Tournament:EVO 2019
EVO 2019 | |
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Dates | August 2nd-4th, 2019 |
Venue | Mandalay Bay Events Center |
Address/City | 3950 S Las Vegas Blvd Las Vegas, Nevada |
Attendance | 3,534 |
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Organizer(s) | Mr. Wizard, Bear, Ponder, inkblot, MarkMan |
Evolution 2019, or simply EVO 2019, was the 18th edition of the Evolution Championship Series, a fighting game tournament held annually in Las Vegas, Nevada. EVO 2019 took place on August 2nd to 4th, 2019, at the Mandalay Bay Events Center. It was announced on February 26th, by EVO's tournament director Joey "Mr. Wizard" Cuellar, that Super Smash Bros. Ultimate would make its debut as an official game on the EVO 2019 game lineup. While it was confirmed to replace Super Smash Bros. for Wii U if it released in time in 2018, this was the first EVO for Ultimate post-release. Notably, for the first time since EVO 2012, Super Smash Bros. Melee was not revealed to be in the lineup—although Melee was still present as a side event on August 3rd—making EVO 2019 the first one since 2014 to feature only one Smash game at EVO instead of two. Ultimate ran on version 3.1.0, rather than running on 4.0.0 with Hero, due to the update being released after the cutoff date for patches and being a few days before the tournament.
It is currently the largest in person Smash tournament of all time, with 3,534 entrants signed up for Ultimate.
Tournament summary[edit]
Super Smash Bros. Ultimate[edit]
With 3,534 entrants and 37 of the top 50 players at the time attending, including 26 of the top 30 (and 9 of the top 10), EVO 2019 remains the largest Ultimate event of all time and was the most stacked tournament by top player attendance until Kagaribi 13 in 2025. As such, it is often considered one of the most prestigious tournaments, if not the most, in Ultimate history.
Although round 1 generally went as expected (expect perhaps with unseeded player Toski defeating #96 seed Tyroy 2-1), a few notable upsets occurred beginning in round 2, with #278 seed SK92 defeating #22 seed MuteAce 2-1, #230 seed Ronnichu defeating #27 seed Mr. E 2-0, #202 seed YMCA defeating #55 seed ven, and unseeded player 0mart defeating #77 seed Shoe, sending each into the loser's bracket. Round 3 was where many early eliminations began: #66 seed K9 was defeated by #274 seed thirsty, #54 seed LingLing was defeated by #108 seed varun, #40 seed Fatality was defeated by #120 seed MastaMario, and Mr. E was defeated by #59 seed JW, eliminating each at 129th. Multiple top 32 seeds were eliminated at 65th: #26 seed T by #122 seed Eim, #24 seed Dark Wizzy by MastaMario, #23 seed NAKAT by #119 seed Dragoomba, MuteAce by #70 seed Kome, #18 seed MVD by #34 seed Stroder, and most notably #9 seed Cosmos, who lost to #73 seed Shogun and #57 seed Larry Lurr, for his worst placement of the year. Other notable early exits were #12 seed VoiD, who lost to #76 seed Rotsuku and #44 seed Maister for 49th; and #14 seed Salem, who lost to #19 seed Nietono and #35 seed ScAtt for 33rd. #7 seed Nairo was the sole top 8 seed who lost before top 32, being sent into loser's by #39 seed Mr. R.
This trend of upsets continued into top 32, where #3 seed Marss was notably defeated by Nietono and #11 seed Light for 13th. #21 seed Raito, who was on his strongest-ever Ultimate run, defeated both #5 seed Shuton and #4 seed Dabuz to make top 8 winner's side, both of whom were later eliminated by #10 seed zackray for 13th and Light for 9th, respectively. Finally, in arguably the most shocking upset of the tournament, #17 seed Kameme defeated #1 seed MkLeo 2-0, forcing the best player in the world into loser's early into bracket. This didn't deter him, however, as he tore through Maister, ScAtt, and Abadango to make top 8 loser's side.
Of the original top 8 seeds, only half of them remained: MkLeo through loser's; and #2 seed Tweek, #6 seed Samsora, and #8 seed Glutonny through winner's. Aside from Raito; zackray, Light, and #15 seed ProtoBanham represented the other loser's side players. Winner's side saw Tweek cruise through Samsora 2-0 before stopping a reverse 3-0 by Glutonny to slide into Grand Finals. On the other hand, MkLeo continued his loser's streak, dropping 0 total games against zackray, Raito, Samsora, and finally Glutonny to meet Tweek on the other side. Game 1 was a back-and-forth affair that ultimately came down to a last-stock, last-hit situation in Tweek's favor. Although Game 2 looked like it would be the same initially, Tweek gained heavy momentum after he took MkLeo's second stock, and quickly dispatched of his last to force match point. MkLeo finally struck back in game 3, securing at least another chance to keep fighting. However, it seemed like it wasn't meant to be, as Tweek came out swinging in game 4, taking 2 of Leo's stocks in under 2 minutes while still holding all of his own, poised to take the game and the tournament.
In what many consider one of the greatest comebacks in Ultimate history, MkLeo proceeded to take 2 of Tweek's stocks within 20 seconds of each other, suddenly forcing what seemed like a lost cause into a last stock scenario. The game once again came down to last-stock, last-hit for both players, but this time Leo found the winning move, reading Tweek's roll and completing the reverse 3-stock. After winning game 5 to force a reset, MkLeo won 3 straight games in True Finals to take the tournament.
With his victory, MkLeo cemented himself as not just the undisputed best player in the world, but someone who was nigh untouchable at the time. Leo would be once again ranked 1st on the Fall 2019 PGRU, and his ongoing streak of Grand Final appearances would continue until Smash Ultimate Summit 4 in 2022.
Official Game Lineup[edit]
Finals | Game | Entrants | Pot Size |
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Sunday | Super Smash Bros. Ultimate | 3,534 | $35,340 |
Sunday | Tekken 7 | 1,899 | $23,989 |
Sunday | Street Fighter V: Arcade Edition | 1,951 | $69,510 |
Sunday | BlazBlue: Cross Tag Battle | 646 | $6,460 |
Saturday | Mortal Kombat 11 | 1,576 | $30,670 |
Saturday | Samurai Shodown | 1,729 | $47,290 |
Saturday | Dragon Ball FighterZ | 1,200 | $12,000 |
Saturday | Under Night In-Birth Exe:Late[st] | 1,157 | $11,570 |
Friday | Soulcalibur VI | 746 | $7,460 |
Results[edit]
Super Smash Bros. Ultimate singles[edit]
(3,534 entrants)
Top 32 Bracket
Top 8 Bracket
Place | Name | Character(s) | Earnings[1] |
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1st | ![]() |
$21,204.00 | |
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$7,068.00 | |
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$3,534.00 | |
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$1,413.60 | |
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$706.80 | |
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$706.80 | |
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$353.40 | |
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$353.40 | |
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Side Events[edit]
Super Smash Bros. Melee singles[edit]
(111 entrants)
Top 4 Bracket
Place | Name | Character(s) | Earnings |
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Trivia[edit]
- MkLeo won the largest cash prize for an Ultimate tournament at $21,204 until it was surpassed by Tweek making $47,739.60 at Smash Ultimate Summit 3.
- MkLeo was congratulated by series director Masahiro Sakurai for his victory.[2] Sakurai thanked the participants for a good show, and watched some parts of the tournament, but missed the Grand Finals due to a meeting.
- Due to flight issues, LeoN was unable to attend the tournament, where he was seeded to eventually face MkLeo. In what was dubbed by some as the "Bowser curse", none of the Bowser players that had their matches shown on the official EVO Twitch stream won their sets.
- Raito is the only returning player from EVO 2018 that placed Top 8 in the singles tournaments for both Smash 4 and Ultimate.
- Coincidentally, this is also the second year in a row Dabuz placed just outside of Top 8 and got 9th for both games.
- As there was only one official EVO stream for the Ultimate tournament, players like Hungrybox and ZeRo went out of their way to provide the results of numerous off-stream sets via Twitter and Twitch, respectively. This led to praise from the community for their efforts.
- After Mr.R lost to ProtoBanham, he pointed out that Proto had been looking at his phone in the middle of the set and asked if there was a ruling on it (due to the possibility of mid-set coaching, though Proto was apparently looking up kill combos for Inkling). After asking Bear (who helped direct the tournament), Bear told him that there was no such ruling and that the set was legitimate. Although some accused him of being a sore loser, he later confirmed on Twitter that he had no intention of replaying the set and was surprised that no such measure was put in place beforehand.[3]
- Despite having kidney stones, which required him to miss Super Smash Con 2019 later on, ProtoBanham was able to place 5th at the tournament.
- With Mew2King and his Smash protégé Wizzrobe both placing 49th, Plup was the highest-placing player in Super Smash Bros. Ultimate singles that is otherwise known for being a professional Super Smash Bros. Melee player, placing 17th.
- This tournament marks the worst placement for Cosmos, with a placement of 65th.
- Viewership of the tournament peaked at over 279,000 concurrent viewers across all streams, making it not only the most viewed Super Smash Bros. tournament in history, but also the most viewed EVO game of all time.
- The VOD for Ultimate's Grand Finals has over three million views on YouTube. It is the most viewed Ultimate video out of all of VGBootCamp's channels. It is the first Ultimate tournament set to reach two million views on YouTube.
- On November 2018, Twitch streamer Ninja posted a now-infamous Tweet telling the Smash community that he had something planned for them.[4] During a poker game with Ludwig on May 1st, 2022, Ninja alleged that the Tweet was referencing his plans on donating $500,000 to the EVO 2019 prize pool, however he was unable to go through with it due to a lack of communication from Nintendo.[5]
- This is the last EVO tournament in the US to feature any Super Smash Bros. game, as Sony acquired EVO in 2021 after the 2020 Super Smash Bros. sexual misconduct allegations and one of the co-founders, Mr. Wizard, was fired.[6] This action resulted in not featuring games developed by Nintendo.
External links[edit]
- EVO's website
- EVO's twitter
- EVO's Tournament Director twitter
- start.gg page
- Melee Side Event Start.gg page
References[edit]
- ^ EVO 2019 (SSBU) payouts.
- ^ https://twitter.com/Sora_Sakurai/status/1158246845358850050
- ^ Mr.R confirms that Bear told him looking at one's phone in the middle of a set is allowed at EVO.
- ^ Ninja's Tweet.
- ^ Ninja's explanation to the "surprise".
- ^ Sony Interactive Entertainment LLC RTS (March 19, 2021). Sony Interactive Entertainment and New Esports Venture, RTS, Jointly Acquire the Evolution Championship Series (EVO). Sony Interactive Entertainment. Retrieved on November 11, 2024.
EVO | |
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World Championships | EVO World 2007 · EVO 2008 · EVO 2009 · EVO 2013 · EVO 2014 · EVO 2015 · EVO 2016 · EVO 2017 · EVO 2018 · EVO 2019 |
EVO 2007 circuit | EVO South · EVO East · EVO North · EVO West |
EVO Japan | EVO Japan 2018 · EVO Japan 2020 |