how you guys gonna get so mad at some dude who is like helplessly ignorant? weird ass crusade shit happening over there.
He's not helplessly ignorant. He's a trolling asshole.
how you guys gonna get so mad at some dude who is like helplessly ignorant? weird ass crusade shit happening over there.
how you guys gonna get so mad at some dude who is like helplessly ignorant? weird ass crusade shit happening over there.
I'm probably going to try and go right back on Friday as well and try to wrap up all my lowers back to back. I feel it will probably be a little rougher on me at first but drawing it out long term doing a bit every week has been draining me really badly.agreed!
Stay strong Q, you need to beat me down in Xrd.
stop being naive.
James Chen just threw out a random benchmark which was that a major should be able to fill a 256 man bracket for the most popular game present (so USF4). Of course take it with a grain of salt.
I feel like a major should have big numbers and big out of state presence. There is no benchmark for this obviously but it's pretty obvious that Summer Jam is not on the same level as Final Round.
Art of fighting had special bonus stages that told you inputs for special moves. Guilty Gear had some special moves shown during pre-match screens I think? Its a bit of a lost art these days.About move lists, I've always liked how Samurai Shodown... 2, I think, showed your special inputs during the special animation below the health bar.
i know people love james chen.. i think i hate him. he has the absolute worst opinions i think i have ever heard
i know people love james chen.. i think i hate him. he has the absolute worst opinions i think i have ever heard
so uh....how many USF4 tournaments have had 256+ entrants this year? lol
CEO 2014
EVO 2014
SCR 2014
Final Round 2014
Pretty much the 4 tournaments that most people agree to be "majors". These are the 4 I checked, there might be one or two more that broke the 256 mark.
Yeah, but only in arcade mode IIRC.. Guilty Gear had some special moves shown during pre-match screens I think?
Probably talking specifically about US tournaments here. Although those tournaments would definitely qualify as major too based on Chen's criteria.Japanese tournaments get 256+.
Japanese tournaments get 256+.
People should have just suggested the authentic arcade experience and trying to guess the inputs on their own.
Joniosan is on pretty much all the time.
Omex put out some good stuff
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLeqFbh3-uIIFOkbGGA1RVwWY3TXnwDpsz
I think Majors have two components, IMO.
1) attendance (targeted) demographics: Any tournament that's targeted specifically to as many people as it can, especially outside of their area, and has significant numbers of folks coming for it is a major. Tournaments focused on the people from that general area and has minor presence outside of their normal folks is a regional.
2) Game representation: There has to be solid representation for the big games that are currently played, particularly if it aligns with our biggest event currently, Evo. Having one game have huge numbers but every other game have super low to no entrants makes it really hard to call it a major considering the image we have of what a major event is.
I don't like using just raw numbers. it's not indicative of the event itself because even if you get 250 for USF4, what if every other game got like 5-10? That really means it's big or major USF4 tournament but it's not a big fighting game event unless USF4 is the only game that counts.
CEO 2014
EVO 2014
SCR 2014
Final Round 2014
Pretty much the 4 tournaments that most people agree to be "majors". These are the 4 I checked, there might be one or two more that broke the 256 mark.
I can guarantee that SCR and Final Round did not have 256 people for USF4.
I can guarantee that SCR and Final Round did not have 256 people for USF4.
http://capcomprotour.com/congratulations-to-ryan-hart-final-round-xvii-champion/
This link states FR had 300+ entrants.
SCR had like 170+ pre-registered players and was using a 256 man bracket. It was probably short of 256 bracket but the point James Chen was making that a major should be able to fill out a 256 bracket. So in that regard he would consider Socal a major.
Edit: NVM I just realized that USF4 wasn't even out for those two events. LMAO!
kind of silly to throw out a random arbitrary number as the benchmark when only one or two games hit that number most events anyway. if 256 man bracket is the case, there have been like, no anime majors lol. tekken hasnt had a major in a long ass time if that's thr case...
shouta has the right idea
Holy shit this guy's stream quality is BANANAS!! It's like I'm watching the actual game!
Japanese people are only human, man. They aren't all zen masters or anything.
To me, there are 7 majors, with EVO being in its own class.
EVO
CEO
UFGT
NCR
SCR
NEC
FR
I don't feel like 2 is important. Why can't we just say an event is a major for series X, but not Y? Smash majors have pretty much only been Smash for the longest time.I think Majors have two components, IMO.
1) attendance (targeted) demographics: Any tournament that's targeted specifically to as many people as it can, especially outside of their area, and has significant numbers of folks coming for it is a major. Tournaments focused on the people from that general area and has minor presence outside of their normal folks is a regional.
2) Game representation: There has to be solid representation for the big games that are currently played, particularly if it aligns with our biggest event currently, Evo. Having one game have huge numbers but every other game have super low to no entrants makes it really hard to call it a major considering the image we have of what a major event is.
I don't like using just raw numbers. it's not indicative of the event itself because even if you get 250 for USF4, what if every other game got like 5-10? That really means it's big or major USF4 tournament but it's not a big fighting game event unless USF4 is the only game that counts.
What about VXG?
Brah, you can find plenty examples of the same for North American, European, and South American guys doing the same after being frustrated by a video game. This is not something new or specific to Japanese game players.Yeah well I don't rage so much that i break my laptop in half after 4 straight losses in League of Legends.