Post your reflections on EVO 2012!

Post whatever your two cents were from evo, be it your first or 5th time there. Memories, funny stories, matches, or community, what did you love or hate about Evo this year?

Setup: This was my first one, and I gotta say I was really impressed with the fact they had headphones at every station, definitely a great option for players, and goes the extra mile.

However, I was EXTREMELY disappointed at the lack of casual setups. Biggest Evo ever, and there’s TWO SSF4 stations? Everyone said come to Evo so you can play people from all over the world and get better. I just didn’t know it would require a 40 minute wait in between games.

Also, I think an easy solution to the blocked isle situation in the future would be to put to mark off the floor with tape to label where people can sit and where they need to be cleared.

My other beef: they need to find an affordable food option. I understand the hotel wants to make money, but in no way is it cool to charge $8 for chicken fingers. They are already making a ton of $$$ off of us, and if food had been more affordable (or at least worth what they were charging), they probably would have sold MORE food and made more $$$. Instead I stocked up on burrito bowls from chipotle.

Matches: Goes without saying, Marvel was HYPE. SO much clutch play, so many epic comebacks and stuff coming down to the wire. I gotta say the Chris G hate is unwarranted, at least in his top 8 performances the Morrigan traps weren’t much of a factor.

Grand finals = F champ kills everyone but sentinel, and cue guile’s theme amazing comeback. Seriously best sentinel in the world, but damn that dorm play was top tier.

SF4 wasn’t all that hype, but was freaking amazing because Gamerbee and Infiltration straight BODIED everyone. Seriously, Gamerbee pretty much showed he needs a stick with one button (HK), he got so much damage with stand HK, meaty neutral jump HK.

Infiltration made everyone look like amateurs. Focusing fireballs dash forward, and the demons, he made everyone look like they didn’t even come to play.

Final thought: I was extremely pleased to see so many new characters and players in top 8s! From Caps, Modoks, Sakuras, & Adon’s, I think it shows these games have a lot more life in them and depth to them.

Dope weekend, gonna start practicing for next year…

My First trip to EVO, thoughts and reflections (Wall of Text, TLDR at bottom)


Well I finally did it, I made my first trip out to Las Vegas to see the pinnacle of fighting game tournaments, Evolution. Now that I’ve gotten back home I just wanted to give my thoughts and experiences on the whole thing, hopefully for future improvements and for people interested in going. This won’t be for everyone, some people will dismiss it because I didn’t compete (I went with my wife and we did more of a Las Vegas vacation that also included going to Evo finals on Sunday). I did stop by the room both Friday and Saturday some, checked out some booths, saw some of my friends from the Midwest, watched some randoms in pool play for a while. As I said, this is just MY experience, so I can’t speak for everyone by any means.

Timing of finals day: Let me get my biggest complaint out of the way. The timing was poor for EVO. The FGC has a reputation for running late (except for UFGT which has a reputation for running early), but for some reason I honestly expected that this was the year that we would change that. I thought we were getting main stream enough that we should know how important timing is. I know it’s hard to plan when you don’t know if finals will get reset, or if every game will go 3-2 or 2-0, but we need to back up plans. The people who run the Superbowl don’t know exactly how long the game might take, but they have plans on what to do if it’s longer. By the start of AE, we were running 2 hours behind schedule. You can see in the number of viewers for AE that EVO ran too late, it ended at 11:30 P.M. pacific time, that’s 2:30 A.M. on the east coast. People have work and school and EVO has to finish before midnight east coast Sunday night to ever get the viewers it needs. This would also help U.K viewers to see it in the morning before they leave for work. The fact that AE only got 80K viewers proves this point (along with a stream shutdown), and ultimately it hurts the FGC because I honestly believe if we were on schedule we would have had 100K viewers, adding more money from advertising.

We were supposed to have an hour long break in between marvel and AE for awards, but when I went to go get food right after Marvel (something I waited very late for because it was 2 hours behind schedule), I saw on my smart phone that AE was already starting and had to rush through my dinner. On the other hand, nowhere on the schedule did it mention that the gap between KOF and marvel would be over an hour long. A lot of people will point the finger at KOF and how long those matches take, but KOF was scheduled to take longer as well. Personally I have a few thoughts about how we could have done better.

First, button checks are getting out of control. I understand we need to do them, but when people are playing a whole round to check their buttons it is taking too long. Check if your buttons work, that’s it. I realize that many players spend this time preparing their minds for what’s coming up and getting comfortable, but this is valuable time and ultimately it ended up delaying the whole tournament. Why did we get away from having the two monitor set up where the next match can button check while the current game is being played? I’m just curious because I feel like we were moving backwards. Going along with this, people are taking huge breaks in between games to compose themselves. I don’t know if I have a problem with this as much as button checks, but it definitely delays things when you have to pick the same characters again. Not sure how to regulate it, but there was definitely a large portion of time spent on these activities (maybe 45 mins-1 hour total).

Second, we need videos, games, and promotions to start much quicker. I have the utmost respect for the people that put on streams, I know there is a lot of stuff to manage and get ready, but down time pushed us back and back. There was no reason for the 10 minute gap between videos. I wanted to enjoy Filthie Rich’s TTT2 presentation, but with how late we were running people were just pissed. At another time, or if we were on schedule, it would have been awesome. It’s the same with the CC video. It was a great intro for what we were about to watch, but there was too much time in between videos getting ready and started. You literally heard the whole audience groan once they realized they were about to talk about MVC3 after they had talked about AE.
Ultimately though, it’s up to the tournament organizers to find a way to finish on time. It doesn’t affect me a ton, but they are the ones losing money and viewers by running so late. I was honestly shocked at first that MVC3 reached 97K viewers, and AE reached 80K only. I have to believe if we were on time we would have gotten more viewership.

**The extras: **Walking around EVO was great. They had tons of booths and ton’s of set ups. The guys at brokentier did some great things with having pros that you could play against and streaming some of their exhibition matches. Lots of cool shirts for sale. Some Indy games you could play (I didn’t play any but heard some good things about some). MarkMan/MadCatz having big sales and free gear. Team Tekken bringing TTT2 was great and the game looks really solid. The Guidebook App, which had some useful information, like if you wanted to see a Pro’s pool play you could find when their pool started and at what station. I will say that I never saw any live updates, but I only checked that area once Friday morning, don’t know if it got updated. Most of all, a big thank you to Glenn from GetYourTournament. This guy had all of the updates and info I needed when I was out and about Friday and Saturday and couldn’t watch what was going on, I was always informed about what was happening.

The community: The community is great, everyone knows that and talks about it. Most people are very nice and helpful. So I don’t know what I was expecting, but it wasn’t exactly what I thought it would be. For the most part I’m an online warrior. When I was in college I had a group of friends I played with, I go to some majors/minors in the Indiana area, but really these are the only people I actually “know”. I’m married, work full time, and live in a small town outside of Indianapolis where it would take me 1.5 hours to play with anyone I know; so for the most part when I play, I play online. I can recognize any big name in the scene, but ultimately they don’t know me. That’s fine, when I go to a basketball game I don’t plan on talking to Lebron James, but it just makes for a weird experience because the community is smaller. With the FGC, we’re small enough to be personal, but large enough to not be. Does that make sense? I can tell a pro how awesome their play style is and how I appreciate what they do for the scene, but at the end they don’t know me and won’t remember, and I don’t expect them too. When you hear the pros talk they’re always saying, “I love Evo, all of my friends I get to see once a year are here”. What they mean is, they get to hang out with other pro’s that live on the opposite coasts or are from other countries. But when you’re a nobody like me (a 2-2 player), there’s not really anyone I’m planning on seeing or hanging out with. I said hi to some people, sat with some of my college friends some during finals day, but most of the time I was sitting by myself in the crowd with people that didn’t know me and I didn’t know them about 150 feet away from the stage (sounds depressing right?). When something huge happened a few of us stood up and cheered, but most of the back of the crowd just sat there and clapped some. That’s the thing; you never see the back of the room on the stream. You see all of the pros and their friends near the front and you don’t see the randoms that sit in the back by themselves. It’s just a weird experience. I know I’m making myself sound like a loser, but I just want to give some people the reality (or at least my reality). You don’t go to Evo and everyone there is as hype as you, not everybody wants to be your friend, and most of the time you might meet a few people there that you keep in contact with but most people you will never see again. I feel like I’m speaking to a large percentage of the audience of people that attended Evo (everyone except the big name players and veterans of the scene). There isn’t a solution to this problem other than for me to get out and meet more people, go to more majors, write more on the forums so people recognize my name, I’m just trying to explain that it’s not like you go to Evo and all of a sudden everyone knows you and you make a ton of friends and you’re part of the community like people make it sound. I know I sound like I’m QQing that I didn’t become Mike Ross’ best friend this weekend, but that’s really not what I’m trying to say; I’m saying the whole experience wasn’t as close knit as I was hoping. While the front of the audience was jam packed and enjoying the hype, my seat was at the back of the room and most of the people there were watching the games with half interest/understanding. When Chris G raw tagged out Morrigan and his doom got blown up I was going insane jumping up and down, the guy next to me just kept sitting and clapped some.

*Side note: Why do they not give commentary to the audience in attendance. Is it for echo reasons? I actually watched most of the SCV top 8 on my smartphone so I could hear the commentary and actually enjoy/learn/understand what was going on since I don’t know that games as well but always enjoy learning more. I always feel like commentary makes events more hype, and as a stream monster I’m used to hearing yipes go crazy when Jean gets popped. I’m sure it has something to do with audio sounding weird, but I think some Esports events have commentary that the audience can hear? Maybe I’m mistaken?

Most hype moment: Mad KOF’s Duo Lon dominating losers bracket and BALA having no answer for it. He made this character look unstoppable and he did whatever he wanted to (rushdown or keepaway). While the whole ballroom was cheering for BALA, you have to give it up for Mad KOF and his composure. King of Fighters had around 75,000 viewers on stream and 900 competitors which meant the game was finally getting the recognition it deserved.

Notable mention: All of MVC3 top 8. There were some great comebacks, some huge blunders, and some amazing set ups. It was everything you wanted it to be, big names, big combos, big attitudes, and even a Mexican MODOK. Watching Infrit’s Sentinel was so hype, and F Champ redeeming himself and dropping Phoenix to show he’s not just a one horse pony was amazing. Pulling off those Doom combos in a high pressure situation, sick!

**Least hype moment: **SFXT duh! Did you see how boring that game was! Seriously though, it was bad. There were only two interesting moments, the two person combo Tokido’s team did, and Mike Ross and Combofiend getting double perfected with Mike never even getting to play and laughing as they got embarrassed.

Notable mention: SSF4: AE v.2012 top 8. I know Infiltration was clearly the top talent in this group, but it literally felt like every match went 2-0. Yes there were 1 or 2 come from behind victories, but AE is my favorite game and this year it was just not interesting. You also definitely felt how people were too tired near the end of the tournament and how AE just got rushed through, and it felt rushed. Hey, looks it’s Poongko… and there he goes I guess? I’m a balrog player and PR is one of my idols, but it was just not interesting at all watching him get destroyed by Infiltration. There was so little excitement my friends started making bets on if the game clock would be odd or even when the match ended, or who would get the first hit. There was just no excitement for AE which was sad because we had so many characters and so many countries represented.

TL,DR: Did I enjoy EVO, absolutely. Will I return for next year, probably not. I don’t really feel like it was anything that special for me personally. I didn’t feel like EVO was better than some of the other majors I’ve been to, it just cost me a lot more money. I actually enjoy meeting people at local tournaments that you might see again. I don’t enjoy being cramped next to people, but I do enjoy how all of the action is near me at smaller venues. As an example, when I went to season’s beatings 2 years ago and saw Marn beat Daigo I was 15 feet away and actually gave him a high five as he walked away. When top 8 of AE was going on, I was 150 feet (maybe more?) away in the back of the room, couldn’t see a single player IRL, and sitting with a bunch of people I don’t know and will never see again. The extras were great though, you could tell a lot of work went into planning this, and the tournament was covered very well through social media (THANK YOU Glenn from GYT and thanks to everyone that helped stream).

KOF stole EVO, sprites>2.5D, needed moar Bala hype even in games he wasn’t playing

AE was dissapointing especially considering that it had a chance to show how balanced it was with one of the most diverse seelction of characters reaching top 16 in years.

I really enjoyed KOF and Marvel more than I thought I would. All I know is I really want to go next year!!!

KoF really did steal the show for me. First time watching all of Evo that I could during the weekend and I was expecting AE to be extremely hype after watching clips of last year’s fight. Even Diago getting eliminated didn’t feel amazing cause he got completely crushed.

i dont play kof buy kof was by far the best top 8 to watch.

sf4 was not as hype as i taught it would be .

i will buy kof if i find it cheap somewhere

Chris G vs F Champ was the match of the night.

KoF got a ton of views, but I have to believe that a lot of it was from people like me. People who showed up on the stream at the scheduled time for Marvel to start only to be just in time for Losers and Grand Finals for KoF

KOF XIII > Every other Grand Final.
The best show of skill and smart play was displayed in KOF. Kinda bummed there were shirt monsters that didn’t care for KOF, but hopefully these people gain some interest in the game. It isn’t hard at all to play, you just gotta buckle yourself down when playing. Kind of sad that B.A.L.A didn’t win, but hey shit happens. The dude did not want Mad to completely take the set and he just wouldn’t let Mad take it ALL in one set. Amazing play by all who competed!

Marvel was pretty good despite me not able to enjoy the game no matter how many times I come into contact with it.
F Champ really wanted this and he got it. The dude sure has a loud mouth, but he won and he’s at the top. I’m sure he’s well aware he’s a massive target right now until EVO '13.
Marvel really is an international game now. A Mexican in top 8? unheard of. Really enjoyed it!

MK9 was freakin’ sweet! I stopped playing, but decided to watch top 8. Good Shit to Perfect Legend for shutting people up and proving them wrong.Hopefully the dude has more of a presence in tourneys this time around.

AE was good. Infiltration really fucked people up. Amazing match with Daigo. All of top 8 did well imo. A bit boring considering how old the game is, but this year really was a toss up since it’s been so long since this game’s been out so nothing surprises these guys anymore. It was all a matter of gameplay that determined who won this time around.

SFxT was ok. Could kind of tell Inf/Laugh would win by their steam rolling through everyone.

SCV- didn’t watch. Not my juego. Good shit regardless, these players must’ve put a lot of work into their play just like everyone else.

The only reason kof was entertaining at all was because bala was getting owned by rush down DL.

Outside of that the crowd wanted marvel.

Evo the event itself wasn’t that great for me this year. A bit to much production and lacking alot of soul.

But that’s the price you pay for success I guess.

Yo btfu, I kinda understand where you’re coming from, having similar obligations (married, full time job irl), and went to evo by myself as well.
I think you just gotta go in with the right expectations. I’m not looking for the fighting game scene to be the end all be all to my life, but definitely enjoy the fun and competition. Sure you got a lot of young kids that can be tough to relate to, as well as some click-ish ness from older established players occasionally, but I found a lot of people in the middle, who were excited to be there, play, and watch great games.

You put yourself out there, and have an opportunity to make some friends at least for the weekend. I was chatting with a person in line in registration who was there with a lot of friends, and I just asked if I could come by and get some games in. Brought a 12 pack, and made some friends for the weekend. Probably won’t be best friends for life, but I enjoyed meeting them and watching their games as they moved up the brackets.

I pretty much agree with you and that’s why I made the comment that my experience wasn’t everyone else’s. My wife came with me on this trip and we did Vegas together with Evo thrown in. Didn’t have an opportunity to just hang out and meet people all day and go drink in a strangers room because I was busy doing tours, seeing all of the hotels, being with my wife, etc. I’m sure it’d be different if I was just by myself trying to find people, or if I went with my college scene, but for me that’s what I experienced.

haha sure man, wifey was nice enough to stay home for this one, I knew that me wanting to be fully engaged with evo + her wanting to do vegas stuff = fights.

EVO2k12 was my very first in-person EVO experience. I have been stream monster’ing it since the debut of SF4 for the home console in 09. Every year after that, I kept saying, “I’ll go next year,” but I somehow never go. This year would’ve been the same thing. Random real world shit just kept delaying and taking away my EVO funding to the point where I almost had to bail out on the trip. But after a little bit of bad luck, my dad told me to do the most irresponsible thing ever and said “GO TO EVO DAMNIT! YOU’VE BEEN TALKING ABOUT THIS TRIP FOR 2 YEARS! GO ENJOY YOURSELF!” So I went and a blast! My only regret is not entering UMVC3 as planned and not being able to see everyone that I have known for years via online networks! Next year will be different! I know the matchup better.

Gametrailers had a nice reflection on the event:


32min - 39min

I’m also married like btfu88, and I know how’s that. You have less time to enjoy the community, but, I don’t know, you just need to plan the travel so that you have those “free” 3 days from your wife. If she trusts you, it’s no problem. That’s kinda what I did.
We went to Vegas together, I stayed the whole time of those 3 days in the ballroom, but lunch and dinner (and sleeping of course) was with my wife. She stayed a while in the event during those 3 days but she did her things during the day. After those 3 days were over, we stayed together and went on the see Vegas stuff together.

But I know, things are different from when you were single and could go on after a day of EVO and go to some room and spend the night money-matching and stuff, sleep 3 hours and be ready for the next day of the event, and so on.

My experience at EVO was amazing, and I’ll be back in 2013 for sure. The only bad part of the trip was the actual flight from Brazil to Las Vegas. It’s a 9 hour flight from Brazil to Newark then another 5 hour flight from Newark to Vegas. 14 hours in a plane for someone like me who’s afraid of flying, yeah… not cool