@
MerzA
damn, that first match, the last stock was sliiiiiiiiiick! you don't seem to have any obvious patterns, yet, from what i can tell, nor bad punish habits, or something like that. gonna watch another vid.
against falcon, get off of platforms asap. he likes people on platforms more than ganon, due to limited tech/roll options and the speed that he can put a safe uair out under/on a platform. you seemed to panic and roll away from him a lot in the first game, gonna see if that's a bad habit in the second one. try to edgeguard with ftilt more. his recovery is better, but i thiiiiiink ftilt's disjoint should still clip it, or at least let you force him to pick a perfect sweetspot angle, allowing you easier opportunities to set up float edgeguards or edgehogs. you also tend to give him too much stage control. when you respawned on your... 3rd stock, i want to say, he was still on the left edge and instead of running up to pressure him with your invuln time, you went to the opposite side of the stage to not pressure him with your invuln timer.
you fixed that in the second game, also with that smaller stage choice (personally, i would never pick fod, but you made it work, so hey!). you still preferred roll away, but it didn't seem to be a panic button so much, this time.
against voyce: you established you preferred wizkick forward out of flamechokes in match 1. he caught on near the end and rolled behind you and you didn't get a chance to try again. let's see if you use this in the later games. your punish game on fox is really solid, though. like, you hit him on a platform, and he dies from your read. that's really good. it looks like voyce is slowing down and not running in, like a bad fox, near the end of g1, but then realizes he's behind so he can't just try to camp you out.
so, you only got one chance to flame choke followup, but wizkick forward worked, so yay! he was definitely just playing more patiently. he got the stock lead early and then just played "proper" fox, where he makes you move on his terms and then attempts to punish you. the sketchiest choice you made, imo, was trying to wizkick onto the stage during recovery on your 3rd stock. there was no reason to, fox wasn't committing to anything and he could have (and did) avoided the attack. you actually lost your last stock because you gave up the stage. it was all set up because you (maybe over?) respected his respawn invuln and went to the left ledge. you got him with that bair, but he went for you having to commit to an offensive action and nair-then shined you to death, really quickly. if you'd approached with shield, you might've been able to get out of the situation (this a hindsight observation. i probably would've run forward to attempt a followup like you had i done the same thing, tbh).
he starts doing it in g2, but in g3, you can see very early on that he's just watching you when you tech and reacting, bcuz fox. right around 8m, he knocks you down under the left platform and just lets you tech mid, the chases with nair. he misses the followup off of nair, but the setup works, bcuz fox. i think this is what's going to make you lose, ultimately. instead of trying to predict, he remembers that he can just react to your options, in a lot of situations. around 8m40s when you uair him onto the bottom left platform, you waited. you're ganon, you can't do this; also, there was no reason not to be running up towards him, either. his only options would be limited by the platform, and his safest (roll away, or tech in place-shield) wouldn't realistically be able to punish a sh-uair, if you'd gone for it. if you had predicted tech in, you could've just uair'd him and probably put him offstage for a stock, right there. you still got him with the followup uair, but that was also dependent on fox trying to attack oos against you, which he might not have done. really really good spacing on the fairs immediately when fox respawned, though! that third stock was unfortunate : ( you did well to avoid the first shine spike, though! you might've been able to avoid the second with a sweetspot, but i don't think you could have pulled that off from that angle... i don't think you made any outright mistake to get put into the situation, just got read on your followup from your nair. your last stock was just him watching spacing and predicting a few of your rolls, it looked like. he also started using his jump speed to shove nairs into your airspace, so you couldn't use your own ac nair to threaten.