO Staff Joey "Mr. Wizard" Cuellar, Shoryuken (SRK)
James Chen (LevelUp Live)
VGBootCamp, CLASH Tournaments, Melee It On Me, Team OXY GimR, Chibo, Prog, D1, Scar, TheCrimsonBlur

Evolution 2013, or simply EVO 2013, was the 12th edition of the Evolution Championship Series, a fighting game tournament held annually in Las Vegas, Nevada, which took place on July 12th to 14th, 2013, at the Paris Las Vegas Hotel & Casino. It was the largest Smash tournament of 2013 and broke the record for the largest Smash tournament at the time, with 709 entrants for Super Smash Bros. Melee. EVO 2013 also had twice the entrants as the previous largest Melee tournament, Pound 4.

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 $95,000 by the final day of the donation drive.

The tournament is now known as a landmark event and a major turning point in Melee history. It marked the beginning of an explosive rise in the game's popularity, and ushered in an era that featured significantly increased turnout and more new tournaments hosted than ever before. EVO marked the beginning of the Platinum Age, in which Melee transitioned from a largely grassroots scene to a more professional "eSport."

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.

However, the tournament proceeded, and Melee joined such games as Super Street Fighter IV and Ultimate Marvel vs. Capcom 3 on the main stage. For commentary on the main stage, Prog was joined by famed Street Fighter commentator James Chen.

Tournament summaryEdit

EVO 2013 was Mang0's first supermajor victory since Pound 4 in 2010; after losing to Wobbles in winners' quarters, he went on an extended losers run, defeating SFAT, Ice, Dr. PeePee, Armada, and Hungrybox to make it to losers' side of grand finals; he then defeated Wobbles in two sets of grands to win the tournament. Wobbles also went on an impressive run in 2nd place, defeating Shroomed, Mang0, Dr. PeePee, and Hungrybox en route to grand finals. His performance at EVO has become one of the most well-known Cinderella runs in the game's history, having defeated three of the Five Gods using the Ice Climbers, considered below the standards of a top tier character. This was also the first supermajor since Viva La Smashtaclysm in 2007 where at least one of the players in grand finals was not a member of the Five Gods. Armada had initially announced his retirement from competing in early 2013, but decided to attend EVO regardless; he was defeated by Dr. PeePee and Mang0, finishing 4th, his lowest placing at a North American tournament since Pound 4.

The winners' finals set between Wobbles and Hungrybox became particularly infamous. Wobbles defeated Hungrybox 2-1, but after game 3, neither player knew that the set had ended, as both assumed that winners' finals was a best-of-five set. Livestream footage shows a EVO founder Tom Cannon walking up to inform both players that the set was over. Hungrybox later stated that the event had been advertised as having best-of-five sets for winners' and losers' finals, but the TOs changed the set count at the last minute.[1]

Mang0's set-winning up smash roll read vs. Hungrybox in losers' finals has become one of the most well-known moments in competitive Melee history.[2]

Official game lineupEdit

Finals Game Entrants Pot Size
Sunday Super Street Fighter IV: Arcade Edition 1,601 $16,370.0
Sunday Ultimate Marvel vs. Capcom 3 1,297 $13,020.0
Sunday Injustice: Gods Among Us 582 $5,820.00
Sunday Super Smash Bros. Melee 709 $7,952.00
Sunday The King of Fighters XIII 433 $4,270.00
Saturday Street Fighter X Tekken 573 $5,730.00
Friday Mortal Kombat (2011 video game) 233 $2,330.00
Friday Persona 4 Arena 400 $4,000.00
Friday Tekken Tag Tournament 2 355 $3,550.00

RulesetEdit

General rulesEdit

  • Items were set to none.
  • 4 stocks
  • 8 minute time limit
  • Wobbling was allowed. The freeze glitch and infinite stalling were banned however.
  • Matches that time out would 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 would be replayed in full. Sudden Death is not to be played, and will not count.
  • If a player accidentally paused while stealing a life in doubles, the opposing team could deem that stock forfeit. Pausing could be turned off to prevent this.
  • Stage Striking (in the order 1-2-1) was used to decide the stage on game 1.
  • In a Best of 3 match, a player could ban 1 stage upon winning a game. In a Best of 5 match however, there were no stage bans.
  • Before the next game, the winner of the previous game decided their stage ban and character. The loser would counterpick stages and characters accordingly.
  • A player could not counterpick the last stage they won on unless mutually agreed to by both players.

Stage listEdit

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

ResultsEdit

Super Smash Bros. Melee singlesEdit

(709 entrants)
Bracket
Grand Finals
Note that MacD and Eval took Jtb and LK007's places, respectively.

Place Name Character(s) Earnings
1st   Mango    $3,205
2nd   Wobbles   $1,731
3rd   Hungrybox   $796
4th   Armada   $550
5th   Dr. PeePee   $487
5th   Mew2King    $487
7th   Ice   $348
7th   Shroomed   $348
9th   Leffen  
9th   Silent Wolf  
9th   SFAT  
9th   Hax  
13th   Axe  
13th   S2J  
13th   Taj   
13th   Lucien  
17th   Fiction  
17th   Lord   
17th   Fly Amanita  
17th   Westballz   
17th   PewPewU  
17th   Fuzzyness  
17th   DaShizWiz  
17th   Zhu  
25th   Darkrain  
25th   Reno   
25th   Eddy Mexico  
25th   Tomber  
25th   Darrell  
25th   OkamiBW  
25th   aMSa  
25th   Nite  
33rd   Bladewise  
33rd   SwiftBass   
33rd   Jman  
33rd   I.B  
33rd   Cyrain  
33rd   MattDotZeb  
33rd   Redd  
33rd   Lovage  
33rd   Phish-It  
33rd   Dart!  
33rd   Bob$  
33rd   Jace  
33rd   SilentSpectre  
33rd   Mr. F   
33rd   Kounotori  
33rd   DEHF  
49th   Bacon  
49th   Azusa  
49th   Swedish Delight  
49th   Sung666   
49th   Flow   
49th   HugS  
49th   PikaChad  
49th   Tafokints  
49th   Hyprid  
49th   Lucky  
49th   SummonedFist  
49th   Vist  
49th   Milkman  
49th   Bimbo Mexico  
49th   Boback  
49th   Ken  
65th   L  
65th   J666  
65th   Narcissa  
65th   Bizzarro Flame  
65th   MacD  
65th   Vudujin  
65th   Yakal  
65th   Neon   
65th   Eval  
65th   G$   
65th   Kels  
65th   ZoSo  
65th   Aza  
79th   Baka4moe  
79th   Isis  
79th   Omgage  
79th   Stab  
79th   everlasting yayuhzz  
79th   Hectohertz  
79th   Icer  
79th   Crush   
79th   Pi  
79th   Choknater  
79th   Eggz  
79th   Android  
79th   StriCNYN3  
79th   Meta  

Super Smash Bros. Melee doubles (side event)Edit

(22 teams)
Grand Finals

Place Name Character(s) Name Character(s) Earnings
1st   Mew2King     Hungrybox  
2nd   Mango     Lucky  
3rd   PewPewU     SFAT  
4th   Armada     Android  
5th   Ice     Leffen  
5th   Hax     Jman  

TriviaEdit

  • Taylor Hicks, winner of the fifth season of American Idol, tied for 257th place for the Melee tournament.
  • 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 (with the exception of the incorrect result between Fiction and Darkrain).

External linksEdit

ReferencesEdit