theDuL0R
Smash Journeyman
I'm pretty sure Alex Strife has a regular 9-5 job.
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Alex, do you just T.O as a hobby or do you actually do this as a business and make a living off of it?
THAT'S RIGHT!! LOOK AT CROSSFIRE II!! HAHA Thanks for the shout out Strife!What I have said since we had the ability to have multiple games is that locals should run all three games. If you break into all the communities and are able to handle them then it would benefit you and the venue to have them. Look at CrossFire II for example. It had several games and a lot of people came out. There was enough space and enough setups to do pretty much anything. If you do not like one of the games, I understand, but I think investing in helping others shows that we are all in this together. Remember that Smash is Smash no matter the version.
And never give up man!! I started TOing 2 years ago. As a newbie, I got hated on by members of this community. But I fought and beat all odds. And because of my efforts, I currently have the Brawl Singles (54 players) and Doubles (20 teams) Attendance record here on Long Island (which I still aim to break). Keep doing what you are doing man! If you believe, you will succeed!That was an excellent read I was really looking forward to the post about the difference between a T.O and a Bracket runner. I am definitely a T.O. I have/had an uphill battle though. The Bahamas is a very small country and that creates less diversity and a lot of bigots. I have been trying to grow a competitive scene since 2006(when I left high school) even when the odds were against me I pushed onwards. It's tough when it's only you as a person that thinks about doing this in your country--especially when no one else before you has ever done it or your peers thinking the idea is ludicrous/doubting you. People in this country still to this day(Outside the community) Think that I pulled this whole competitive smash idea out of my ***. They don't know this game is played competitively in other countries, or even has Internationals (Apex, Genesis and now EVO).
There is an anime/gaming club here, that are so elitist it's not even funny...it's only the 1 or 2 trolls in the group though, the actual owners don't know me that well, so I am trying to help them with an up and coming traditional fighting game event; to give a good impression. I never had help before with my community, but I think it's time to branch out and increase the numbers--which is always on my mind.
I run tournaments, record videos, write up the results...I do everything to be honest. I have a crew though that is super supportive especially one named Rudra. I think having that one friend to keep you from getting overwhelmed and reminding you of your purpose for doing all of it helps too.
I am the only smash T.O here and I do doubt myself sometimes about all of this, but threads like this is really inspiring and shows me I am on the right track. I'll keep pushing and trying and maybe one day someone from the states may visit here and want to link up with my scene, that would be awesome. I can't wait for the next read, Alex. ^-^
Easiest way is to get in touch with th regional manager and try to strike a deal. It is rough but usually w if you try hard enough it works out.If you are starting out small but want to host a large scale regional, what is the best way for getting sponsorship (such as Best Buy) on board. (Like if I wanted to host a mini-Apex and doing it for the first time)
That is based upon the venue. Some venues you do not have to worry about it and some are horribly wired.In your experience, how many setups is enough to warrant some sort of power panel installation?
Why doesn't people attend my tournies?
I've started a small scene in Tyler, which is in east tx.
The dallas scene has come out for nearly every event(Denti infinity Alsm dakpo) and Gnes is the only person from Houston to come.
But I've yet to break 20 entrants after 6 events LOL
I've tried flyers, posting on EVERY website possible, and contacting people induvidually and no one comes. I've even been told my events are tons of fun/super well run/one guy said best ran tourney he's attended.
1. Here/AiB/FB/reddit/twitter/when I co-host another series here(ETFC) it's posted on like srk and stuff plus flyers are GameStop/Starbucks/other local nerd stores
2. My venue is a library which is actually an awesome venue. We have wifi that USUALLY works and is pretty good for my stream, we're put in a spacious room(like I could host a regional in there lol) separate from the actual library, so we're allowed to be noisy and stuff, plus we have access to the library's own tables/chairs they use. And the venue just charges me $50 every day I want it rented AMAZINGGG. Only down side is that we aren't in walking distance of food so people just drive away to go eat
3. Our scene is pretty chill. We suck at brawl really(top 3 are Labernash, minifox, myself) but we all want to, and are, improving rapidly. It's cool to have Dallas come out to our events cause they teach us stuff. Everyone in tx says they want to see the tyler scene in action but then they never do lol
We are about 2 hours from DFW
Both honestly. Some things you cannot control and some things you can. Learning from trial and error will help too.If a T.O. runs a tournament, it is announced and all, and there is lack of entrants and/or Set-ups. Is the blame on the community or the TOs?