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Monday Morning Marth: Feb. 4

On Sunday, the undisputed world No. 1 Hungrybox won Genesis 6 over the rest of the nationally packed field. Notably, Axe made his first grand finals of a supermajor ever, defeating Kalamazhu, Rishi, Zain, Ginger, PewPewU, aMSa and Plup in a massive loser’s bracket run.

The rest of the three-day event was packed to the brim with upsets, particularly on day two, which featured results like Louisiana’s Magi besting Mango in Falco dittos, Trif clutching out a last-stock victory against Mew2King and several more.

For other events, Rik held off Morsecode762 in grand finals to win Indiana’s Midway Melee, and Professor Pro withstood a valiant effort from Setchi in Britain’s Quartered 12 to come out on top.

1. Top 8 From Top 8

2. Edwin Attends: Genesis 6

So as most of you guys know, I attend a fairly high amount of nationals and larger tournaments, at least in proportion to locals. For the sake of reading ease, I’ll try to chronologically organize everything about my time attending

Day one was a blast. I barely missed making it out of pools, but I was happy with most of my play and learned a lot from my matches. I did well against these two Sheiks whom I was worried about playing against, which made me very happy, given how much I hate playing against her. In terms of my losses, I blew an otherwise big comeback game one and threw away a big lead in game two to lose to a very respectable Sacramento Falco, while my gameplan against a Pikachu player, wasn’t quite where it needed to be. I couldn’t be too upset – I just lost to better players.

However, I felt extremely let down by my day two experience. In addition to the lack of friendlies stations, the ones that were available were cramped in between or adjacent to tournament matches going on. Sometimes they were so close to each other that certain televisions simply took up space to where no one could sit down. This isn’t even taking into account my issues with a lot of the arduino adapters, many of which I’m especially frustrated about because I have no frame of public reference to tell if any muscle memory differences I feel are just the placebo effect in action or legitimate. It also doesn’t open the can of worms regarding some of the technical problems with the adapters, which I witnessed not register certain controller ports at times for tournament sets.

As a spectator, I was happy to watch high-quality Melee, but I was still pretty annoyed that the most amount of games out of bracket I played came well into the late night hours, rather than earlier in the day, on setups that weren’t always functional. I doubt too many other smashers would agree, so for next supermajors and multi-day tournaments I attend, I’ll have to change my expectations for what I do in between bracket time and top 64.

Day three was slightly better, although I once again was annoyed that so many of the televisions were being shut down, and friendlies forcibly ended. From the standpoint of logistics, I get why this was the case, but as an attendee looking to play a lot of Melee, waking up early, heading to venue and seeing a field of CRTs isn’t exactly awe-inspiring when you’re told that you aren’t allowed to use them. At the same time though, I was also thinking about the Super Bowl, so I had something to distract me.

To recap my thoughts on each major: I think Evo is by far the worst for playing Melee and the best for overall out-of-game experience. Shine is by far the best for people trying to play as much Melee as possible, and The Big House is a middle ground that’s mostly spectator-friendly, as well as centered around the tournament series’ deep history.

Genesis, however, is in a tricky spot. Its brand recognition is strong, but its differentiator is in a weird spot. It sounds basic, but I really believe there was something magical about the Genesis series being inherently tied to Mango and Armada’s rivalry. Now that Armada isn’t in Melee any more, it’ll be interesting to see how Genesis finds its new identity. It can’t play the location card as convincingly as its contemporaries, and isn’t as historically groundbreaking as it used to be, at least in terms of Melee.

I’m happy and grateful for the event staff and their efforts this weekend. However, as far as whether you should attend Genesis yourself, frankly, it depends on proximity to NorCal. Between travel, hotel costs, food and transportation, I spent a little over $750 on the trip (I’m from Boston). I’m glad I came, but I don’t think I’d do it again, barring extreme circumstances.

3. Random other takeaways from the event

Also, I literally wrote this late last night, quickly finished this in in the airport and I have a flight to catch. Apologies in advance for any errors!

 

 

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