Evo 2017: Difference between revisions
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===''Super Smash Bros. Melee''=== |
===''Super Smash Bros. Melee''=== |
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Although the finals took place on Saturday, the ''[[Super Smash Bros. Melee]]'' event had as much excitement as the previous years. One notable upset was where fan favorite, [[Leffen|William "Leffen" Hjelte]] was notably eliminated by Ryan "The Moon" Coker-Welch in a match to advance in Top 8 in Loser's Bracket. [[Adam Lindgren|Adam "Armada" Lindgren]] would face off against [[Joseph Marquez|Joseph "Mango" Marquez]] in the Winner's Finals with Armada sending Mango to Loser's Finals |
Although the finals took place on Saturday, the ''[[Super Smash Bros. Melee]]'' event had as much excitement as the previous years. One notable upset was where fan favorite, [[Leffen|William "Leffen" Hjelte]] was notably eliminated by Ryan "The Moon" Coker-Welch in a match to advance in Top 8 in Loser's Bracket. [[Adam Lindgren|Adam "Armada" Lindgren]] would face off against [[Joseph Marquez|Joseph "Mango" Marquez]] in the Winner's Finals with Armada sending Mango to Loser's Finals, 3-0. Mango then eliminated the defending champion, [[Juan Debiedma|Juan "Hungrybox" Debiedma]]. In Grand Finals, Armada won the first set 3-1 and took the title of EVO champion for the second time.<ref name="armada 2time">{{cite web|last1=Gach|first1=Ethan|title=Armada Wins Second Evo Melee Championship, Makes It Look Easy|url=http://compete.kotaku.com/armada-wins-second-evo-melee-championship-makes-it-loo-1796958916|website=[[Kotaku|Compete]]|accessdate=2017-07-16}}</ref><ref name="armada espn">{{cite web|last1=Khan|first1=Imad|title=Armada cements Melee legacy with second Evo title|url=http://www.espn.com/esports/story/_/id/20077379/evo-2017-armada-cements-melee-legacy-second-evo-title|website=[[ESPN]]|accessdate=2017-07-16}}</ref><ref name="armada dot">{{cite web|last1=Newell|first1=Adam|title=Armada is your Smash Smash Bros. Melee champion at Evo|url=https://dotesports.com/fgc/melee-evo-2017-armada-15911|website=[[Dot esports]]|accessdate=2017-07-16}}</ref> |
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===''The King of Fighters XIV''=== |
===''The King of Fighters XIV''=== |
Revision as of 14:42, 16 July 2017
Tournament information | |
---|---|
Location | Las Vegas, Nevada, United States |
Dates | July 14–16, 2017 |
Venue(s) | Mandalay Bay Events Center |
Final positions | |
Champions |
|
Tournament statistics | |
Attendance | ~10,000 |
The 2017 Evolution Championship Series (commonly referred to as Evo 2017 or EVO 2017) is a fighting game event held in Las Vegas on July 14–16. It is the twenty-first installment of the long-running Evolution Championship Series. The event offers tournaments for various video games, including Street Fighter V, Tekken 7, and Injustice 2. Over 10,000 people registered for the event with Tekken 7 receiving double the amount of players from the previous year.
Venue
Contrast to the previous year's event which took place in two venues, Evo 2017 takes place in the Mandalay Bay Events Center for all three days of the event.[1]
Games
The nine games played at Evo 2017 were announced in January 2017 during a special announcement stream on Twitch.tv, with event co-founder Joey Cuellar discussing the inclusion of each game. The games set to be contested consisted of new releases, FGC contemporaries, and updated releases. New additions included BlazBlue: Central Fiction, The King of Fighters XIV, and Injustice 2 while Guilty Gear Xrd REV 2 would replace Guilty Gear Xrd -REVELATOR-. [2][3] A major change among the Smash community is that Super Smash Bros. Melee's finals would be moved to the prime time spot on Saturday, contrast to its Sunday spot in the previous years.[4] A ninth game, a Player's Choice title, was later won by Ultimate Marvel vs. Capcom 3, after having donated the most money for Make-A-Wish International via Generosity.com.[5]
The nine games competed at Evo 2017 were:[2]
- Street Fighter V
- Guilty Gear Xrd REV 2
- Super Smash Bros. for Wii U
- Super Smash Bros. Melee
- Injustice 2
- BlazBlue: Central Fiction
- Tekken 7
- The King of Fighters XIV
- Ultimate Marvel vs. Capcom 3
In an interview with PVP Live's Amanda Stevens, veteran Super Street Fighter II Turbo player and commentator, James Chen had mixed opinions regarding the lineup praising Guilty Gear and BlazBlue's simultaneous inclusion while criticizing the Player's Choice game.[6] Although Pokkén Tournament lost the Make-A-Wish Foundation poll, in recognition of the Pokkén scenes passion for their game as shown by being the second most funded fighting game; Joey Cuellar offered $10,000 for pot bonuses towards various tournaments surrounding the game.[7]
Side events
As with the previous two years, the AnimEVO series of side tournaments, which is dedicated to airdasher fighting games will be at the event with more than sixteen fighting games to compete in including Catherine, Guilty Gear XX Accent Core Plus R, Under Night In-Birth EXE: Late as well as former EVO titles Persona 4 Arena Ultimax and Pokkén Tournament.[8][9] Other side events for games like Super Street Fighter II Turbo[9] and the upcoming Dragon Ball FighterZ have also been confirmed.[10]
Participants
The Evolution Championship Series has historically been the largest fighting game tournament in the world, allowing free registration for anyone who wants to compete. Registration for the event closed on July 1, which Joey "Mr. Wizard" Cuellar had announced the final registration numbers. The three largest games from last year: Street Fighter V, Super Smash Bros. for Wii U, and Super Smash Bros. Melee have all seen decreases in numbers with the games going from 5107 to 2622, 2662 to 1515, and 2372 to 1435 respectively.[11][12] In contrast, Tekken 7 doubled in entrant numbers receiving over 1,200 entrants which is commonly associated with the release of the title's console version. [13]
Evo 2017 has received over 10,000 attendees in competition.[12]
Broadcasting
It was announced that ESPN2 would once again broadcast the finals of the Street Fighter V tournament on July 16 with Kevin Lopes stating "This final will provide no shortage of compelling competition, and we look forward to delivering this event to fans.".[14] The Super Smash Bros. for Wii U finals in addition to the aformentioned Street Fighter V finals will also be broadcast on Disney XD during the weekend.[15][16]
As every year, the entire tournament is streamed through the Twitch.tv streaming service. The tournament is broadcast across nine different streams: six Evo-run streams provide coverage of all games throughout the weekend, while Capcom runs its own stream that features additional coverage of Street Fighter V on Friday and Saturday, Namco provides a stream with additional coverage of Tekken 7 on Friday, while NetherRealm Studios provides a stream with additional coverage of Injustice 2.[17][9]
Reveals
On the first day of the event, Capcom revealed three nostalgic costumes (one for Alex, Ibuki, and Juri) and Ryu's classic Street Fighter II stage, Suzaku Castle.[18] They additionally announced a new stage called Ring of Pride as well as a new costume for Guile designed by Capcom Cup 2016 champion, Du "NuckleDu" Dang.[19]
Tournament summary
Super Smash Bros. Melee
Although the finals took place on Saturday, the Super Smash Bros. Melee event had as much excitement as the previous years. One notable upset was where fan favorite, William "Leffen" Hjelte was notably eliminated by Ryan "The Moon" Coker-Welch in a match to advance in Top 8 in Loser's Bracket. Adam "Armada" Lindgren would face off against Joseph "Mango" Marquez in the Winner's Finals with Armada sending Mango to Loser's Finals, 3-0. Mango then eliminated the defending champion, Juan "Hungrybox" Debiedma. In Grand Finals, Armada won the first set 3-1 and took the title of EVO champion for the second time.[20][21][22]
The King of Fighters XIV
As with the previous years that the King of Fighters franchise was represented, which was with the thirteenth installment; the Evo 2017 King of Fighters XIV tournament had global talent represented in its Top 8 with six countries represented. The finals saw some upsets as the Evo 2013 champion and KOF XIV World Champion, Reynald Tacsuan and Murakami "M'" Masanobu respectively, were notably eliminated by Chia-Chen "ZJZ" Tseng and Ruber "Pako" Partida respectively. Ultimately, Taiwanese player and Evo 2014 3rd placer Chia-Hung Lin "E.T." Lin would become the champion after defeating the Evo 2014 champion, Zhuojun "Xiao Hai" Zeng of China with a 3-2 finish, having earned 60% of the $14,000 pot bonus.[23][24] His victory was attributed to a surprise character pick in which Goro Daimon was used.[25]
Prize pool
The Street Fighter V event has received a $50,000 pot bonus as part of the 2017 Capcom Pro Tour Season.[1] The King of Fighters XIV received a $14,000 bonus pot courtesy of SNK and Atlus.[26] Injustice 2 received a pot bonus of $50,000 as part of the Injustice 2 Pro Series by ESL Gaming.[27] Arc System Works and Aksys Games provided a $10,000 pot bonus each for Guilty Gear Xrd REV 2 and BlazBlue: Central Fiction.[28]
Due to being the most donated fighting game for the Make-A-Wish Foundation crowdfunding, Ultimate Marvel vs. Capcom 3 received a $10,000 pot bonus.[29]
Controversy
In a match between Juan "Hungrybox" Debiedma and Zac "SFAT" Cordoni in Winner's Quarter-Finals, both players were issued a yellow card after Debiedma called his coach, Luis “Captain Crunch” Rosias over for advice; Gordon "G$" Connell mocked Debiedma by miming a coaching session with Cordoni, but this was somehow mistaken as an actual interaction between the two players. As both players were believed to have violated the "No Coaching After Pools" rule, lead EVO tournament organizer Joey "Mr. Wizard" Cuellar let the match stand.[30][21]
Results
Place | Player | Alias | Character(s) | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1st | Adam Lindgren | [A]|Armada | Peach | |
2nd | Joseph Marquez | C9|Mango | Fox, Falco | |
3rd | Juan Debiedma | Liquid|Hungrybox | Jigglypuff | |
4th | Jason Zimmerman | FOX.MVG|Mew2King | Marth, Fox, Sheik, Peach | |
5th | Joey Aldama | Lucky | Fox | |
5th | Justin McGrath | PG|Plup | Sheik, Fox | |
7th | Ryan Coker-Welch | MSF|The Moon | Marth | |
7th | Zac Cordoni | CLG|SFAT | Fox |
Place | Player | Alias | Character(s) | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1st | Ryan Walker | Noble|Dragon | Aquaman, Poison Ivy | |
2nd | Tim Commandeur | cR|HoneyBee | Flash, Aquaman | |
3rd | Jivan Karapetian | FOX|Theo | Superman | |
4th | Andrew Fontanez | Noble|Semiij | Catwoman | |
5th | Dominique McLean | FOX|SonicFox | Red Hood, Black Adam | |
5th | Alexandre Dubé-Bilodeau | PG|Hayatei | Robin, Batman | |
7th | Sayed Hashim Ahmed | NASR|Tekken Master | Atrocitus, Brainiac | |
7th | Daris Daniel | T7G|DR Gross | Green Lantern, Black Adam |
Place | Player | Alias | Character(s) | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1st | Omito Hashimoto | KSB|Omito | Johnny | |
2nd | /r/Kappa|T5M7 | Leo | ||
3rd | Tezuka Kazuyoshi | Samitto | Chipp | |
4th | Nage | Faust | ||
5th | Ryota Inoue | GGP|Kazunoko | Raven | |
5th | Kazumitsu Ippongi | PurePure | Jack-O' | |
7th | Hikaru Sato | 310 | Venom | |
7th | Fukuda Norihiro | Teresa | Jam |
Place | Player | Alias | Character(s) | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1st | Chia-Hung Lin | HuomaoTV|E.T. | Leona/Daimon/Benimaru, Clark/Benimaru/Daimon, Billy/Leona/Benimaru, Meitenkun/Benimaru/Leona | |
2nd | Zhuojun Zeng | DouyuTV|Xiao Hai | Kula/Benimaru/Iori, Robert/Kula/Iori | |
3rd | Luis Martinez | KCO|Luis Cha | Andy/Mai/Muimui | |
4th | Chia-Chen Tseng | HuomaoTV|ZJZ | Benimaru/Mature/Athena, Meitenkun/Yuri/Mature, Yuri/Mature/Leona, Athena/Yuri/Mature | |
5th | Waqas Ali | GCCM|WhiteAshX | Nakoruru/Yuri/Athena, Mian/Yuri/Athena | |
5th | Ruber Partida | TC|Pako | Meitenkun/Luong/Muimui, Meitenkun/Luong/Mai | |
7th | Reynald Tacsuan | AS|Reynald | Gang-il/Geese/Meitenkun, Mian/Benimaru/Robert | |
7th | Murakami Masanobu | Sanwa|M' | Kula/Benimaru/Iori |
References
- ^ a b Walker, Ian. "What To Watch For This Weekend At Evo 2017, The World's Largest Fighting Game Tournament". Compete. Retrieved 2017-07-14.
- ^ a b Hussain, Tamoor. "Evo 2017 Fighting Game Tournament Lineup Revealed". GameSpot. Retrieved 2017-07-14.
- ^ Porter, Matt. "EVO 2017 GAME LINE-UP ANNOUNCED". IGN. Retrieved 2017-07-14.
- ^ Kwilinski, Darin. "Evo 2017 lineup announced, Melee missing from Sunday finals". ESPN. Retrieved 2017-07-14.
- ^ Devore, Jordan. "Ultimate Marvel vs. Capcom 3 takes the EVO 2017 fan vote". Destructoid. Retrieved 2017-07-14.
- ^ Stevens, Amanda. "James Chen: "Having to make a decision to come down with eight games is a lose/lose situation"". PVP Live. Retrieved 2017-07-14.
- ^ Keefer, John. "Marvel vs. Capcom 3 Wins Donation War for 9th EVO 2017 Spot". Shacknews. Retrieved 2017-07-14.
- ^ Walker, Ian. "AnimEvo Is A Great Showcase For The Games That Don't Make It Into Evo". Compete. Retrieved 2017-07-14.
- ^ a b c Jurek, Steve. "Viewer's guide to watching Evo 2017 on Twitch". Dot esports. Retrieved 2017-07-14.
- ^ Sato. "Watch Dragon Ball FighterZ' Exhibition Tournaments At Evo 2017 Today And Tomorrow". Siliconera. Retrieved 2017-07-14.
- ^ Lawson, Aurich (2016-07-15). "How to watch the world's biggest fighting game tournament this weekend". Ars Technica.
- ^ a b Newell, Adam. "Street Fighter V, Smash 4, and Smash Melee have seen huge drops in EVO registration". Dot esports. Retrieved 2017-07-14.
- ^ Mejia, Ozzie. "EVO 2017 Preview: The 5 Storylines To Watch". Shacknews. Retrieved 2017-07-14.
- ^ ESPN esports Staff. "ESPN2 to broadcast Street Fighter V finals at Evo". ESPN. Retrieved 2017-07-14.
- ^ Casey. "Disney XD Will Be Airing The Super Smash Bros. Wii U Finals From EVO 2017". Siliconera. Retrieved 2017-07-14.
- ^ Beck, Kellen. "Disney is bringing esports to TV this weekend". Mashable. Retrieved 2017-07-14.
- ^ McWhertor, Michael. "Watch Evo 2017 live this weekend". Polygon. Retrieved 2017-07-14.
- ^ Newhouse, Alex. "Street Fighter 5 Receiving Three More Retro Costumes And A Classic Stage". GameSpot. Retrieved 2017-07-16.
- ^ Jones, Elton. "Street Fighter 5: Nostalgic Costumes, Classic Ryu Stage & More DLC Releasing Soon". Heavy.com. Retrieved 2017-07-16.
- ^ Gach, Ethan. "Armada Wins Second Evo Melee Championship, Makes It Look Easy". Compete. Retrieved 2017-07-16.
- ^ a b Khan, Imad. "Armada cements Melee legacy with second Evo title". ESPN. Retrieved 2017-07-16.
- ^ Newell, Adam. "Armada is your Smash Smash Bros. Melee champion at Evo". Dot esports. Retrieved 2017-07-16.
- ^ Jurek, Steve. "E.T. wins King of Fighters XIV title at Evo 2017". Dot esports. Retrieved 2017-07-15.
- ^ George, Daniel. "E.T. wins the Evo 2017 King of Fighters XIV Grand Finals". FanSided. Retrieved 2017-07-15.
- ^ Walker, Ian. "Surprise Character Pick Wins Evo 2017's King Of Fighters XIV Tournament". Compete. Retrieved 2017-07-15.
- ^ Jones, Elton. "Evo 2017: 5 Fast Facts You Need to Know". Heavy.com. Retrieved 2017-07-14.
- ^ "Evo 2017 is part of the Injustice 2 Pro Series! Earn points and compete for $50,000!". Retrieved 2017-07-14.
- ^ X. "Aksys Games and Arc System Works partner up for Evolution Championship Series 2017". Aksys Games. Retrieved 2017-07-14.
- ^ Valdez, Nick. "EVO 2017 Championship lineup revealed". Destructoid. Retrieved 2017-07-14.
- ^ Van Allen, Eric. "Yellow Card Ruling On Melee Coaching Stirs Controversy". Compete. Retrieved 2017-07-16.