Smasher:Ken

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Revision as of 11:43, October 21, 2015 by 169.244.75.145 (talk)
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Ken "SephirothKen"
Sken.jpg
Character info
Melee main Marth
Other Melee characters Fox, Captain Falcon, Roy
Brawl main Marth
Smash 4 mains Roy, Ganondorf
Other Smash 4 character Marth
Project M main Marth
Team info
Crew(s) Team Liquid, Melee Hell
Former crews Socal Elite 4
Personal and other info
Real name Ken Hoang
Birth date (age 39)
Location Westminster, California United States
Miscellaneous info
Skill Super Smash Bros. Melee Top professional

Ken Hoang (born October 10, 1985), also referred to as just Ken, SephirothKen, or a variety of other nicknames, such as "The King of Smash" and "The Asian Sensation", is an American professional smasher of Vietnamese descent. Often cited to be the World Champion of Super Smash Bros. Melee during his prime, Ken is said to have earned well over $40,000 USD playing the game. His main character since his debut in Tournament Go 4 has been Marth, and he uses Fox as an alternate character. The two-time national champion of Major League Gaming, two-time winner of Tournament Go and winner of many other tournaments, Ken was officially ranked the best Super Smash Bros. Melee player in America during his heyday. He was also widely regarded as the best player in the world, having defeated reputable players from around the globe, including top Japanese players such as Captain Jack, Masashi, Aniki, Bombsoldier, and Korius in the summer of 2005. He is also Manacloud's younger brother. Ken is currently ranked 16th on the SoCal Melee Power Rankings.

Ken was considered the most consistent player during his prime, and had the most impressive tournament track record earning him the nickname "The King of Smash" within the community. Aside from his personal achievements, Ken is a member of El Chocolate Diablo, which was the top-ranking doubles team, and a member of the Socal Elite 4. Ken is also notable for innovating a highly influential combo named after him.

Biography

World Champion Ken (left, holding two trophies) with a check for $5000.

Ken started playing Super Smash Bros. when it was released for the Nintendo 64. He made his gamertag "sephirothken" after the main villain of Final Fantasy VII. He was naturally talented at the game and became fluent in the gameplay and style of Smash. However, he was never able to compete in major tournaments for the Nintendo 64 version of Super Smash Bros. due to the lack of a competitive scene. When Melee was released for the Gamecube, Ken initially did not enjoy it, but the game grew on him after a period of a few months. By the time he attended his first tournament, he had already built up an impressive reputation in his town as the best Smash player. This tournament, hosted at a local gaming store known as Game Square, employed completely different rules from today's standardized rules. It was a free-for-all tournament, and everybody else teamed up against Ken because he was considered the best. Despite the combined efforts of the other participants, however, Ken still ended up winning the tournament.

In 2002, a moderator on SmashBoards by the handle of Matt Deezie hosted the Tournament Go (TG series), which was one of the first lines of major tournaments. Up to that point, there had been three installments in the TG series, with each new incarnation being more popular than the last. Recipherus, a Sheik main, was the favorite to win the fourth installment that would come in early 2003. However, interests turned as Matt Deezie read posts by Ken, who boasted that he was unbeatable at Melee due to his tournament win at Game Square. Matt Deezie and Recipherus challenged Ken to a $200 money match, and while the two competitive smashers were more versed in advanced, technical aspects of the game, Ken was more adept in adaptation, and defeated the duo. After the money match, Ken learned of the Tournament Go series, and planned to travel to Northern California to claim his first major tournament win.

Ken later attended Tournament Go 4, where even with his lack of experience in any strong competitive scene, he managed to defeat players who had attended previous TGs and take first out of a record 89 players at that time. He also placed second in teams with his brother Manacloud, losing to TG1 and TG2 singles winners J.R. Castillo and Justin Junio.

Seven months later, in August 2003, Ken attended and won TG5. This was the first tournament where he teamed with Isai for doubles (otherwise known as "Malva00"), who was considered one of the best Melee players in the country in his prime. Their victory in the doubles tournament started a two-and-a-half year winning streak. They won every doubles tournament they entered until MLG Chicago 2006 in July, where they were defeated by Azen and Chillindude829 in the finals and received second place. However, they reclaimed their title later that year in August at MLG Orlando 2006 where they defeated Azen and Chillindude829 6-3 in the finals.

For the next two years, Ken continued to win nearly every competition he entered. The worst loss he ever garnered in his competitive career was in August 2004 at TG6 where he placed 9th out of approximately 128 competitors. After that, he did not place below 2nd until MLG Orlando 2006 in August where he placed 5th and then MLG New York Playoffs 2006 where he placed 7th, and in teams he got 3rd teaming with Isai making it his all-time low in singles and doubles at MLG events.

Ken is notable for having fame outside of the Smash games. In September 2006, Ken was nominated as one of five members of "The Dangerous Five" by Electronic Gaming Monthly; he was notable as being one of only two gamers on the list who did not specialise in the Halo games, alongside Michael Brandt, who played Tekken. Ken was referred to as "The Duper", due to his quick, smart, and aggressive playstyle. Additionally, Ken managed to land a spot as a contestant on the 17th season of Survivor.[1]; in the final standings, he won fifth place.

Ken briefly joined the tournament scene for Brawl, with respectable standings, including a second place finish at EVO 2008. EVO 2008, however, proved to be his last Brawl tournament; his AllisBrawl profile lists him as inactive, and in a Q&A session with ESPN, Ken stated that he needed "a big break from gaming", and that he needed to pursue his career in illustration. Ken, however, also suggested that there existed a potential for him in joining the Brawl tournament scene if it got picked up by the MLG again. Several years later in 2010 MLG did have Brawl on its Pro Circuit, however Ken did not participate.

After five years away from competitive Smash, Ken temporarily chose to rejoin the scene in the 2012 tournament of Kings of Cali. In his return to Melee, however, Ken underperformed in singles, getting a 33rd place finish. His doubles run, however, ended in a third place finish with Dr. Peepee, and he provided the deciding KO in the NorCal - Socal 8 on 8 battle against PewPewU; Ken was initially not supposed to appear in the battle for SoCal, but a six stock lead by his team caused team captain Mango to switch out Lucky for him.

Although still no longer as active in the Melee scene as before, Ken has made a handful of appearances since Kings of Cali; while unable to continue his previously dominant standings from the past, Ken continues to be seen in the top 64 of finalists in singles sets, along with solid doubles standings.

On March 18th, 2014, Team Liquid, an eSports team in the Netherlands famous for its StarCraft II and Dota 2 teams, opened a Melee team and signed Ken and KoreanDJ as its first members, with Smash Brothers director Samox producing Team Liquid's official announcement video.[2][3]

He was also invited to participate in the E3 2014-held Super Smash Bros. Invitational tournament to play Super Smash Bros. for Wii U. He used Marth in the tournament.

Ken in 2014 has made a resurgence in many tournaments, including EVO 2014, MLG Anaheim 2014, SSS Lock-In, SKTAR 3, CEO 2014 and Kings of Cali 4. In each, he has finished with decent placing, as well as holding set wins over the likes of MacD, Lucky, Westballz, DEHF, Bizzarro Flame, Fly Amanita and more, with close set losses and game wins against the likes of S2J, fellow top Marth mains The Moon and PewPewU, and even one of the world's best Armada at CEO. He has also regularly been attending Super Smash Sundays throughout the year, where he has been consistently placing top 8 or 9th place in singles and Top 8 in doubles. At EVO 2015, Ken unexpectedly placed 13th, marking his highest placement at a major tournament since Super Champ Combo in 2007.

Notable tournament placings

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Melee

Tournament Date 1v1 Placement 2v2 Placement Partner
Tournament Go 4 January 19th, 2003 1st 2nd Manacloud
SoCal Inland Empire SSB:M 1st
Tournament Go 5 August 2nd-3rd, 2003 1st 1st Isai
Game Over January 10th, 2004 1st 1st Isai
Zero Challenge 1 January 17th-18th, 2004 1st 1st Isai
MLG Chicago 2004 June 19th-20th, 2004 1st 1st Isai
MELEE-FC1 July 9th-10th, 2004 1st 1st Isai
Tournament Go 6 August 21st-22nd, 2004 9th 1st Isai
MLG Los Angeles 2004 September 25th-26th, 2004 1st 1st Isai
MLG New York 2004 October 24th, 2004 1st 1st Isai
MOAST 3 January 16th, 2005 2nd 1st Isai
MLG DC 2005 January 29th-30th, 2005 1st 1st Isai
MLG San Francisco 2005 February 26th-27th, 2005 1st 1st Isai
Gettin' Schooled 2 June 25th, 2005 1st 1st Isai
MELEE-FC3 July 10th-12th, 2005 1st 1st Isai
Jack Garden Tournament August 20th, 2005 1st
MLG Los Angeles 2005 October 14th-16th, 2005 2nd 1st Isai
MLG Atlanta 2005 November 25th-27th, 2005 1st 1st Isai
MLG Chicago 2005 December 16th-18th, 2005 1st 2nd ChuDat
MLG New York 2005 February 24th-26th, 2006 1st 1st Isai
Champ Combo: Yayuhzzz Edition March 25th, 2006 1st 1st Isai
Champ Combo: NorCal Edition April 8th, 2006 1st 1st Isai
MLG New York Opener 2006 April 21st-23rd, 2006 2nd 1st Isai
MLG Dallas 2006 May 19th-21st, 2006 1st 1st Isai
MLG Anaheim 2006 June 23rd-25th, 2006 1st 1st Isai
MLG Chicago 2006 July 21st-23rd, 2006 1st 2nd Isai
Zero Challenge 2 August 15th-17th, 2006 1st 7th Rob$
MLG Orlando 2006 August 25th-27th, 2006 5th 1st Isai
MLG New York Playoffs 2006 October 13th-15th, 2006 7th 3rd Isai
NCT2: The Big One October 28th, 2006 1st 1st Isai
MLG Las Vegas 2006 November 17th-19th, 2006 3rd 1st Isai
Super Smash Royale III April 28th, 2007 1st 1st Isai
Comrades 2 June 9th, 2007 1st 1st CAOTIC
Sushiman's Westminster Tournament July 14th, 2007 1st 1st Manacloud
Zero Challenge 3 July 20th-22nd, 2007 4th 2nd Bombsoldier
EVO World 2007 August 24th-26th, 2007 1st
Super Champ Combo September 29th-30th, 2007 7th 7th Isai
Kings of Cali November 10th, 2012 33rd 3rd Dr. PeePee
Kings of Cali 2 April 13th-14th, 2013 17th Hairynipples
EVO 2013 July 12th-14th, 2013 49th
Kings of Cali 3 December 14th-15th, 2013 25th 5th HugS
SoCal Regionals 2014 February 28th-March 2nd, 2014 9th 9th Santiago
Super Smash Sundays 5-18-2014 May 18th, 2014 9th 1st Fiction
Pat's House 2 May 24th-25th, 2014 17th 9th HugS
SKTAR 3 May 31st-June 1st, 2014 25th 9th KoreanDJ
SSS Lock-In June 14th-15th, 2014 9th 5th KoreanDJ
MLG Anaheim 2014 June 20th-22nd, 2014 21st 9th KoreanDJ
CEO 2014 June 27th-29th, 2014 33rd 7th KoreanDJ
Kings of Cali 4 July 5th-6th, 2014 13th 4th DEHF
EVO 2014 July 11th-13th, 2014 33rd
Super Smash Sundays 29 December 7th, 2014 9th 5th DEHF
Apex 2015 January 30th-February 1st, 2015 81st 25th KoreanDJ
I'm Not Yelling! April 11th-12th, 2015 25th 5th Santiago
MVG Sandstorm April 18th-19th, 2015 17th 9th OkamiBW
Press Start May 9th-10th, 2015 25th 7th Kira
CEO 2015 June 26th-28th, 2015 33rd 7th ChuDat
Mayhem July 2015 July 11th, 2015 5th 3rd Kira
EVO 2015 July 17th-19th, 2015 13th 17th Santiago
Paragon Los Angeles 2015 September 4-6, 2015 33rd
HTC Throwdown September 19th, 2015 17th

Project M

Tournament Date 1v1 Placement 2v2 Placement Partner
CEO 2014 June 27th-29th, 2014 25th 7th KoreanDJ

References

Trivia

External links