OU RBY Invitational IV - Commencement, Discussion, & Team / Set Dump

Status
Not open for further replies.

emma

is a Forum Moderatoris a Community Contributoris a Site Content Manager Alumnusis a Social Media Contributor Alumnusis a Community Leader Alumnusis a Smogon Discord Contributor Alumnusis a Top Tiering Contributor Alumnusis a Contributor Alumnusis a Dedicated Tournament Host Alumnusis a Past SPL Championis a Past SCL Champion
Moderator
Hello everyone, and welcome to RBY Invitational IV, hosted by yours truly! RBY Invitational is a 32-player, invite-only, double-elimination RBY OU tournament featuring returning legends, current superstars, up-and-comers, and some of the best players in Smogon's history. This year's edition has a current prizepool of $670.5. Join the Discord Server to watch the RBY event of the year!

RBY Invitational does not happen without CALLOUS and CALLOUS Invitational. The tournament's rules, format, and donation-based prizepool were directly carried over from CALLOUS Invitational. Big thank you to him for creating the Invitational format for ADV that almost every other generation has replicated at this point!

Special thanks to Alpha1013 & MANNAT for helping with Hosting, Blazenix for the Art and Player Cards, shiloh for the Matchup Animations, Ticken for the Replays and Usage Stats Sheet, and Acetylaldehyde, Blue Cloyster, Kaz, phoopes, RaiZen1704, shiloh, & Torchic for all the Donations!

The RBY Invitational promises to be an unforgettable experience, with battles that will inspire, surprise, and thrill us all. Stay tuned for the exhilarating battles that await, where history will be made, legacies forged, and champions crowned. Remember how hype Heroic Troller vs. Serpi in SPL XIV Finals was? Or marcoasd vs. Lusch in RBYWC I Finals? Now, magnify that sense of grandeur, that all-encompassing spectacle, and envision it unfolding with each passing round. The journey begins here—let the RBY Invitational begin!
  • This is a standard RBY OU tournament.​
  • This tournament will be Double Elimination. 32 Players, 10 Rounds. Both the Main Event and Play-ins are invite only.
  • Rounds will be Best of Three until Round 8 (Winner's Finals) where they become Best of Five.​
  • REPLAYS ARE REQUIRED FOR ALL MATCHES.
  • All games must be played on the Smogon Tournaments Pokemon Showdown! server (smogtours.psim.us).​
  • Play-ins will be a Best of Three, Single Elimination, 32 person bracket where the top two participants qualify for the main event. You must win four rounds to move on.​
  • Do not cheat. I reserve the right to disqualify anyone breaking this rule.​
  • Do not harass or insult your opponents, spectators, or staff. I reserve the right to disqualify anyone breaking this rule.​
  • The main event will take over 2 months to complete. This is a hefty time and effort commitment. Make sure you are able to commit to playing the entire tournament until the end before accepting the invitation.
  • This is a serious, competitive, invite-only RBY OU Tournament with hundreds of dollars on the line. Effort, serious teams and Pokemon, and not forfeiting games/sets for no valid reason is expected of all players. I reserve the right to disqualify anyone breaking this rule.
  • I am the sole decider on anything and everything regarding this tournament. There are no appeals. I reserve the right to change, cancel or in any other way alter the tournament at any time for any reason at my sole discretion. I reserve the right to penalize, kick, ban or disqualify any participant at any time for any reason at my sole discretion. My decisions are final. By agreeing to participate in this tournament you understand and agree to this.

May 28th - Main Event Invitations
June 4th - Play Ins Invitations
June 11th - Play In Round 1
June 18th - Play Ins Round 2
June 25th - Play Ins Round 3
July 2nd - Play Ins Round 4
July 9th - Round 1
July 16th - Round 2
July 23rd - Round 3 (Loser’s Only)
July 30th - Round 4
August 6th - Round 5 (Loser’s Only)
August 13th - Round 6
August 20th - Round 7 (Loser’s Only)
August 27th - Round 8 (Winner's Finals) **Best of 5 begins
September 3rd - Round 9 (Loser’s Finals)
September 10th - Round 10 (Grand Finals)

MAIN EVENT

1. Amaranth
2. Serpi
3. SaDiSTiCNarwhal
4. Kaz
5. M Dragon
6. Mako
7. BIHI
8. McMeghan
9. shiloh
10. Excal
11. Star
12. marcoasd
13. Enigami
14. Hayburner
15. Hipmonlee
16. Mana
17. Isza
18. Lusch
19. Nails
20. ABR
21. Gefährlicher Random
22. chuva de perereca
23. LNumbers
24. Sceptross
25. Ctown6
26. Koalacance
27. dice
28. Aliss
29. Frrf

30. Laroxyl
31. nicole7735
32. BlazingDark
33. Ice Yazu

DECLINED - MAIN EVENT

BKC
Peasounay
SoulWind
Pohjis
Heroic Troller
Prinz
Khaetis
FriendOfMrGolem120
spies
TDK
MetalGro$$
Maya Chansey
Gilbert arenas

PLAY INS

1. Quarante8
2. nicole7735
3. Gastlies
4. kjdaas
5. Torchic
6. Acetylaldehyde
7. Sabelette
8. phoopes
9. Unowndragon
10. RaiZen1704
11. erz
12. Justamente
13. Ice Yazu
14. Rubyblood
15. Laroxyl
16. teal6
17. BlazingDark
18. Hachimaki
19. chub
20. johnnyg2
21. stunner047
22. Mister Tim
23. HSOWA
24. Melbelle
25. Ortheore
26. robjr
27. oakdeon
28. Vileman
29. Genesis7
30. ziloXX
31. Mendeez
32. RampageWebber

DECLINED - PLAY INS

Oiseau Bleu
Mikon
fade
august
Prof_J

emma - 300
Kaz - 166.5
phoopes - 20
shiloh - 69
Torchic - 25
RaiZen1704 - 20
Blue Cloyster - 25
Acetylaldehyde - 15
Plague von Karma - 30

Total - $670.5

Play Ins Round 1

Mister Tim  vs  Ice Yazu
HSOWA  vs  Sabelette
Rubyblood
 vs  oakdeon
chub  vs  nicole7735
Genesis7  vs  Laroxyl
Justamente
 vs  Melbelle
Vileman  vs  ziloXX
Hachimaki  vs  Mendeez
Ortheore  vs  stunner047
kjdaas
 vs  johnnyg2
Gastlies  vs  BlazingDark
Unowndragon  vs  Quarante8
Torchic  vs  phoopes
Acetylaldehyde
vs  robjr
RampageWebber  vs  erz
RaiZen1704
vs  teal6

Play Ins Round 2

Mendeez  vs  nicole7735
Acetylaldehyde
 vs  ziloXX
Sabelette vs  Quarante8
Laroxyl  vs  erz
Rubyblood  vs  Justamente
RaiZen1704  vs  Ice Yazu
kjdaas
 vs  phoopes
stunner047  vs  BlazingDark

Play Ins Round 3

Laroxyl  vs  Acetylaldehyde
nicole7735  vs  kjdaas
BlazingDark  vs  Sabelette
Ice Yazu  vs  Justamente

Play Ins Round 4



Matchup Animations by shiloh

Ice Yazu  vs  nicole7735
BlazingDark  vs  Laroxyl

Play Ins Deluxe Edition

BlazingDark vs Ice Yazu

Round 1

ABR vs. Hayburner
Amaranth vs. Enigami
Ctown6 vs. Excal
Kaz
vs. Lusch
M Dragon vs. dice
Mana vs. Isza
BIHI vs. Laroxyl
Sceptross vs. McMeghan
marcoasd
vs. nicole7735
Hipmonlee vs. shiloh
Serpi vs. BlazingDark
LNumbers vs. Gefährlicher Random
chuva de perereca
vs. Aliss
Mako vs. Star
SaDiSTiCNarwhal vs. Frrf
Nails vs. Koalacance

Round 2

Winner's

SaDiSTiCNarwhal vs  Kaz
BlazingDark  vs  Mako
Hipmonlee
 vs Isza
Excal  vs  Amaranth
Gefährlicher Random  vs  marcoasd
Laroxyl  vs  Nails
McMeghan vs  chuva de perereca
M Dragon vs  ABR

Loser's

Enigami vs  Star
Koalacance  vs  Frrf
dice vs  shiloh
Mana vs  Sceptross
Ctown6
 vs  nicole7735
Serpi  vs  Ice Yazu
BIHI  vs  Lusch
LNumbers  vs  Aliss

Round 3

Loser's

Koalacance  vs  Enigami
M Dragon  vs  Serpi
Aliss  vs  Ctown6
BlazingDark  vs  McMeghan
Amaranth  vs  Nails
Sceptross  vs  Isza
shiloh  vs  Kaz
marcoasd  vs  Lusch

Round 4

Winner's

Hipmonlee  vs  Gefährlicher Random
Excal  vs  SaDiSTiCNarwhal
ABR  vs  Laroxyl
chuva de perereca
 vs  Mako

Loser's

Amaranth vs  Sceptross
Lusch
 vs  Kaz
Koalacance  vs  McMeghan
Ctown6
 vs  M Dragon

Round 5

Loser's

Lusch  vs  SaDiSTiCNarwhal
ABR
 vs  Hipmonlee
McMeghan  vs  Mako
Ctown6  vs  Sceptross

Round 6

Winner's

chuva de perereca  vs  Laroxyl
Excal  vs  Gefährlicher Random

Loser's

Sceptross  vs  SaDiSTiCNarwhal
McMeghan  vs  ABR

Round 7

Loser’s

Excal  vs  chuva de perereca
McMeghan vs  Sceptross

Round 8

Winner's

Laroxyl vs. Gefährlicher Random

Loser's

chuva de perereca vs. Sceptross

Round 9

Loser's

Laroxyl vs. chuva de perereca

Round 10

Set 1

Gefährlicher Random vs. chuva de perereca

Set 2 (if necessary)

Gefährlicher Random vs. chuva de perereca
 

emma

is a Forum Moderatoris a Community Contributoris a Site Content Manager Alumnusis a Social Media Contributor Alumnusis a Community Leader Alumnusis a Smogon Discord Contributor Alumnusis a Top Tiering Contributor Alumnusis a Contributor Alumnusis a Dedicated Tournament Host Alumnusis a Past SPL Championis a Past SCL Champion
Moderator
RBY Invitational History

Volume I - Totality

Total Invitationals Participated In

4 - Amaranth, Enigami, marcoasd, Nails, Sceptross
3 - Aliss, Excal, Frrf, Gilbert arenas, Hayburner, Hipmonlee, Kaz, Lusch, Mako, Mana, McMeghan, Mister Tim, SaDiSTiCNarwhal, Serpi, shiloh
2 - BIHI, chuva de perereca, Ctown6, dice, ErPeris, FriendOfMrGolem120, Genesis7, HANTSUKI, Koalacance, M Dragon, MetalGro$$, Peasounay, Pohjis, spies. Star
1 - ABR, Bedschibaer, BKC, BlazingDark, Christos, Ciele, Diegolh, eden, Gefährlicher Random, Golden Gyarados, Heroic Troller, Isa, Isza, jake, Jsaok3, Khaetis, Laroxyl, LNumbers, Lutra, Maya Chansey, Mysterious M, nicole7735, Oiseau Bleu, Pearl, Raish, SMB, soulgazer, SoulWind, teal6, The Quasar, Tobes, Ice Yazu

Total Set Wins

15 - FriendOfMrGolem120
10 - Kaz
9 - Amaranth
8 - Nails, Sceptross, Serpi
7 - Excal, marcoasd, Pohjis
6 - Enigami, Khaetis, Lusch, spies
5 - Gilbert arenas
4 - Aliss, Diegolh, Heroic Troller, Hipmonlee, Mako, MetalGro$$, Mister Tim, Peasounay, shiloh
3 - BIHI, M Dragon, McMeghan, SaDiSTiCNarwhal
2 - Bedschibaer, Christos, ErPeris, Frrf, teal6
1 - eden, Genesis7, Hayburner, Isa, jake, Koalacance, Mana, Maya Chansey, Pearl, SoulWind, Star, Tobes
0 - BKC, chuva de perereca, Ciele, Ctown6, dice, Golden Gyarados, HANTSUKI, Jsaok3, Lutra, Mysterious M, Oiseau Bleu, Raish, soulgazer, The Quasar

Total Money Finishes

2 - Kaz (I, 2nd & II, 2nd)
1 - Khaetis (III, 1st), marcoasd (III, 3rd), Excal (II, 1st), FriendOfMrGolem120 (II, 2nd), Sceptross (II, 3rd), Amaranth (I, 1st), Nails (I, 3rd)

Total Money Won

Khaetis - $277.5
Kaz - $200.46
Excal - $134
marcoasd - $111
FriendOfMrGolem120 - $80.40
Amaranth - $67.91
Sceptross - $53.60
Nails - $11.32

Volume II - Patriotism

Participants by Country (Invitational IV)

United States (10) - ABR, Ctown6, dice, Enigami, Excal, Isza, Nails, SaDiSTiCNarwhal, shiloh, Star
France (6) - BIHI, BlazingDark, Frrf, Kaz, Koalacance, Ice Yazu
Germany (4) - Gefährlicher Random, LNumbers, Lusch, Serpi
Italy (3) - Amaranth, Laroxyl, marcoasd
Spain (2) - chuva de perereca, M Dragon
Netherlands (2) - Aliss, Mana
New Zealand (2) - Hipmonlee, nicole7735
Belgium (1) - McMeghan
Canada (1) - Hayburner
Chile (1) - Mako
Portgual (1) - Sceptross

US Northeast (5) - ABR, Excal, Isza, SaDiSTiCNarwhal, Star
US Midwest (3) - dice, Enigami, Nails
US West (2) - Ctown6, shiloh

Participants by Country (Invitationals I - IV)

United States (20) - ABR, BKC, Ctown6, dice, eden, Enigami, Excal, Gilbert arenas, Golden Gyarados, Isza, jake, Jsaok3, Maya Chansey, Nails, Raish, SaDiSTiCNarwhal, shiloh, Star, teal6, Tobes
France (10) - BIHI, BlazingDark, Diegolh, Frrf, Kaz, Khaetis, Koalacance, Oiseau Bleu, Peasounay, Ice Yazu
Italy (6) - Amaranth, ErPeris, Heroic Troller, Laroxyl, marcoasd, The Quasar
Germany (5) - FriendOfMrGolem120, Gefährlicher Random, LNumbers, Lusch, Serpi
Spain (4) - chuva de perereca, M Dragon, SMB, SoulWind
Canada (3) - Genesis7, Hayburner, soulgazer
Belgium (2) - McMeghan, MetalGro$$
Greece (2) - Christos, Mysterious M
Netherlands (2) - Aliss, Mana
New Zealand (2) - Hipmonlee, nicole7735
Portugal (2) - Pearl, Sceptross
United Kingdon (2) - Lutra, Ciele
Austria (1) - Bedschibaer
Brazil (1) - HANTSUKi
Chile (1) - Mako
Finland (1) - Pohjis
Peru (1) - spies
Russia (1) - Mister Tim
Sweden (1) - Isa

Set Wins by Country

41 - United States
37 - France
29 - Germany
22 - Italy
9 - Portugal
9 - Spain
7 - Belgium
7 - Finland
6 - Peru
5 - Netherlands
4 - Chile
4 - New Zealand
4 - Russia
4 - United Kingdom
2 - Austria
2 - Canada
2 - Greece
1 - Sweden
1 - Venezuela
0 - Brazil

Victors by Country

France (1) - Khaetis (III)
United States (1) - Excal (II)
Italy (1) - Amaranth (I)

Money Finishes by Country

France (3) - Kaz (I, 2nd & III, 2nd), Khaetis (III, 1st)
Italy (2) - Amaranth (I, 1st) & marcoasd (III, 3rd)
United States (2) - Excal (II, 1st) & Nails (I, 3rd)
Germany (1) - FriendOfMrGolem120 (II, 2nd)
Portugal (1) - Sceptross (II, 3rd)

Volume III - Dominance

Most Set Wins in a single Invitational

9 - FriendOfMrGolem120 (II)
6 - Khaetis (III), marcoasd (III), FriendOfMrGolem120 (III), Excal (II), Amaranth (I), Kaz (I), Nails (I)
5 - Kaz (III), Serpi (II)

Longest Set Win Streaks in a single Invitational

8 - FriendOfMrGolem120 (II)
6 - Khaetis (III), Amaranth (I)
5 - FriendOfMrGolem120 (III), Excal (II)
4 - Kaz (III), marcoasd (III), Pohjis (II), spies (II), Kaz (I), Nails (I)

Greatest Set Differential

+11 - FriendOfMrGolem120
+6 - Kaz, Khaetis
+5 - Amaranth
+4 - Excal, Serpi

Participants who've only finished Top 16 or better (min. 2 Invitationals played)

Aliss - x / Top 16 / Top 12
FriendOfMrGolem120 - x / 2nd / 4th
Kaz - 2nd / x / 2nd
Mako - x / Top 12 / Top 16
Pohjis - x / Top 8 / Top 6
Sceptross - Top 12 / 3rd / Top 16
Serpi - x / 4th / Top 8
shiloh - x / Top 12 / Top 16
spies - x / Top 8 / Top 12

Volume IV - Jeopardy

Repeat Matchups

Amaranth (2) vs. (0) Kaz
Khaetis (2) vs. Kaz (0)
marcoasd (2) vs. FriendOfMrGolem120 (0)
Nails (2) vs. Peasounay (0)
Enigami (1) vs. (1) Nails
Excal (1) vs. FriendOfMrGolem120 (1)
SaDiSTiCNarwhal (1) vs. Frrf (0) ** happening again in Invitational IV Round 1!

Most Roles in the Discord (excluding Matches)

6 - Amaranth (I Champion, IV Player, III Host, III Player, II Player, I Player)
6 - emma (em, IV Host, IV Donor, III Host, III Donor, II Donor)
6 - Kaz (III Money Finish, I Money Finish, IV Donor, IV Player, III Player, I Player)
5 - Enigami (IV Player, III Donor, III Player, II Player, I Player)
5 - marcoasd (III Money Finish, IV Player, III Player, II Player, I Player)
5 - Nails (I Money Finish, IV Player, III Player, II Player, I Player)
5 - Sceptross (II Money Finish, IV Player, III Player, II Player, I Player)
4 - Aliss (IV Player, III Player, II Player, I Host)
4 - Excal (II Champion, IV Player, III Player, II Player)
4 - Hipmonlee (IV Player, II Donor, II Player, I Player)
4 - Serpi (IV Player, III Player, II Donor, II Player)
4 - shiloh (IV Donor, IV Player, III Player, II Player)
 

emma

is a Forum Moderatoris a Community Contributoris a Site Content Manager Alumnusis a Social Media Contributor Alumnusis a Community Leader Alumnusis a Smogon Discord Contributor Alumnusis a Top Tiering Contributor Alumnusis a Contributor Alumnusis a Dedicated Tournament Host Alumnusis a Past SPL Championis a Past SCL Champion
Moderator
Introducing the Participants

Amaranth
(ITA)

19-21 SPL
9-4 Invitational | 4th Invitational
#20 Pokemon Perfect Rankings
Invitational I Champion | Global Championship 2020 Champion | RBY Circuit 2020 Semifinalist | Global Championship 2021 Semifinalist

Although he claims to be retired, Amaranth can be found helping propel Team Italy to the finals of the inaugural RBY World Cup of Pokemon (while also hosting it!) with a 5-1 record (finally hitting .500 in RBY Forum Team Tours!) and berating his poor SPL XIV RBY OU player after she almost loses to Kingler. At his peak, Amaranth is one of the best RBY OU players of all time, dating back to the Pokemon Perfect days, with major Invitational, SPL, and Circuit success, including an Invitational I victory and a 7-4 SPL XI. With nothing left to prove, will we see the first ever Invitational repeat champion or will his finishes keep diminishing?

Serpi (GER)

18-11 SPL
8-4 Invitational | 3rd Invitational
23-6 RBYPL/RBYWC
Winter Seasonal 2021 Champion | Global Championship 2022 Finalist | Summer Seasonal 2022 Semifinalist | Invitational II Semifinalist | RBY Cup 2021 Semifinalist | Summer Seasonal 2021 Semifinalist

Dare I say, Serpi is the best RBY OU player on the planet at the moment. He went 8-3 in SPL XIV, including playoff victories over chuva de perereca and Heroic Troller to propel the Team Raiders to their second SPL title in as many years, and that doesn't even begin to scratch the surface of Serpi's RBY dominance. He has an absolutely absurd 23-6 (79%, +17!!!!) record in RBYPL and RBYWC, including a 7-0 run to lead Germany to the first ever RBYWC victory, dominated the 2021 and 2022 Circuits, and has 4th and Top 8 places in Invitational. Last Invitational, I asked if Serpi would finally find peak RBY OU success and solidify himself as the guy to beat, and he most certainly has. Quite possibly the favorite going in, can he further cement himself in RBY history with an Invitational IV win?

SaDiSTiCNarwhal (USA)

2-6 SPL
3-4 Invitational | 3rd Invitational
10-6 RBYPL/RBYWC
#20 Pokemon Perfect Rankings
Winter Seasonal 2023 Champion | Global Championship 2022 Champion | Summer Seasonal 2020 Finalist

Last year I asked if a strong Invitational III performance after a Global Championship victory could catapult SaDiSTiCNarwhal into SPL XIV starter discussion, but unfortunately an 0-2 performance saw him watching from the sidelines once more. Here we are again a year later - once again, SaDiSTiCNarwhal has the opportunity to build off a circuit tournament win (Winter Seasonal 2023 Champion) and a strong performance in an RBY Team Tour (5-1 in RBYWC) and cement himself as an SPL starter. Can he finally build off all his momentum or will history repeat itself?

Kaz (FRA)

9-8 SPL
10-4 Invitational | 3rd Invitational
#23 Pokemon Perfect Rankings
Invitational III Finalist | Invitational I Finalist | 2x PP Master Tour Winner

Kaz returned from the dead last year to participate in Invitational III and many wondered if he was ready for a full-on return to the competitive RBY OU scene. After another Invitational Silver Medal, including wins over chuva de perereca and marcoasd while only losing to the eventual champion Khaetis twice, and a 5-1 performance in RBYPL III, he's made it clear he still has it. One of the seven players to ever win multiple Pokemon Perfect Master Tournaments and the only player with two money finishes in Invitational, will this be the year he finally takes the entire thing home?

M Dragon (ESP)

0-1 SPL | 74-65 Overall (15th)
3-2 Invitational | 2nd Invitational
#35 Pokemon Perfect Rankings
1x PP Season Winner | 1x PP Master Tour Winner

M Dragon left his mark last Invitational, utilizing innovative strategies including Reflect Alakazam and Back Gengar to get the jump on Back Jynx en route to a Top 6 finish, with wins over Amaranth, Mako, and Serpi. A high finish shouldn't have been a surprise to most; he's one of the greatest players of all time with a 74-62 official team tournament record and has plenty of high level RBY experience. He's one of twelve to win a Pokemon Perfect Season and is ranked #35 overall on the standings despite playing in only the first three of nineteen seasons. When M Dragon shows up, he usually wins - can he move up from #12 on the Pokemon Perfect Hall of Fame?

Mako (CHL)

15-10 SPL
4-4 Invitational | 3rd Invitational
11-3 RBYPL/RBYWC

Mako is very quietly becoming one of the outstanding SPL RBY OU players of all time. A stunning 6-3 performance in SPL XIV (for only 3k!) with wins over Gefährlicher Random, chuva de perereca, and Nails brings her to 15-10 overall - good for 9th most wins and the 6th highest win percentage for anyone with at least twenty sets played. Additionally, a perfect 4-0 RBYWC, including a win over BIHI, brings her to 11-3 all time in RBYPL and RBYWC, good for 3rd most wins and 3rd highest win percentage for anyone with at least ten sets played. I haven't even mentioned Invitational yet, where she has Top 12 and Top 16 finishes over the past two years, including wins over SoulWind and Peasounay. If she continues showing up like she has recently, she has a chance to cement herself as one of the most successful RBY OU players in the Smogon era.

BIHI (FRA)

2-0 SPL | 53-43 Overall
3-2 Invitational | 2nd Invitational
RBY Cup 2020 Semifinalist | Summer Seasonal 2019 Semifinalist

I may be incredibly biased, but BIHI is the most clutch RBY OU player of all time. In SPL XIII playoffs, he defeated chuva de perereca and Heroic Troller in back-to-back tiebreaker sets to secure the red for the Raiders after not touching the tier throughout the entire tournament. His brilliance in playoffs must have re-sparked his passion in the tier, as he then went on beat Heroic Troller, shiloh, Mako, and Amaranth twice across Retro Cup of Pokemon, Invitational III, and RBY World Cup. After a dominating 2022 where he became the first player ever to win SPL, WCoP, and SCL in the same calendar year, BIHI has solidified himself as one of the most accomplished players in Smogon's history. Can he continue his absurd streak of success with an Invitational IV win?

McMeghan (BEL)

1-0 SPL | 85-62 Overall (5th)
3-4 Invitational | 3rd Invitational

One of fourteen with multiple individual trophies, the sixth most official team tournament wins of all time, and finally a SPL title to his name after years shackled to the Tigers and BIGs, McMeghan is one of the few with legitimate claim to be the greatest player of all time. 9-2 and a finals tiebreaker win was his best performance since SPL VI, where he went 8-1 and was retained for a ridiculous 40.5k (!!!!) the following year. Fun Fact - I have been drafted in four official team tours and my overall price tag isn't even half of that. After an exciting Top 16 finish in Invitational III with a Galopa sighting, is the motivation and effort there to continue to add to his already historic resume?

shiloh (USA)

6-9 SPL
4-4 Invitational | 3rd Invitational
11-7 RBYPL/RBYWC
RBY Cup 2022 Champion | Winter Seasonal 2020 Semifinalist

After a 2-2 Invitational II and a 5-5 SPL XII, shiloh continued his trend of perfectly breaking even with a 2-2 record and Top 16 finish in Invitational III. Where he most certainly did more than break even was this year's RBY Cup, where he proved it was possible to play one set of RBY OU in under a week; oh, and he won the whole thing too. Alongside a perfect 3-0 RBYWC and a brilliant start to his VGC career, shiloh is in great form to break through in this year's edition of Invitational.

Excal (USA)

0-0 SPL
7-3 Invitational | 3rd Invitational
Invitational II Champion

Excal crushed mainers' dreams everywhere in his championship run in Invitational II, taking down the then defending champion and putting a stop to one of the most dominant streaks of RBY OU play in the tier's history en route to glory. One of three to take home RBY's most prestigious individual tournament, Excal's name is already written in the generation's history books. Unfortunately, he could not replicate the magic last year, nor in Jirachee's DPP Invitational, where he finished Top 24 in both. Coming in once more with minimal RBY OU played since last's year's edition, Excal already shocked the world once; who's to say he can't do it again?

Star (USA)

0-0 SPL | 59-43 Overall (26th)
1-2 Invitational | 2nd Invitational

Everyone's favorite tournament player returns after being able to take down SPL XIV starter Mana but fell to the 1st and 4th place finishers last year. Star might be the most proficient player without an individual trophy to their name. Since 2022, he has accomplished the following: Official Smogon Tournament XVIII Top 16, Official Ladder Tournament IX Top 16, Smogon Tour XXXIII Finalist, Smogon Tour XXXIV Semifinalist, Smogon Tour XXXV Top 16, Smogon Grand Slam XI Quarterfinalist, is psuedo-locked for Smogon Grand Slam XII Playoffs, GSC Invitational II Finalist, DPP Invitational I Top 6, ORAS Invitational Top 6, and is already 6-3 in SPL/WCoP this year. He is surely due for a win at some point; will RBY Invitational IV finally be his tour?

marcoasd (ITA)

14-10 SPL | 10-4 WCoP
7-5 Invitational | 4th Invitational
6-0 RBYPL/RBYWC
#1 Pokemon Perfect Rankings
Invitational III Semifinalist | 6x PP Top Player Ranking | 6x PP Season Winner | 11x PP Master Tour Winner | 10x PP Cup Winner | RBY Cup II Finalist

marcoasd, the greatest RBY OU player of all time. The man with (quite literally) too many accomplishments to list, who's performance in a singular tier at the peak of the generation's competitiveness might be the most impressive in competitive Pokemon history, and with a seemingly endless array of triumphs that defy logic, marcoasd is the definition of a living legend. He's even shown up and dominated in the new era of RBY OU, with a 3rd place finish in Invitational III and a perfect 6-0 record in RBYWC. Go back and read last year's introduction, comb through the Pokemon Perfect RBY Hall of Fame and Tournament Archives, and see for yourself what an awe-inspiring spectacle he is. In a realm where legends are born, marcoasd stands head and shoulders above almost all, an almost unparalleled phenomenon. With his is protégée Heroic Troller, the only other man with a claim to being the best of all time, sitting out, marcoasd once more has the chance to further cement his renowned legacy and become the undisputed best with an Invitational IV victory.

Enigami (USA)

0-0 SPL
6-3 Invitational | 4th Invitational
#12 Pokemon Perfect Rankings

Enigami proved he wasn't past his prime last year, making his way through play ins and finishing in the Top 12 with a 3-2 record. One of five players to play in all four Invitationals to date, Enigami brings a level of experience very few can match. Weidler of Lead Tauros, Double Electric, Porygon, Arbok, and even Tauros-less stall, Enigami is known to think way outside the box across all RBY tiers. From Top 6 to Top 32 to Top 12, he's finished all over the final standings. Will we see the patented inventions come on out, and if they do, can they work?

Hayburner (CAN)

10-12 SPL
1-4 Invitational | 3rd Invitational
8-2 RBYPL/RBYWC

Hayburner has not been on the strongest of SPL teams in his career - the 9th place SPL XII BIGs, the 8th place SPL XIII BIGs, and the 9th place SPL XIV Cryonicles - which I would strongly assume has impacted how much he cared and tried during the season, especially towards the end. After a strong 5-2 SPL XII and a solid 4-4 campaign the following year, a tough 1-6 SPL XIV, marked by the legendary heat-off and almost beating some scrub with Kingler, has made his SPL record a lot worse than it really should be. A similar story is shown in Invitational, where after a Round 1 or Round 2 loss in both of the previous years, the following rounds saw quite a few less than stellar teams. We'll which Hayburner shows up this year - if he can start off strong and gain some momentum it's promising, but another early loss might bring out the Claw.

Hipmonlee (NZL)

0-3 SPL | 8-7 WCoP
4-4 Invitational | 3rd Invitational
6-3 RBYPL/RBYWC
Winter Seasonal 2018 Champion | RBY Cup 2020 Finalist | Winter Seasonal 2019 Semifinalist

The eldest player in the tour, Hipmonlee has a Smogon join date of December 19th, 2004. For reference, my birthday is July 9th, 2002. He has been on Smogon for nearly 20 years and is the 19th user in the site's history. He has an unfathomable wealth of experience and knowledge, about RBY and competitive Pokemon has a whole, that is utterly unmatched. He even wrote a 22-page RBY Prediction Guide! After sitting out last Invitational, we'll see if Hipmonlee can build off his Top 12 and Top 16 finishes or if he'll be unable to handle the RBY zoomers' nonsense.

Mana (NLD)

4-5 SPL | 28-20 Overall
1-4 Invitational | 3rd Invitational

Mana must have fallen in love with RBY after sweeping with Reflect Slowbro in Invitational II that he exclusively signed up for RBY OU in SPL XIV after not playing in the tournament for the prior three years. He had a strong 2-0 start, including a Week 2 victory over Heroic Troller that saw Amnesia + Thunderbolt Snorlax take down Starmie, but could only finish 3-4 in meaningful games. Well known for his excellent old generations play with multiple Smogon Classic Playoffs appearances, RBY Invitational has unfortunately not been his tournament, only mustering up one win across the past two years. Will his Pet Mods Premier League II success carry over and his fuck it we ball mentality be worth it, or might the mainers be right about him?

Isza (USA)

2-4 SPL
0-0 Invitational | 1st Invitational

Isza was thrown into the fire in SPL XIV as the unsurprisingly non-mainer starter for the Dragonspiral Tyrants after his Smogon Classic VII Playoffs appearance. Despite a tough 0-3 start, Isza was able to take down Serpi and Nails and finish 2-4, showing everyone he deserved to be in the pool. He was also critical to US Northeast's Semifinals run in the inaugural RBY World Cup of Pokemon, with Round 1 Tiebreaker and Semifinals victory over Germany. After a Smogon Tour XXXV Semifinals run, let's see if Isza can put it all together in his Invitational debut.

Lusch (GER)

9-7 SPL | 6-3 WCoP
6-4 Invitational | 3rd Invitational
11-4 RBYPL/RBYWC
#7 Pokemon Perfect Rankings
1x PP Top Player Ranking | 3x PP Season Winner | 7x PP Master Tour Winner | 6x PP Cup Winner

A legendary figure, Lusch returns to grace the stage in Invitational IV. Much like marcoasd, Lusch reigns supreme across the old and new eras of RBY OU, an unparalleled testament to his unwavering dominance. Sitting at #3 in the Pokemon Perfect Hall of Fame and #7 in the Rankings, Lusch won the last six Master Tournaments, is tied with Heroic Troller for the second amount of Master Tournament and Season victories, and is one of six ever to finish atop of the Player Rankings. After resurfacing and finishing Top 8 in RBY Invitational III, eliminating Excal, Sceptross, and spies, Lusch helped propel Germany to an RBYWC Victory with the third best overall 6-2 record, including a Semifinals Tiebreaker victory over SaDiSTiCNarwhal. With success in Smogon Premier League, World Cup of Pokemon, RBY Invitational, RBY Premier League, RBY World Cup, and Pokemon Perfect, prepare to bear witness to the unrivaled brilliance of Lusch.

Nails (USA)

34-22 SPL | 74-58 Overall (14th)
8-6 Invitational | 4th Invitational
RBY Cup 2020 Finalist | RBY Cup 2019 Finalist | Invitational I Semifinalist | Global Championship 2018 Semifinalist

The man who wants to luck you and won't lie about it, Nails is the second greatest player in the Smogon era of RBY. You all know the stats by now - 2nd most RBY SPL wins of all time, one of two to win at least 20 RBY sets over the course of three SPLs, one of four to take down Heroic Troller multiple times in SPL, back-to-back RBY Cup finals, and an Invitational I bronze trophy to boot. For years he was able to dominate the competition with his ice-cold suffocating playstyle, with the infamous "Nails Team" at the very center, but the playerbase had adapted, and the days of rotating the same few cores has come to a bitter end. Starting in SPL XIII, where his usage statistics changed drastically, Nails is only 10-10 in SPL, compared to his 20-8 from the three years prior, with more of a focus on Hearthstone, DOU, and VGC than RBY. We now reach a crossroads - if Nails want to return to his former glory, he must find a way to successfully adapt and reinvent himself as an RBY player. Will the journey begin here, or will we just see him go through the motions?

ABR (USA)

0-0 SPL | 80-39 Overall (8th)
0-0 Invitational | 1st Invitational
RBY Cup 2021 Finalist

Prepare to witness brilliance as ABR, the undisputed greatest Smogon player of all time, finally makes his Invitational debut. With a historic legacy that eclipses all others, ABR stands far-and-away as the embodiment of competitive Pokemon success. Unparalleled in his achievements, he stands alone with four individual trophies, a feat unmatched by any other, as well as the highest differential in team tournaments, with an absolutely ridiculous 80-39 (67%, +41!!!!) on the sheet. No corner of this site has eluded his grasp; ABR has won OST, Smogon Classic, back-to-back Smogon Tours, SPL twice, WCoP twice, CALLOUS Invitational, and even the title of most likely to get their Policy Review permissions revoked for posting something ridiculous. If the motivation is there, and he doesn't forget about Sleep Clause, ABR is one of the favorites to reinvent RBY OU as we know it and take the entire thing home.

Gefährlicher Random (GER)

6-3 SPL | 36-20 Overall
0-0 Invitational | 1st Invitational
Summer Seasonal 2022 Champion

In 2021, Gefährlicher Random had an absurd year in Official Team Tournaments, where he finished 3rd overall with 15 wins, including a dazzling 8-1 in in SCL I playing SS OU. In 2022, he made the switch to RBY from CG OU and lit the 2022 Circuit on fire, finishing Top 8 in the RBY Winter Seasonal, Top 8 in the RBY Global Championship, 1st in the RBY Summer Seasonal, and Top 16 in the RBY Circuit Championship. In 2023, we saw an incredible upset, where the Invitational Play Ins outcast finished with a brilliant 6-3 record in SPL XIV. Last year's biggest snub, Gefährlicher Random has made his way to this big stage; can his trademarked zoomer playstyle help usher in a new era of RBY?

chuva de perereca (ESP)

12-9 SPL
0-2 Invitational | 2nd Invitational
8-2 RBYPL/RBYWC
Winter Seasonal 2022 Champion | RBY Circuit 2022 Finalist | RBY Circuit 2021 Semifinalist | Summer Seasonal 2021 Semifinalist | Winter Seasonal 2021 Semifinalist

chuvaToday at 1:20 PM
pls dont hype me im washed and i hate the game

LNumbers (GER)

2-5 SPL | 19-18 Overall
0-0 Invitational | 1st Invitational
RBY Cup 2022 Finalist

LNumbers is yet another German who picked up RBY and saw success very quickly. He started playing the tier during last year's RBY Cup where he immediately reached finals and got the opportunity to start in RBY OU in SPL XIV after stints playing SS OU and SS UU in official team tournaments. Unfortunately, we all known the SPL atmosphere is not like anything else, and he struggled to a 2-5 record, notably when trying to expand the range of teams he was comfortable with. He could also not replicate the magic in RBYWC, where he went 0-3 after slotting in for playoffs. Invitational will serve as a litmus test for LNumbers - can he follow in Serpi's and Gefährlicher Random's footsteps and deliver on the big stage, or does he need more time in the lab?

Sceptross (PRT)

3-8 SPL
8-6 Invitational | 4th Invitational
#17 Pokemon Perfect Rankings
Invitational II Semifinalist

An old Pokemon Perfect boomer, Sceptross is the only player who's competed in every Invitational so far and has yet to finish in the bottom half. An avid ladderer and enthusiast when active, he's returned from a months long hiatus and has already gotten right back into it when it comes to discussing the merits and applications of Substitute Slowbro and Tentacruel in RBY OU. While he might not have the peaks in Pokemon Perfect and SPL as some others, Sceptross always shows up for Invitational, with Top 12, 3rd, and Top 16 finishes. An active Sceptross is quite dangerous - will he have enough time to derust or will his streak of Invitational success end here?

Ctown6 (USA)

0-0 SPL
0-2 Invitational | 2nd Invitational
9-5 RBYPL/RBYWC
Winter Seasonal 2022 Finalist | Winter Seasonal 2023 Semifinalist

Gengar enthusiast Ctown6 fought his play through Play Ins and into the Main Event last year, just as his may fans had hoped for, but Invitational is nothing like RBY Grand Slam. He was unable to deliver on the biggest of stages, bowing out to Lusch and SoulWind in the first two rounds. We enter a similar situation one year later - coming off another deep run in the Winter Seasonal, Ctown6 has the opportunity to use a strong performance to catapult him into SPL XIV player discussion. Will he be able to prove he can hang with the best of the best as one of the few dedicated mainers in the tournament, or will he be sent packing back to RBY Ubers?

Koalacance (FRA)

1-3 SPL
1-2 Invitational | 2nd Invitational
RBY Circuit 2021 Champion

Koalacance went from Invitational II Play Ins loser to not dropping a game on his way to taking home the 2021 RBY Circuit. His success saw him get picked up at midseason in SPL XII, but struggled in the official team tournament environment to a 1-3 record and went undrafted in SPL XIV. Another RBY mainer, Koalacance will likely need a deep Invitational run or prolonged circuit success to prove he is ready to return to the bright lights - will Invitational IV set him up for success or is this the beginning of the end?

dice (USA)

1-1 SPL | 76-65 Overall (10th)
0-2 Invitational | 2nd Invitational

dice is one of the most accomplished Smogon players and talented old generations player of all time. His 76 official team tour wins is good for 10th most all time, and he has plenty of deep runs in Smogon Classic and CALLOUS Invitational. His skill is undeniable, but the question is his motivation. Last year, we saw him load up Dragonite and lose to Tauros-less stall, and combined with his SV OU debut in the World Cup of Pokemon, it's likely his focus is elsewhere. Pokemon is Pokemon at the end of the day, but I'd guess his run goes a lot further if he chooses not to handicap himself in the builder.

Aliss (NLD)

6-9 SPL
4-4 Invitational | 3rd Invitational

Aliss has shown a lot of success in old generation individual tournaments - Top 16 and Top 12 finishes in RBY Invitational, a GSC Invitational victory, and a ADV Cup Semifinals & Smogon Classic Playoffs appearance two years ago. However, the success has not translated well to SPL - after her 3-2 debut in SPL XII playing RBY, she struggled to a 3-7 record in SPL XIII and a 2-4 record in SPL XIV, playing RBY and GSC respectively. Will she be able to build off her two consecutive top half finishes and put together a great run, or will I not even be able to contact her through Smogon PM if she flames out early?

Frrf (FRA)

0-0 SPL
2-4 Invitational | 3rd Invitational
Summer Seasonal 2021 Semifinalist

Frrf fought her way through the (albeit small) Play Ins in Invitational II and has remained a staple in the tournament ever since. Her successful 2021, Top 16 in Invitational II, Top 4 in Summer Seasonal & Top 16 in Circuit, had her projected as a potential SPL pickup, but went undrafted and hasn't been able to replicate her accomplishments since. Frrf will need to get back on her game, perhaps beginning with a strong Invitational IV run, if she ever want to get back to where she once were.

Laroxyl (ITA)

0-0 SPL
0-0 Invitational | 1st Invitational

Our first Play Ins victor and only Little Cup main in the tournament, Laroxyl has improved significantly after training with marcoasd, Heroic Troller, and Amaranth during RBYWC. He's already already in the RBY Hall of Champions, as he won the RBY Gold Medal for Team Italy in RoA Olympics VII, taking down Ctown6, SMB, and Genesis7. After making his way through a very tough Play Ins journey of Genesis7, erz, Acetylaldehyde, and BlazingDark, we'll see if Laroxyl can follow in the legendary Italian footsteps and make his country proud (although I'm sure he already has!).

nicole7735 (NZL)

0-0 SPL
0-0 Invitational | 1st Invitational

Our second Play Ins victor, nicole7735 is 2023's most hyped up-and-coming RBY mainer, and for good reason. Originally beginning as a RBY Lower Tiers player, she's shifted some of her focus into OU and is looking like a potential SPL starter with a year or two more of experience. She went 3-1 in RBYWC, with her only loss being to Heroic Troller, and helped lead underdog Oceania to Quarterfinals. She took down chub, Mendeez, kjdaas, and Ice Yazu to blaze through Play Ins and debut in her first Invitational in her first year seriously playing the tier. Up against the greatest RBYer of all time, marcoasd, in Round 1, it'll be exciting to see if nicole7735 can make any noise.

BlazingDark (FRA)

0-0 SPL
0-0 Invitational | 1st Invitational

Our third and final Play Ins victor, and blessed by the Gods he is, BlazingDark made the most of his second chance to advance to the Main Event. In 2022, he won the World Cup of Pokemon with Team France and has recently picked up RBY OU, going 2-2 in RBYWC, with both losses being to Heroic Troller. Known for his high Ice Beam Snorlax usage throughout Play Ins, he defeated Gastlies, stunner047, and Sabelette, before falling to Laroxyl but then redeeming himself against Ice Yazu. Can BlazingDark joins the ranks of elite French RBY OUers or will be take a backseat to Kaz & co.?

Ice Yazu (FRA)

0-0 SPL
0-0 Invitational | 1st Invitational
Winter Seasonal 2023 Finalist

It turns out I lied when I said BlazingDark would be the last Play Ins player to advance to the Main Event. After a post-Round 1 drop out, Ice Yazu will have a shot at redemption, although he will be starting at 0-1 and in the Loser's Bracket. He beat Mister Tim, RaiZen1704, and Justamente before falling to nicole7735 and BlazingDark and finding a third chance here. Ice Yazu has a wealth of RBY success across Lower and Other Tiers, including being the #1 ranked Gen 1 [1500+] Randbats player and winner of Grand Slam I, and has started to translate the fundamentals to OU with a 2nd place finish in the 2023 Winter Seasonal. But just as I've said before, Invitational is nothing like Grand Slam. Will he be able to prove he can hang with the best of the best as one of the few dedicated mainers in the tournament, or will he be sent packing back to RBY UU?
 

emma

is a Forum Moderatoris a Community Contributoris a Site Content Manager Alumnusis a Social Media Contributor Alumnusis a Community Leader Alumnusis a Smogon Discord Contributor Alumnusis a Top Tiering Contributor Alumnusis a Contributor Alumnusis a Dedicated Tournament Host Alumnusis a Past SPL Championis a Past SCL Champion
Moderator
Storylines

Pre Round 1
  • Can Serpi, perhaps the best RBY OU player on the planet at the moment, break through his previous 4th and Top 8 finishes and take it all home?
  • Can marcoasd cement himself as the clear cut best player of the tier's history over his protégée Heroic Troller?
  • Will Kaz finish 2nd in his third Invitational in a row or can he finally win it all?
  • Can Amaranth and Nails bounce back from their disappointing last two years and reclaim the magic from Invitational I?
  • Does Hipmonlee still have it after sitting out last year?
  • Can Sceptross build off three consecutive Top 16 finishes?
  • How will ABR, the greatest Smogon player of all time, fare in his Invitational debut?
  • Can Star and dice silence their haters and eradicate some mainers?
  • Can chuva de perereca, the hottest player going into last Invitational, bounce back after his disappointing Invitational III and SPL XIV?
  • How will Gefährlicher Random, last year's biggest snub, perform in the revenge tour after a brilliant SPL XIV?
  • How will Isza and LNumbers do after struggling in their SPL debut?
  • Ctown6, Frrf, Koalacance, nicole7735, and SaDiSTiCNarwhal can all catapult themselves into SPL XIV starter discussion with a strong run - can they deliver under the bright lights?
  • Aliss, Mako, and shiloh have all finished either Top 12 or Top 16 the last two years - can any of them break through or will any falter?
  • Excal (1st) and SaDiSTiCNarwhal (Top 12) both had strong Invitational II performances before struggling last year - can either of them bounce back?
  • Italy (Amaranth), the United States (Excal), and France (Khaetis) have taken home the first three editions - is it Germany's turn after a RBYWC victory?
Post Round 2
  • Serpi, marcoasd, and Kaz, likely the three favorites going into the tournament, all lost within the first two rounds - can any of them pull a FriendOfMrGolem120 with an absurd Loser's Bracket run?
  • chuva de perereca has eliminated his demons and is still in the Winner's Bracket - is he back in SPL XIII form?
  • Gefährlicher Random has taken down marcoasd and is perhaps the best player in the Winner's Bracket - is he going to take it all home and give Germany their first RBY Invitational victory?
  • Excal is the only former champion to win the first two rounds in an Invitational after their championship run and looks quite motivated - will he be our first ever repeat winner?
  • Laroxyl is the only Italian and Play In Winner still in the Winner's Bracket and looked very impressive against Nails - is he next rising superstar?
 

emma

is a Forum Moderatoris a Community Contributoris a Site Content Manager Alumnusis a Social Media Contributor Alumnusis a Community Leader Alumnusis a Smogon Discord Contributor Alumnusis a Top Tiering Contributor Alumnusis a Contributor Alumnusis a Dedicated Tournament Host Alumnusis a Past SPL Championis a Past SCL Champion
Moderator
Predictions Analysis
Play Ins Round 1

Mister Tim (10)  vs  Ice Yazu (22)
HSOWA (18)  vs  Sabelette (12)
Rubyblood (22)
 vs  oakdeon (8)
chub (5)  vs  nicole7735 (23)
Genesis7 (25)  vs  Laroxyl (4)
Justamente (16)
 vs  Melbelle (16)
Vileman (25)  vs  ziloXX (5)
Hachimaki (22)  vs  Mendeez (10)
Ortheore (4)  vs  stunner047 (26)
kjdaas (14)
 vs  johnnyg2 (15)
Gastlies (12)  vs  BlazingDark (16)
Unowndragon (10)  vs  Quarante8 (20)
Torchic (23)  vs  phoopes (5)
Acetylaldehyde (7)
vs  robjr (21)
RampageWebber (16)  vs  erz (13)
RaiZen1704 (20) vs  teal6 (10)

Mass Opinion: 8-6-2 (8-6-2 Overall)
Notable Upsets: Laroxyl over Genesis7 (4 to 25), ziloXX over Vileman (5 to 25), phoopes over Torchic (5 to 23), Acetylaldehyde over robjr (7 to 21)

Play Ins Round 2

Mendeez (3)  vs  nicole7735 (21)
Acetylaldehyde (6)
 vs  ziloXX (14)
Sabelette (3) vs  Quarante8 (15)
Laroxyl (8)  vs  erz (11)
Rubyblood (14)  vs  Justamente (10)
RaiZen1704 (11)  vs  Ice Yazu (9)
kjdaas (17)
 vs  phoopes (6)
stunner047 (13)  vs  BlazingDark (7)

Mass Opinion: 3-5 (11-11-2 Overall)
Notable Upsets: Sabelette over Quarante8 (3 to 15), Acetylaldehyde over ziloXX (6 to 14)

Play Ins Round 3

Laroxyl (9)  vs  Acetylaldehyde (9)
nicole7735 (16)  vs  kjdaas (3)
BlazingDark (8)  vs  Sabelette (10)
Ice Yazu (15)  vs  Justamente (6)

Mass Opinion: 2-1-1 (13-12-3 Overall)
Biggest Upsets: None

Play Ins Round 4

Ice Yazu (10)  vs  nicole7735 (9)
BlazingDark (6)  vs  Laroxyl (12)

Mass Opinion: 1-1 (14-13-3 Overall)
Notable Upsets: None

Play Ins Deluxe Edition

BlazingDark (9) vs Ice Yazu (9)

Mass Opinion: 0-0-1 (14-13-4 Overall)
Notable Upsets: None

Fun Facts:
  • Laroxyl was not favored until the final round of Play Ins.
  • nicole7735 was favored until the final round of Play Ins. She was the one of the most popular picks (+18, +18, +13) in the first three rounds.
  • BlazingDark went from the favorite, to the underdog, the underdog again, the underdog once more, to even.
  • Acetylaldehyde and Sabelette won Play Ins Rounds 1 and 2 as underdogs, but lost in Round 3 when they were even or favored.

Round 1

ABR (13) vs. Hayburner (18)
Amaranth (28) vs. Enigami (3)
Ctown6 (14) vs. Excal (16)
Kaz (19)
vs. Lusch (15)
M Dragon (27) vs. dice (6)
Mana (16) vs. Isza (15)
BIHI (29) vs. Laroxyl (4)
Sceptross (16) vs. McMeghan (16)
marcoasd (25)
vs. nicole7735 (7)
Hipmonlee (18) vs. shiloh (13)
Serpi (27) vs. BlazingDark (0)
LNumbers (5) vs. Gefährlicher Random (28)
chuva de perereca (31)
vs. Aliss (4)
Mako (30) vs. Star (4)
SaDiSTiCNarwhal (24) vs. Frrf (8)
Nails (27) vs. Koalacance (5)

Mass Opinion: 10-4-2
Notable Upsets: BlazingDark over Serpi (0 to 27), Laroxyl over BIHI (4 to 29)

Fun Facts:
  • BlazingDark, the last player to make it in, upset Serpi, one of the favorites going in, after not a single person predicted him to win.
  • The Play In Winners (nicole7735, Laroxyl, BlazingDark) drew some of the toughest Round 1 opponents (marcoasd, Serpi, BIHI). Laroxyl and BlazingDark scored massive upsets, while nicole7735 fell despite being the most popular upset pick of the three.
  • Despite winning Invitational II, Excal was only slightly favored over Ctown6 (+2).

Round 2

Winner's

SaDiSTiCNarwhal (7) vs  Kaz (21)
BlazingDark (4)  vs  Mako (20)
Hipmonlee (14)
 vs Isza (3)
Excal (13)  vs  Amaranth (12)
Gefährlicher Random (13)  vs  marcoasd (14)
Laroxyl (6)  vs  Nails (18)
McMeghan (5) vs  chuva de perereca (19)
M Dragon (12) vs  ABR (12)

Loser's

Enigami (16) vs  Star (9)
Koalacance (11)  vs  Frrf (10)
dice vs  shiloh
Mana (7) vs  Sceptross (14)
Ctown6 (14)
 vs  nicole7735 (9)
Serpi (25)  vs  Ice Yazu (2)
BIHI (9)  vs  Lusch (17)
LNumbers (19)  vs  Aliss (7)

Mass Opinion: 10-4-2 (20-8-4 Overall)
Notable Upsets: Laroxyl over Nails (6 to 18), SaDiSTiCNarwhal over Kaz (7 to 21), Aliss over LNumbers (7 to 19)

Fun Facts:
  • Mass Opinion had the same record in Round 2 as it did in Round 1.

Round 3

Loser's

Koalacance (11)  vs  Enigami (14)
M Dragon (5) vs  Serpi (23)
Aliss (7)  vs  Ctown6 (18)
BlazingDark  vs  McMeghan
Amaranth (11)  vs  Nails (15)

Sceptross (11)  vs  Isza (4)
shiloh (6)  vs  Kaz (22)
marcoasd (21)  vs  Lusch (6)

Mass Opinion: 3-3-2 (23-11-6 Overall)
Notable Upsets: M Dragon over Serpi (5 to 23), Lusch over marcoasd (6 to 21)

Fun Facts:
  • This was the first round without a tie.
  • M Dragon and BlazingDark had some of the biggest upsets of the tournament, both against Serpi (-18 & -27 respectively).

Round 4

Winner's

Hipmonlee (4)  vs  Gefährlicher Random (21)
Excal (9)
 vs  SaDiSTiCNarwhal (16)
ABR (12)  vs  Laroxyl (13)
chuva de perereca (18)
 vs  Mako (9)

Loser's

Amaranth (8)  vs  Sceptross (10)
Lusch (11)
vs  Kaz (15)
Koalacance (6)  vs  McMeghan (18)
Ctown6 (13)
 vs  M Dragon (11)

Mass Opinion: 6-2-0 (29-13-6 Overall)
Notable Upsets: Excal over SaDiSTiCNarwhal (9 to 16)

Fun Facts:
  • Kaz was favorited by the same amount both sets against Lusch (+4).

Round 5

Loser's

Lusch (4)  vs  SaDiSTiCNarwhal (10)
ABR (6)
vs  Hipmonlee (10)
McMeghan (9) vs  Mako (9)
Ctown6 (9)  vs  Sceptross (10)

Mass Opinion: 2-1-1 (31-14-7 Overall)
Notable Upsets: ABR over Hipmonlee (6 to 10)

Fun Facts:
  • Despite being one of the greats, Lusch was only favored 1 of 5 rounds (Round 2).
  • Mako was 2-0 when favored and 0-2 when not favored.

Round 6

Winner's

chuva de perereca (20)  vs  Laroxyl (4)
Excal (5)  vs  Gefährlicher Random (19)

Loser's

Sceptross (3)  vs  SaDiSTiCNarwhal (17)
McMeghan (18)  vs  ABR (6)

Mass Opinion: 2-2-0 (33-15-7 Overall)
Notable Upsets: Laroxyl over chuva de perereca (4 to 20), Sceptross over SaDiSTiCNarwhal (3 to 17)

Fun Facts:
  • I went 0-4 this round because I am terrible.
  • ABR was not favored in a single round.

Loser's

Excal (4)  vs  chuva de perereca (14)
McMeghan (8) vs  Sceptross (10)

Mass Opinion: 2-0-0 (35-15-7 Overall)
Notable Upsets: None

Fun Facts:
  • TBD.

Winner's

Laroxyl (7) vs. Gefährlicher Random (15)

Loser's

chuva de perereca (15) vs. Sceptross (6)

Mass Opinion: 2-0-0 (37-15-7 Overall)
Notable Upsets: None

Fun Facts:
  • TBD.

Loser's

Laroxyl (6) vs. chuva de perereca (16)

Mass Opinion: 1-0-0 (38-15-7 Overall)
Notable Upsets: None

Fun Facts:
  • TBD.

Gefährlicher Random (11) vs. chuva de perereca (8)

Mass Opinion: 1-0-0 (39-15-7 Overall)
Notable Upsets: None

Fun Facts:
  • TBD.
 

emma

is a Forum Moderatoris a Community Contributoris a Site Content Manager Alumnusis a Social Media Contributor Alumnusis a Community Leader Alumnusis a Smogon Discord Contributor Alumnusis a Top Tiering Contributor Alumnusis a Contributor Alumnusis a Dedicated Tournament Host Alumnusis a Past SPL Championis a Past SCL Champion
Moderator
Watchparty
inspired by zee's VGC Watchparty

One of the most effective ways to improve at this game is to watch the top players play and learn from them. During SPL XIV alone, I watched and analyzed close to two-hundred SPL, Invitational, and other high level tournament games in an attempt to gain an edge on the Classiest’s opponent. During this process, I immensely improved as an RBY OU player. By observing their gameplay, you gain insights into their decision-making processes, positioning, resource management, setting up winning endgames, and overall game sense. This can help you develop a more strategic mindset and make better choices during your own gameplay. To tie this into RBY Invitational and hopefully help raise the level of play, I'm introducing the watchparty.

During RBY Invitational IV, I'll be streaming select sets in call in the Discord Server. Myself and any other high level tournament players who would like to join me will discussing the game, with a focus on breaking down reasoning behind lines taken, team selection, and teaching those who want to take the next step in their play. We will also have an opportunity to go back and analyze any specific turns after the games are concluded. Everyone is welcome and encourage to listen along, although I'll be asking everyone to remain muted unless you've played in SPL or Invitational. Questions are encouraged to be asked in the chat that can be answered in call. All watchparties will be recorded and later uploaded to my Youtube.

Our first watchparty will be happening soon on my Twitch. If you are a SPL or Invitational player who is interested in running the show with me, please send me a DM on Discord.
 

emma

is a Forum Moderatoris a Community Contributoris a Site Content Manager Alumnusis a Social Media Contributor Alumnusis a Community Leader Alumnusis a Smogon Discord Contributor Alumnusis a Top Tiering Contributor Alumnusis a Contributor Alumnusis a Dedicated Tournament Host Alumnusis a Past SPL Championis a Past SCL Champion
Moderator
Recaps
Amaranth vs. Enigami, Game 1

To begin, we have Game 1 of Amaranth vs. Enigami. At his peak, Amaranth is one of the best RBY OU players of all time, dating back to the Pokemon Perfect days, with major Invitational, SPL, and Circuit success, including an Invitational I victory and a 7-4 SPL XI. Enigami is another long-time RBY player who finished #12 on the Pokemon Perfect Rankings and is known to think way outside the box across all RBY tiers, being weidler of Lead Tauros, Double Electric, Porygon, Arbok, and even Tauros-less stall. Both players are in the small group of five people who have played in every RBY Invitational to date and bring levels of experience few can match.

Game 1 of their set is an excellent example of how to take control early by grabbing the momentum and keeping the pressure on throughout the game. After a back-and-forth exchange of Sleep moves, we find ourselves in an unparalyzed Chansey versus unparalyzed Chansey mirror on Turn 6. Amaranth takes a decisive step, immediately paralyzing Chansey to create an opening for his Snorlax and presumably concealed sixth Pokemon. Enigami tries to turn the tide with an Ice Beam for a game-changing freeze chance but comes up short.

The RBY Invitational I winner really begins applying the pressure now. He goes right to Snorlax on the paralyzed Chansey and forces in Snorlax, where he gets a lucky critical hit after the Chansey couldn’t move a turn earlier. He brings in Exeggutor on a predicated Snorlax Rest, and while Enigami clicks Body Slam instead, he does not get the paralysis, which lets Amaranth connect Psychic and force a Rest. Enigami then brings in Chansey to preserve his Snorlax, but Amaranth immediately explodes his Exeggutor to take it down.

After some back and forth between Chansey and Alakazam, Amaranth attempts to get in Snorlax on a full paralysis, Recover, or Seismic Toss. While Enigami opts for Psychic instead, it’s insignificant damage without a critical hit, and by choosing not to Rest, Alakazam is now comfortably in Hyper Beam range. With Starmie and Snorlax having burnt zero turns of Sleep and no risk of Counter Chansey, Amaranth can go for it all once more and clicks Hyper Beam to take down the Alakazam before it can even move. Snorlax then explodes on Tauros, and Enigami concedes after his Tauros is revenge killed and having played on the backfoot the entire game.

Kaz vs. Lusch, Game 1

Next up is Game 1 of Kaz vs. Lusch. Kaz finished 2nd in both Invitational I and III and is the player pushing the RBY OU metagame forward the most currently. They have been exploring the merits of dropping Chansey, Snorlax, and Tauros - three Pokemon that are a staple on almost 100% of competitive RBY OU teams - to great success, even taking down marcoasd with Hitmonlee in Loser’s Finals of the last edition. After marcoasd and Heroic Troller, Lusch is one of the first players to come to mind when you think about the best RBYers ever. He saw vast Pokemon Perfect success in the past and has even returned strong with a Top 8 Invitational III finish and the third-best record in RBY World Cup.

Like our first showcased set, this game begins with one player grabbing the momentum almost instantly. By blowing up Jynx with Gengar, Kaz can near-guarantee he is up in the Sleep game, since his Victreebel will outspeed the most likely backup Sleepers for any Jynx team. While he has to eat Blizzard, Victreebel puts Cloyster to Sleep to go up 5-4 and can start pressuring with +2 Wrap and Razor Leaf. Unfortunately, things go downhill, as Cloyster gets a lucky early wake, and Victreebl does what it does best by missing Sleep Powder and dying. The tides have turned in Lusch’s favor, as it’s now 5-4.

However, Kaz again surprises us by revealing Venusaur to turn the game around. We see yet another UU Grass-type click Sleep Powder and then Swords Dance, although this time +2 Hyper Beam hurts a lot more than Wrap. +2 Venusaur does a net 36% to Chansey, 52% to Snorlax, and 47% to Cloyster before falling to Blizzard. This breaking eventually sets the stage for Kaz’s last to close out the game at the end

After some back-and-forth between Alakazam and Chansey, Kaz lands a key Psychic on Snorlax, putting it in range for the one-and-only Persian. Persian takes down Sleeping Alakazam and Chansey before baiting Hyper Beam on Snorlax and revealing Zapdos as his last. Zapdos clicks Agility as Snorlax has to recharge and seals the deal for Kaz along with Persian.

If Kaz just had Tauros as his last, he almost certainly would have lost. Assuming Hyper Beam connects on either Persian or Tauros on Turn 45, Lusch’s Tauros should be able to clean up the game. But Kaz is Kaz, and dropping at least one of the three Normals, if not all three, is to be expected. By utilizing Zapdos in the stereotypical Tauros role, Kaz turned the tables and came out on top.

Kaz vs. Lusch, Game 2

For Game 2 of Kaz versus. Lusch, we’re going to start on Turn 71. To set the stage, Kaz opened up the game by clicking Thunder Wave on Turn 1, which you rarely see unless the player has a specific game plan to break through paralyzed Chansey. His plan was Victreebel, which on Turn 48, was able to land Sleep on Snorlax. Kaz also took advantage of Lusch running Seismic Toss as his lone Chansey attacking move, continually bringing in Rhydon to apply pressure and even get Exeggutor down to 37%.

Kaz just revenge killed Chansey with Tauros, and Lusch brought Starmie to threaten paralysis. With no other options, Kaz reveals his second Venusaur of the set, which walls Starmie as it shows it isn’t carrying Blizzard. After eating Thunder Wave and getting massive damage off with Razor Leaf, Kaz makes a game-winning double-switch on Turn 73 to get his Tauros in on an Exeggutor in Hyper Beam range. He correctly calls the switch to sleeping Snorlax and Body Slams, but instead of finishing it off, he clicks Rest! By clicking Rest, Kaz’s refreshed Tauros can now take down the opposing Tauros without risking a speed tie AND handle the opposing Starmie, since it ends up out of range of Surf, barring a critical hit. Kaz then cleans up the game with Starmie, Tauros, and Venusaur, taking the set 2-0 and advancing to the Winner’s Bracket.

Sceptross vs. McMeghan, Game 1

Lastly, we have Game 1 of Sceptross vs. McMeghan. An old Pokemon Perfect boomer, Sceptross is the only player who’s competed in every Invitational so far and has yet to finish in the bottom half. An avid ladderer and enthusiast when active, he’s returned from a months-long hiatus to play in Invitational once more. McMeghan is one of the few with a legitimate claim to be the greatest player of all time, being one of fourteen with multiple individual trophies and has the sixth most official team tournament wins of all time. He also had an exciting Top 16 finish in Invitational III.

In Kaz’s series, we saw him continually drop assumed staples on every competitive RBY team and win. However, we’ll see the same strategy can’t always be employed without a specific game plan behind it.

To open up the game, we know Sceptross is running Gengar - Exeggutor - Cloyster with Selfdestruct Snorlax by the end of 3, as he switched his Exeggutor immediately on Alakazam and exploded it the turn after getting Sleep. He has an aggressive game plan where he hopes to gain an advantage early on with Sleep and ride it until the end, with Boom Spam helping him trade down.

Beginning on Turn 7, we see an interesting dynamic. McMeghan’s Snorlax is revealed to not carry Earthquake, which means it cannot damage Gengar. However, since Gengar is not carrying Psychic, McMeghan can comfortably RestLoop Thunderbolt, assuming no consecutive critical hits. For the first time, maybe ever, we see a Pokemon that can literally not damage the opposition, force a switch.

While Sceptross can get Cloyster in to pressure the sleeping Snorlax, it can’t make any progress because of Starmie. This core is notoriously weak to Starmie. Cloyster’s and Exeggutor’s Explosions don’t even OHKO it, so your best out exploding on it with Snorlax or praying for a freeze with Cloyster. On Turn 27, Sceptross misses his chance to remove the Starmie, and it gets even worse on Turn 28, as he reveals he’s almost certainly dropped Chansey for Starmie. With an unlucky Speed Tie loss and full paralysis, Sceptross cannot paralyze the Starmie, which is crucial to McMeghan’s victory. The game ends with Sceptross being unable to force a tie since Starmie can withstand Cloyster’s Explosion.

Laroxyl vs. Nails, Game 2

To begin, we have Game 2 of Laroxyl vs. Nails. Before we even click start, I’m going to spoil Laroxyl’s team for you. He has Gengar - Exeggutor - Cloyster with 4 Attacks Snorlax and Seismic Toss / Counter / Thunder Wave Chansey. For the past two years, this six has been an extraordinarily common bring into Nails, being brought against him five times alone in SPL XIII. This is because during SPL XII and Invitational II, a vast number of Nails’ teams were Jynx / Starmie / Jolteon, Jynx / Starmie / Alakazam, and Starmie / Cloyster / Alakazam. These three teams comprised over half of his brings, and the strategy worked exceptionally well for him. The same trend remains true in SPL XI and SPL X, and throughout these three seasons, Nails had a combined 20-8 set record, good for an over 70% win rate.

Are you starting to see why the player base was able to begin counter-styling Nails very effectively in SPL XIII? Not only did he use many of the same teams, but his sets were almost always identical on his sixes. His Snorlaxes on these teams were Amnesia / Ice Beam / Reflect / Rest, Body Slam / Reflect / Hyper Beam / Rest, and Body Slam / Reflect / Selfdestruct / Rest.As you can tell, none of his Snorlax carried Earthquake. Furthermore, some of his Tauros would even drop Earthquake for Fire Blast, and along with his nearly 40% Jynx usage, Nails was very susceptible to Gengar. Add in Cloyster hardwalling his infamous IceLax and Exeggutor tieing the team together, it’s not hard to see why this was such a common bring into Nails.

Not only does the six match up well into Nails’ usual teams, but it also matches up nicely into his playstyle. Nails has a more reactive playstyle, preferring to sit back and play it safe. Now Gengar, on the other hand, is very good at forcing the issue, and combined with two more Explosions with Exeggutor and Cloyster, the team drags Nails out of his comfort soon and forces him to be more aggressive. History shows that Nails returns to Earth when unable to pilot within his comfort zone, only going 10-10 during SPL XIII and XIV, where hsi usage stats drastically changed. Now that we have all that out of the way, let’s get into the actual game.

Laroxyl gets the lead matchup he wants, and even though he misses Hypnosis while Jynx lands Lovely Kiss, he is still in a fine spot without his Chansey getting frozen. He forces Jynx to rest, brings in Tauros, and forces Snorlax onto the field. After Laroxyl reveals Cloyster on Turn 11, Nails now knows that his Snorlax will never make any progress against this team, as he’s running the classic “Nails Team”. Despite this, Nails is not dead in the water. By the end of Turn 31, he’s already gotten seven Blizzards off and has successfully sacked Jynx to Sleep. Laroxyl has also been risking his Cloyster a bit, switching it into BoltBeam Chansey and raw Clamping on it. As the game progresses, Nails gets more opportunities to land Freeze and Thunderbolt Cloyster, but never gets it. Laroxyl also turns up the aggression, getting unparalyzed Snorlax in on paralyzed Chansey on Turn 53, and then Tauros in on resting Snorlax on Turn 60. These lines eventually lets him paralyze the Starmie on Turn 61,

The game state drastically changes on Turn 77, as Laroxyl trades his Snorlax for Starmie. On Turns 79 and 85, Cloyster comes in on Chansey as it gets fully paralyzed under 50% health, giving Laroxyl opportunities to lock it down with Clamp and put pressure on with Tauros. In a similar sequence, Cloyster clamps down on the Snorlax that can’t touch it to generate more free turns for his Tauros, and Nails eventually crumbles.

Overall, even though Laroxyl doesn’t play perfectly during this game, he has such a colossal matchup advantage and, combined with a bit of luck, can take down one of the best players in the tier’s history.

Enigami vs. Star, Game 1

Up next, we have Game 1 of Enigami vs. Star. For this game, we’re going to start on Turn 13. Enigami has a sleeping Starmie, along with fully healthy Victreebel and Dragonite. Star has a frozen Alakazam, paralyzed Chansey, and fully healthy Snorlax and Gengar. Enigami is rocking a Wrap team, and things are honestly looking not bad after freezing Alakazam Turn 1 and trading Snorlax for Starmie.

The only obstacle besides having to actually hit Wrap is Gengar, but at this point, Star is forced into clicking Psychic and risking his Gengar. While his Gengar gets paralyzed, it’s not the end of the world since it takes no damage from Wrap while draining its uses. Unfortunately, Star makes a critical error of booming the Gengar on the following turn. While he’s removed Victreebel, after Dragonite lands Thunder Wave on Tauros on the following turn, his Wrap counterplay turns into praying. Throughout the game, Enigami hit 46 of his 51 wraps, including 23 in a row at one point, to slowly suffocate Star into submission.

McMeghan vs. chuva de perereca, Game 1

Our next game is Game 1 of McMeghan vs. chuva de perereca. I want to highlight the early game for this one. We see a Gengar lead mirror, but chuva de perereca gains a massive advantage after dodging Hypnosis and landing a critical hit with Psychic. He correctly calls the switch out Turn 2, and while he misses Hypnosis and eventually sleeps the Gengar, he can bring down the Exeggutor to 24% with Night Shade before being forced down.

Historically, lead Gengar were always Night Shade and Thunderbolt, but players started adapting against the increase in Gengar usage by running Psychic over Night Shade. This allows you to chip the Gengar in the lead mirror, so you can later aim to KO it and Sleep something else while sacking your own Gengar to Sleep.

Of course, the issue here is Exeggutor. If chuva de perereca had Thunderbolt over Night Shade, Exeggutor would have been near full, and guessing wrong and sleeping the 13% Gengar would have been punished significantly more. While Starmie is of course an issue, Gengar is an early late Pokemon that aims to be Slept, while Starmie is more of a mid-to-late game Pokemon, so the issue can be worked around. Against lead Starmie, the options of clicking Hypnosis or going right to Chansey are still there.
 

phoopes

I did it again
is a Site Content Manager Alumnusis a Senior Staff Member Alumnusis a Community Contributor Alumnusis a Contributor Alumnusis a Battle Simulator Moderator Alumnus
For those who haven't been keeping up with Invitational, first off I highly recommend that you do so because there have already been some great matches. Secondly, thanks for the invite emma! Had two sets, a haxy 2-1 win against Torchic in round one of play-ins and a short but fun 2-0 loss against kjdaas in round two. Something cool (I think) that I wanted to do was to do a live commentary of the sets as they happened, and I just uploaded my round one win against Torchic to YouTube! You can watch it below.


This tournament was a real learning experience for me, so if anyone wants to watch and give me some feedback that'd be very much appreciated. Even if not, I hope I provided an entertaining commentary experience/good explanation for why I brought the teams that I did and the moves that I chose in the moment. Speaking of the teams I brought against Torchic...

Game 1: https://pokepast.es/8c3212a3e973e05a
Game 2: https://pokepast.es/2d957208f6555772
Game 3: https://pokepast.es/283947b41e962be1

If you feel like using these teams (maybe against Torchic haha) be my guest! Again, I think I did an okay job at explaining why I picked what I did in the video but if you'd like to discuss/ask questions I'm more than happy to go over my rationale.

I'll do a similar post with videos and teams like this if/when kjdaas gets eliminated, because I don't want to spoil my scouting and (maybe) give other competitors an advantage. Wish I could've made even more of these into further rounds, but them's the breaks haha.

Finally, some shoutouts:

emma for the invite to play-ins and running a great event yet again! (it's not over yet but it'll be great once again I'm sure)
Torchic and kjdaas for enjoyable sets against high level players!
Vileman and Acetylaldehyde for helping me with some warm-up/test games!
shiloh for giving me some of his old teams awhile ago (most of my teams are exact replicas or just slight changes from that large pokepaste haha)
everyone who predicted me to win in rounds one and two!
(anyone else I may have forgotten)

With all that said, here's to a great rest of the Invitational! Good luck to all!
 

phoopes

I did it again
is a Site Content Manager Alumnusis a Senior Staff Member Alumnusis a Community Contributor Alumnusis a Contributor Alumnusis a Battle Simulator Moderator Alumnus
Hey hey, me again. Now that kjdaas is out, I feel like I can post the live recording of my set against her. Uploaded to YouTube again, here it is:


Again, hope I provided an entertaining/good experience with commentary. I didn't get to explain my scout/teams as much in this video due to the length of the set but hey, them's the breaks. I appreciated the feedback I got last time and would appreciate feedback again this time if anyone's willing to give it! Here are the teams btw:

Game 1: https://pokepast.es/7b6a69f11faeeaa2
Game 2: https://pokepast.es/1029aa4c1115f7c5
Game 3 (unused): https://pokepast.es/af92b340394b7e56

Same shoutouts as above, but thanks again kjdaas for the games!
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Users Who Are Viewing This Thread (Users: 1, Guests: 0)

Top