Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
Online play

Tournament:Nintendo VS U.S. Fall Open 2021

Nintendo VS U.S. Fall Open 2021
Nintendo vs us fall open 2021.png
Dates October 15th-16th, 2021
October 29th-30th, 2021
Results
Super Smash Bros. Ultimate winners USA Colmar, USA Middy, USA Jake, USA MarkTheSDking (Grand Prize)
Staff
Organizer(s) Nintendo

The Nintendo VS U.S. Fall Open 2021 was an online Super Smash Bros. Ultimate tournament organized by Battlefy and officially sponsored and promoted by Nintendo. The tournament took place in two parts on different dates: October 15th-16th and October 29th-30th. The tournament was broken up into eight regions depending on players' state of residence. The tournament was split into a regional ledder round, a bracket round, and a final round. There were 16 prizes for each tournament - 8 Second Prizes, 4 First Prizes, and 4 Grand Prizes - for a total of 32 prizes.

ResultsEdit

Tournament 1Edit

Tournament Winner Character(s)
Regions 5-8   Colmar (W)  
  Emolord (L)  
Regions 1-4   Middy (W)  
  ToonFink (L)  

Tournament 2Edit

Tournament Winner Character(s)
Regions 5-8   Jake (W)  
  Xerxal (L)  
Regions 1-4   MarkTheSDking (W)  
  Avarice (L)  

GalleryEdit

ControversyEdit

Following the conclusion of the first tournament's first day, HugS[1] and The Crimson Blur[2] noted their disappointment towards the casters for taking up the casting position for the tournament; the disappointment stemmed from Nintendo's lack of support for the scene and the shutdown of tournaments such as The Big House Online. Their comments caused controversy, with players picking at HugS's statement that compared the situation to "crossing the picket line," as well as The Crimson Blur's alleged hypocrisy. Several users, including one of the casters, VikkiKitty, also defended the casters' decision, claiming that they were only doing their jobs as freelancers, and that they should not be prevented from doing so simply because the community was unhappy.[3] HugS has since released a statement where he apologized for his comments, specifically on "crossing the picket line," and noted how he has reconsidered his views on the situation.[4]

During game two of Toonfink Vs Aaron, the online server disconnected entirely and the Battle Arena was forced to shut down.[5] Many took this as an opportunity to complain about Ultimate's poor netcode, pointing out that Nintendo themselves are not immune to these major issues and how they planned to have a price increase for their online service despite not fixing said issues.

ReferencesEdit

External linksEdit