Dilan Omer
Smash Apprentice
Its hard to stale out in my opinion. Barely losing elite with most of the 35 chars I have on it.
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No, it’s either a random number or it could be based upon win %. Because everyone is purchasing a switch and playing Smash online, it bumps everyone’s rank +1, meaning that there would be no official number to reach to get into Smash Elite. It’s not a setting, you’ll know if you’ve entered elite smash because after a match the announcer will say ‘Elite Smash’, and then choosing to play online will now be replaced by the elite smash logo.im 5 mil gsp with my character how is it possible im not in elite smash? is there a setting or something i need to activate?
This, this, this - ALLL of this!I honestly find the people saying it means "nothing" cumbersome and annoying. Yes, there is some margin for luck. For example, you get more GSP per battle if you have a higher win ration to lose ratio. So, if you pick up a character, and you happen to get lucky enough to paired with a few favorable matchups, you can get into elite smash in two or three matches. I did that with kirby. The chances of that happening are kind of slim, though. As far as cheese is concerned, that may be enough to get in, but it's probably not enough to stay in.
If you're seriously claiming it means nothing and that there's no difference between the intensity of matches in elite play verses players with noticeable differences in GSP I think you're being willfully disingenuous, possibly insecure about your own skill, or touting false humility.
Everyone always spews this nonsense when it comes to any ranking system but they don't realize no ranking system can calculate your skill with perfect precision. There's always going to be variance. Phrased in a way people will probably understand: is there a chance that you can be a poorly skilled player and also be in elite smash? Answer: yes. Is there a chance that you're a great player but you can't get into elite smash despite playing QP consistently and over a long period of time? Answer: unlikely.
I thought smash points was the only matchmaking system in place. Does this change when in elite smash?Ostensibly, it's just supposed to be a way to match people with opponents of reasonably close skill levels, so that you don't get the guy who's been playing Smash since the N64 matched against Little Jimmy who just got the game yesterday. The lack of any semblance of matchmaking was why Smash 4's For Glory developed a certain reputation for being full of predictable projectile spammers with platters full of fresh-baked rolls.
I don't necessarily know how well it does its job though, when I can take characters I've never played and have no idea how to use and get thrown into Elite battles immediately.
My brother proposed an idea. Separate Quickplay from Elite Smash so that Quickplay is the new For Fun and Elite Smash is the new For Glory. Maintain the preferences, but the preferences work differently for Quickplay and Elite Smash. I'll present it this way for ease of reading.I believe it was Sakurai himself who said words along the lines of If you're in Elite Smash, you may consider yourself good at the game.
I personal do not like it because I prefer Teams over 1v1 and ES is almost exclusively 1v1.
But basically it's meant to cordon off the players who prefer offline tournament style rulesets and play. If you can somehow get past all the ffa items on jank stages nonsense then you're going to find yourself in ES. I got my dorf into ES very early on and at a high enough GSP that he stayed in even without playing him. But now he's out and trying to get back in seems unlikely.
But like I said I prefer teams anyway.
Should have kept For Glory imho with 1v1 and teams separate.
Don’t know or care about the projectile spammer part, but it’s infested with hero players. I don’t play ES anymore. That character, Hero, is way to cheap. Sakurai is a dumb%## for programming him like that. Heck, most of sakurai decisions for online can describe him as what I just said.I think it's best to just stay right outside Elite. Some of my friends who are in ES tell me that it's crammed with Hero players and projectile spammers. At least if you're just outside of ES, you could maintain your win rate a lot easier than if you're in it. I was just in ES with King DDD a few days ago and got kicked out after losing one match, then I proceeded to win a bunch of FFAs and team battles when not in ES.
I honestly find the people saying it means "nothing" cumbersome and annoying. Yes, there is some margin for luck. For example, you get more GSP per battle if you have a higher win ration to lose ratio. So, if you pick up a character, and you happen to get lucky enough to paired with a few favorable matchups, you can get into elite smash in two or three matches. I did that with kirby. The chances of that happening are kind of slim, though. As far as cheese is concerned, that may be enough to get in, but it's probably not enough to stay in.
If you're seriously claiming it means nothing and that there's no difference between the intensity of matches in elite play verses players with noticeable differences in GSP I think you're being willfully disingenuous, possibly insecure about your own skill, or touting false humility.
Everyone always spews this nonsense when it comes to any ranking system but they don't realize no ranking system can calculate your skill with perfect precision. There's always going to be variance. Phrased in a way people will probably understand: is there a chance that you can be a poorly skilled player and also be in elite smash? Answer: yes. Is there a chance that you're a great player but you can't get into elite smash despite playing QP consistently and over a long period of time? Answer: unlikely.
Huh. That is a bit of a weird case. Usually past 4.5 mil, in my experience, you very rarely see BS rulesets or FFA's. Still though, I'm sorry, that's a pain. I also feel you about being on the edge of elite smash. That's the main reason why I made the initial post that I had, it's because for almost every single character I've picked up, it was more or less easy win riiiiiight until the cusp of elite smash and then things just get intense.As much as I tend to agree with your sentiments, I'm that unlikely player. I have several characters right at the edge of elite but every time I go to get them over the brink I start getting insanely ****ty matchup/stage luck or get tossed into FFA with items set to very high. I agree that it is unlikely I'll stay there forever but it's been months on the edge and it's frustrating honestly. I know I should just not care since I'm trying to stay competitively focused but damn if I can body people who have no issue getting into elite yet I still cant manage to get there myself then something seems to be amiss. I really feel like if they made it so proffered rules were matched up with similar/the same rulesets it would be far easier to attain. That's not to say I don't want a challenge, it's more I would like my preferred ruleset to not be in such a state of flux. Maybe I'm just that bad that I'll never make it in, but I highly doubt it. That's just my perspective on things.
Yeah, this!I view it more like this:
<100k GSP: Either you're really bad or you're losing on purpose.
100k ~1M GSP: You're just learning a new character and trying to get the feel for that particular character.
1M ~ 4M GSP: You're getting comfortable with the character and can win a decent amount of games.
4M ~ 4.6M GSP: Mixed bag. Here in this range we have many different players, and it's starting to get more competitive.
4.6M~5.1M GSP: Mostly good rulesets here. Players in this range tend to be very good, competent players.
5.1~5.35M GSP: This is where you see a significant skill jump. Highly skilled players should be able to maintain a bare minimum of 5.1M GSP.
5.35M GSP~5.475M GSP: You're almost on the same level as ZeRo, Mew2King, Samsora, etc., but they would probably still body you.
I tried to lose on purpse to see what it's like to be below the 1,000s skill level. But it's just takes too much time. I only got to about 73k. And the people down here aren't that bad. They are literally the same crop of players you'd find in the 1 to early 3 millions. This game ranking systems is hot garbage.I view it more like this:
<100k GSP: Either you're really bad or you're losing on purpose.
100k ~1M GSP: You're just learning a new character and trying to get the feel for that particular character.
1M ~ 4M GSP: You're getting comfortable with the character and can win a decent amount of games.
4M ~ 4.6M GSP: Mixed bag. Here in this range we have many different players, and it's starting to get more competitive.
4.6M~5.1M GSP: Mostly good rulesets here. Players in this range tend to be very good, competent players.
5.1~5.35M GSP: This is where you see a significant skill jump. Highly skilled players should be able to maintain a bare minimum of 5.1M GSP.
5.35M GSP~5.475M GSP: You're almost on the same level as ZeRo, Mew2King, Samsora, etc., but they would probably still body you.
Have you tried online tourneys?I like QuickPlay! It's really fun with my main until it got flooded by really good Banjos and now I just play with Isabelle with much lower GSP to continue to have a good time. I don't like arenas because the people there are just too good.
No, I haven't.Have you tried online tourneys?
Um, 3M GSP is kinda average you know... Elite Smash is if you're 5.3M GSP or above (>5,300,000 GSP).If you're in elite smash with 3000000+ GSP that is truly an incredible feat. It means you know the game and are pretty adept at it. To say it means nothing is just plain ignorant in my opinion, I believe Sakurai even said that getting to elite smash means your are fundmentaly good. So don't let a few cynics or pessimists tell you any differently.
Nah, not really. I've already seen many ppl above 5 mil GSP, heck, even some projectile campers who use cheesy rulesets are also above 5M. What WOULD be impressive, though, is if you have over 5.25M GSP and you'll able to maintain that as a bare minimum. One of my mains is hovering around there, but even I'm having trouble trying to maintain that GSP.I stand corrected then. Thank you. But still an incredible feat having 5 mil GSP.