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G5 Interview Series: MSB

by Trent Murray

Genesis 5 is set to be the largest tournament in Rivals history. With a prize pool over $10,000 and the RCS championship on the line, players will be coming from all over the world to challenge the best of the best. One such contender will be Fable eSports’ MSB, an elite Kragg main from the early days of the competitive scene. We caught up with him to discuss his history with the game, his love of giant rock beetles, and how he’s preparing for the biggest tournament of his competitive career.

MSB-interview-socialv2

Tell us a bit about your competitive gaming history before Rivals?

MSB: I was a hardstuck platinum League player and a perennial 1-2 presence at Smash 4 locals. The only gaming-related event I was at before Rivals was Apex 2015, which ended up costing a nasty amount of money due to the relocation putting it an extra train away from where it originally was for me.

Only got to spend one day at the venue as well even though I intended for 3, and in order to catch the last train on Saturday night I missed nearly the entire salty suite. With those things in my mind, I kinda resolved to never spend that much going to an event again unless I had something more to get from it all.

What made you want to be a top Rivals player?

MSB: I went into Rivals without a lot of expectations, knowing that from my previous record in gaming that there wasn’t really much of a shot at going big time. But I ended up getting into it so early that everyone was really, really bad, giving me the time I needed to get comfortable without eating any big losses.

My mindset was the opposite of a growth one when I first started out, and being able to win a majority of my games drew me into it long enough for me to realize I could actually be something. I guess the simplest answer to why I wanted to be a top player was “because I could”. I’ve got nothing like it in any other game, and at this point I’m pretty content with how far I ended up coming.

What first drew you to being a Kragg main?

MSB: I saw him pillar to recover in the trailer and thought that was really cool; nothing like it was in any game I’d played before. Got the game after seeing it on a Mango stream and went into practice mode with grey-colored Kragg to see what his moves did. Then I beat up a level 9 Zetter by spamming forward air at the ledge and I was locked in.

What is your favorite memory from a Rivals tournament?

MSB: Got a few:

  • Get Good 12 – It’s a meme tournament in 2017, but winning a stacked online tourney with people I’d never beaten before was a great moment when it happened
  • Bigger Balc Losers Semis – Reverse 3-0 on someone I’d never beaten before, then instantly broke my own controller in the celebration and got washed in LFs. But I did get a trophy for 3rd place!
  • The first 5 minutes of Winners Finals at Smashcon – Boy I thought I was hot shit for those 20 seconds in between games 2 and 3. Immediately followed up with my least favorite memory from a Rivals tournament.
  • Heatwave – Whole day was a ride, a lot of crazy stuff happened this tournament. Aspiring above my 3rd place block was great.

Is there anything special you’re doing to prepare for Genesis?

MSB: Nothing especially, but a lot of general practice. There are people that play every character going there, so the best way to be prepared is to be more all-rounded. If I zero in on a particular thing I’m just going to get blindsided like I did at G4.

What other hobbies do you have outside of the game?

MSB: When I’m not playing anything I’ve usually got some kind of school/life project to be working on. But if there’s nothing to do I like taking walks.

Give us one movie or TV series that you would recommend that not everyone has seen? What do you like about it?

MSB: Oh man, I just straight up don’t watch TV or movies. But to make a game recommendation though, check out Slay the Spire. Rougelike deckbuilding is something I never knew I wanted until I picked that game up.

What’s one thing about you that your fans might not know?

MSB: The sunglasses pillow seen in a few images I have up is my travel pillow and I take it everywhere. It’s the exact right size to put in my bag without taking up too much space.

Anything else you’d like to say to the community?

MSB: Check out the Rivals Weeklies Show every Sunday at 7PM EST with me, Jarek, and a new guest every week! Not this Sunday though, Christmas and all.

Thanks again to MSB for taking the time to chat. Be sure to follow him and Fable eSports on Twitter. If you’d like to join MSB and the rest of the Rivals community at Genesis 5, registration is still open for a few more days over on smashgg: https://smash.gg/G5

Share Your Story: The Rivals Community (pt. 2)

Nearly one year ago, Rivals of Aether crowned its first RCS champion, Fullstream, at Genesis 4. As one of the most high-profile events in the Platform Fighter community, Rivals’ inclusion at G4 marked the beginning of a truly remarkable year for the game. With Genesis 5 a month away, it seemed like a good time to take a moment and reflect on where Rivals has come in such a short time.

Today, we continue with Part 2 of your responses. These questions focused more on the competitive side of the game as we lead into our world finals.

What was your proudest moment in Rivals?

At their core, fighting games are about growth, about constantly aiming for a larger goal. Every player has a different goal, but your constant pursuit of success is what keeps the game growing and moving forward.

For some, it was about reaching a benchmark:

A few weeks after the full game was out my hard work paid off and I got the best time for story mode boss (36s) I was so excited I couldn’t contain myself

-Adam Thomas (daybs)

So, I’ve had this game for, no more than 2-3 months now, and I would say my proudest moment in RoA, was winning my first Ranked match. Now normally that wouldn’t be a big deal, but managing to stay ok in Puerto Rico after 66 days without any power (so no way of playing or practicing) I felt really proud of myself that I could still put up a challenge

-Jazzy

Any time I get destroyed in the first game of a set, make an effort to understand/fix what I was doing wrong and can come back to win or not lose as badly in the remaining games I’m pretty proud.

-Zak “ZephyrEagle” Eidsvoog

So it was my first time playing rivals, I had seen it thanks to Alpharad in its early stages so I got it in game preview on Xbox as a birthday present. I remember saying let me play Zetterburn cuz he seemed pretty good. I then proceeded a match or two later to 0 to death someone with a flashy Nair to Fairs to Dairs combo. I was so hype and I’d say it gave me a taste of the fun and relief this game brought. Thanks to everyone who has made this community and game what it is today.

-Robin

I’m really proud of the speedrun story mode achievement that was fun to get.

-Codiferus

My proudest moment in Rivals of Aether was finding my main, Clairen. I know it sounds sappy, but picking up Clairen was one of the best experiences I’ve had playing a fighting game. With Rivals, every character caters to a different playstyle, be it hard zoning (Absa), hard rushdown (Maypul), and a whole host of satisfying heavy characters. That satisfying feeling, when a character fits you like a glove, is a feeling I’ve only felt playing Rivals of Aether.

-Lance Smith

Scoring gold medal in Forsburn story and achievement “The Lone Rival”.
As for the online matches… I think it will be revenge on my friend that bought me the game, he beat me very hard at the beginning and settling the score was a nice one!

-CelestialDrago

Having joined the Rivals Community a bit late, I was always losing to everyone. Everyone I knew had played the game a lot more than I had. So, beating my friend who have had tens of hours of experience over me was an amazing feeling and my favorite moment to date.

-Luke Weaver

Many of our competitors thrive off the thrill of victory:

My proudest moment in Rivals of Aether is when I won my first local tournament a couple months ago, Smash Hut XX. I went in with a good mentality and was determined to win. And sure enough, I did. I only dropped one game, and it was in grand finals.

-Scootch

Proudest moment was either winning MSB Amateur Bout or seeing my improvement through winning 3/10 games with Dbrick

-STRAVoS

Proudest moment was the RCS in November. I seriously played my best during that tournament and felt so good after the win! I had won an RCS last year but it wasn’t the same since most of the top players were at Garden of Gods.
Definitely a turning point for me and I proved to myself that I can win tournaments still.

-AZCards

I won Genesis 4.

-FullStream

While many others relish the chance to test their skills against the very best:

My proudest moment in rivals was when I went head to head with Windows in a Wrastor ditto, and felt like I really stood a chance. He is a person I look up to and it meant alot to me, I could feel myself progressing.

-The Clownster

Top 8 at CEO Dreamland baby! When RoA top 8 got moved from Saturday night to Sunday morning I had already made flight arrangements to head home Sunday morning. So when I won my match to make top 8 I was like YES!! … … No!
That night the only affordable flight I could find for Monday morning was for Tulsa (2 1/2 hrs north of my car parked at my home airport) but I was very lucky to have amazing friends back home who were stoked to hear about my placement and willing to drive all the way out and back on a Monday evening to pick me up.
Receiving a medal was really really really cool.

-Solar

Taking a stock off of Ralph’s Maypul on Exhibition with Kragg

-Crim

My proudest moment in Rivals is going to the Bigger Balc. You’d probably think “so what it’s just going to a tournament” but I never get the opportunity to go to tournaments for Rivals since they aren’t close by. I got to experience a competitive Rivals environment for the first time and met some amazing people (one who became my mentor). Since then I’ve continued to play and improve with a passion I never realized I had. That passion shall never perish.

-SpykerFX

Taking one stock off Gabe at shine

-ssssnek

When I took a game off of Dolphinbrick’s fraudulent Ranno :^)

-Koji “K-Munny” Tilley

My proudest moment would probably be getting 5th at CEO Dreamland. While the people I faced might seem like getting 5th was a task that wasn’t too easy, this was my first major tournament and not only was I battling the others in my bracket, but I was also battling an immense amount of nerves that presented themselves to me. Being up on stage caused me to feel incredibly nervous but I fought through the nerves and got as far as I did. A close second proudest moment would be when I see the improvement of the people in the local scene I have created. It makes me incredibly proud to see that people are improving in Rivals and that I have created a local South Florida scene to help them with that.

-Renzo

It’s hard to pick just one moment. When Rivals released in early access, I remember running into Jtails (the well known Smash 4 player) in an exhibition match. I remember having some good matches with his Orcane and it was all on stream, and getting compliments from him and others in his stream chat. I think that’s what convinced me to stick with my Maypul. Now I have hundreds of hours on the character, and I don’t think I’ll be stopping any time soon.

-Rabspat

i beat ralph

-cake

And for one of our own, it was all about getting a chance to create something:

It’s a tie between being hired, and making Ori. Getting hired was a big thing, because Rivals was pretty much my first real gig as a freelance artist; I had just quit my normal job, and the project I was going for died immediately, so I’m glad Rivals came into my life. But the proudest moment was making and releasing Ori, because it was a big jump in quality for me. I started animation with Rivals, so seeing Ori in action, and the community’s reaction, made me realise how much I had learned and grown as an artist! And it’s also around that time that I started interacting with the community, which is a huge boost to confidence and self-realisation. So, thanks a lot to Rivals and its player for all you brought in my life. <3

-Ellian

What is your favorite part of attending Rivals events?

All in all, you’ve shown us how important this community is to you, and what makes it so special. This is why we’re so excited to see you all at Genesis 5. In addition to connecting with all these amazing community members, there are a few things that make attending a live Rivals event truly special:

Attending Rivals tournaments means meeting new players and friends or even old ones. It’s the best way to communicate with the community and enjoy learning from them. Meeting and competing against these people is my favorite part of tournaments because I won’t ever feel pressured playing against friends. A Rivals tournament environment is very friendly and is without pressure to win, just to have fun!

-SpykerFX

To money match better players knowing you’re gonna lose

-Koji “Free-Munny” Tilley

How friendly people are and the fierce competition I get. I’m always thankful when people don’t get short with me because I thought I screwed up some tourney rule like stage selecting and ask if I did, but then I didn’t, but then I feel bad for potentially inconveniencing the other player.

-Daniel Hardy

FRIENDS

-Solar

Talking to devs/friends, travelling around U.S., and learning/getting better from local play. Winning is cool too.

-FullStream

When nature decides to cooperate and allow me to actually go to them, the best part of events for me is capturing memories of everyone I can at the event through photography! The smiles, the focused looks, and all the stirring emotions I can capture in images make for amazing memories to look back on. Viewing as a spectator and making/capturing moments is just as exciting to me as actually playing and competing.

-Zam

Competing with real people. I’m not able to attend events outside of like 1-2 every summer, so actually playing locally against real people is a really nice change of pace to the 4000 matches I play against random people online who I’ve never met before.

-Prime

Thank you again to everyone who contributed to this project. Special thanks to TrentEsports for putting the articles together and combing through the hundreds of responses we received.

If you’d like to join the rest of the community at the RCS finale at Genesis 5, sign ups are still going on over at smash.gg!

Share Your Story: The Rivals Community (pt. 1)

Nearly one year ago, Rivals of Aether crowned its first RCS champion, Fullstream, at Genesis 4. As one of the most high-profile events in the Platform Fighter community, Rivals’ inclusion at G4 marked the beginning of a truly remarkable year for the game. With Genesis 5 a month away, it seemed like a good time to take a moment and reflect on where Rivals has come in such a short time.

Doing a simple retrospective would have been easy. We’ve seen new characters released, the first guest character join the roster, the game’s biggest star get signed by one of the best fighting game teams in the world, and so much more. However, at its core Rivals of Aether owes all of its success to the incredible community. As a result, we instead decided to reach out to you to share your story about Rivals. We should know better at this point, but you really blew this thing out of the water. The outpouring of love for each other, our team, and the game was almost overwhelming.

In this article, we want to share these messages with the rest of the community. Unfortunately, we could not include every message here, but please know that we read every single one and appreciate so much that you took the time to share with us.

G4-crowd

What does Rivals mean to you?

We had no idea what to expect when we asked this question. It was clear from the responses that this was a question about much more than just a video game. For some, Rivals represents a creative outlet:

A place where my creative voice could be heard.
Coming from Sm4sh, my content would often be drowned out by everything that happens with that game on a daily basis. However when I came to Rivals, I just focused on becoming a better player. One day I just got a dumb idea to act like a complete bozo in front of a camera. I literally used my phone and a red solo cup for a tripod. That video is sitting at 9k views, which is huge for Rivals of Aether content creators. The rest is history, and I’m truly grateful to be surrounded by very supportive individuals 🙂

-Brightglow

When it comes to just simply putting art up, the Rivals community has taken me in open arms. I can post art on one discord and get like 2 thumbs ups, but Rivals, they send dozens of emotes and comments about my art. It’s honestly the few times I smile to myself for more than a few minutes. I love the community so much for that.

-Michael B.

This game and its community mean a ton to me! They gave me the chance to do what I love for other people. The amount of players who look at my comics and tell me they appreciate what I’m doing is absolutely appalling and I never thought I would get as far as I did in such a short amount of time. Even if it doesn’t mean much, I have to say thank you to the game developers, the game they made, and the community supporting the game for being so wonderful to me, and I hope to make even more dumb comics that people will like in the future.
my proudest moment was Dan Fornace following me on twitter :orcasm:

-GenericFurryDude

GTX-gameplay

For others, it’s a chance to build something bigger than themselves:

The Rivals community for me has been something that represents hard work and dedication. I’m from Brazil and our scene isn’t as big as in other places. With that said, we do exist since the early access, we’ve been organizing tournaments for over a year, we’ll have our PR when the year ends and all of this has only been done because the other TOs and I truly believe in the game.
Our discord server is a place where people feel welcome and we always try to make it grow however we can.
I strongly hope that Rivals gets only bigger from here on out, this game is way too good not to.
But yeah, the Rivals community, for me, simbolizes hours of dedication, brainstorming and hope.

-LeoD

I drove 7 and a half hours just to attend a WEEKLY for this game. The friends I have made through this game are definitely worth the drive. My love for this game encourages me to form, grow, and connect local scenes. Shout outs to all of the Florida scenes!

-Koji “K-Munny” Tilley

Proud hard work, I live in a country where even the smash community is not that big and I’ve introduced people into the game to the point where we had a Rivals tournament in the biggest major here, and I hope to make it grow even bigger next year.

-Alejandro Sagre – Janledroxa

Many of you told us about how Rivals feeds your desire to compete and improve:

This game only after 30 hours is amazing. The community by itself is amazing. I went over to the discord because I wanted to get good and when I got there, I got a lot of people helping when I asked to spar people. I learned a lot in those hours and genuinely felt happy playing the game, even if I lost. Losing also for the first time in a while didn’t feel bad. While is wasn’t as great as beating someone, it made me want to get better and play more. I remember playing with a guy on exhibition who was incredibly overpowering me at first. I just felt like I couldn’t get through. We eventually started rematching each other. We found each other on discord and we began sparring each other and he kept giving me tips and tricks. I eventually took a stock after 10-15 matches and I felt so happy I had improved. It slowly became consistent and I eventually was landing quick combos on him which felt really fun. I then spent a straight 8 hours facing him till I eventually beat him. I remember it being 12 at night and I kept saying I wouldn’t sleep till I beat him. When I eventually did it felt like the greatest thing in world. I felt I accomplished something great. I slept and then played the next morning to which it was noticeable improvements. Parry reads, consistent combos, and better movement. I have to say. RoA has the best community compared to the many games I’ve played.

-Regent | Sugar

It’s competitive, but it’s the perfect mix of salt, comebacks, and skill that makes this game alone special. But when i invite friends over or go to locals, it’s nothing but fun for everyone involved.

-TheFrogMan

I remember after my first online tournament since taking the game seriously (and being able to enter without computer complications, my PC was ass back then) I did really well. I got a 2-1 win on Danzello, a 2-1 win on MurderofCroz, and a 3-0 win on Ceztellz (but he was playing secondaries so I don’t really count it personally). But what I enjoyed the most was just chatting with ZeeBee after we played and he crushed me. He was nice, and he let me know what I could work on while mentioning how huge it was I did this well at my first online event. Idk, just stuck out to me, 99% of you guys are awesome, and I hope the community grows lager overtime.

-Prime

But of course, the overwhelming response to this question wasn’t about the game itself, but about the community:

The rivals community means a group of people that when in need of help, i can always look to to further my understand and knowledge of the game, all while being friendly and nice. i have never seen a community so open to helping other players grow, and its truly something unique to this community. it is special to me for that reason.

-Dr. Osaka

It is for me a quite of a change… better change. Once I was sticking out with smash-like fangame, the community wasn’t really friendly at all. It kind of distorted the way on how I look on people now… I see Hope and a new way of fun in this community. I see some “memeish” people from time to time but they are not toxic at all, I can see a positive difference. My friend Strife (VA|Tenebrae) that bought me RoA for my birthday also shares the same view on you guys! Keep it up! Keep being peaceful and keep making the community stick together for ages!

-CelestialDrago

Coming from toxic communities, this place means so, so much to me. The kindness and strength of the community has helped me to come a lot more confident in myself, as well as get inspiration to actually start doing graphic design again.

-Austin “P a n t c h” Wynn

Grandes personas dispuestos a ayudar en cualquier problema del juego

-Gimpawer

I have met many of my best friends thanks to Rivals. It brings my friends and family together and makes us forget about all of the terrible stuff in our lives, makes us forget about our other opinions and immerse ourselves in the game . It also makes everyone equal. I’m not the fastest or strongest guy in the world, but I can fight my friends who are stronger and faster and be on equal ground with them. The Rivals community is a safe place where people appreciate me MS Paint drawings of Orcane. Everyone is supportive, nice and willing to help me improve. More people need to be apart of this community. I can always find someone to play against and they are 90% going to be one of the coolest people I’ve met. Thanks Rivals for making me feel welcome. 😉

-TJ Stiver

The rivals discords are great spots where you can meet great new people, who all share the same enjoyment of the game. and just schmooze with awesome or practice with dedicated mentors, depending on what you want. Either way, you’ll love it.

-Nasty_Crime_Boy

I’ve been playing the game since early access release in September of 2015, got roped in at a Smash local in SoCal. Didn’t really participate in the online community at all for a few months, but it’s been a pretty crazy two years. It’s weird that people recognize who you are when you’ve never seen or heard of them before, and your friends are people you looked up to two years ago, and you can casually talk and laugh with top players and even devs of one of your favorite games. It’s hard to remember sometimes, but at the end of the day we’re all just people with a similar passion for at least one thing together. Thanks to Dan, the entire dev team, and the community for giving me this fated encounter, and cheers to as long of a future as we all have together, however long that may be and whatever doors may be on the horizon as well.

-Shengon

The Rivals of Aether community is awesome. Everywhere I go, I find supportive, helpful people that love their community. This game is great, the community is great, the tournaments are great, the characters are great, and I love this game. Thank you, Rivals devs for the amazing game that you’ve given me. I’ve wasted so many hours playing it.

-Torin

The Rivals community is really quite special to me. I bought the game before Absa was released, so I have played this game for a long time, although only recently have I started truly pushing myself to become better (Just got a gc controller). I love how the game feels like a love letter to all smash bros players and how nice the community is. I’m sure the majority of the people on my friends list is from the community, and I could ask any of them for a friendly match any day and I’m sure they’d say yes. So thank you for being a sort of home.

-为西瓜

The RoA community is one of the most amazing communities I’ve ever been a part of. Everyone is so welcoming and willing to help you and be your friend. Ive had the game since when there were only 4 characters, but I never played it often. When I first saw a Rivals tournament (G4), I was amazed by what I saw and decided to start playing it a lot more competitively. MrLz, FullStream, ProDoubleSushi, Arcanine, Protagify, Turtlebox and Kenneth (most of all) are my greatest inspirations in the community. Watching them play is mesmerizing and learning from them is absolutely amazing. There are many more people who I look up to here that have helped me become a better (and happier) player both mentally and physically and I cannot thank them enough. My time playing RoA is far from over and I’m so grateful to continue to be a part of such a wonderful community! Thank you guys! 🙂

-SpykerFX

A great way to meet with a competitive yet casual and fun amounts of people online or locally. The community is a really awesome one whether it’s art or for the overly excessive amounts of great combo videos and montages you find in your feed. I’d like to thank the community for a good year since I started playing since last Christmas. It’s a fun experience and I wish to have more of it. ;3

-DaMemeChild (Joel)

One of the best parts of the rivals community in my eyes is that the devs are a part of it. Smash got tiring with it not being supported, no insight into what the devs think of the balance, and how they just feel so distant. With Rivals they’re so easy to get in contact with and they actually know what’s going on with not just the game, but the metagame and the community. When I first got the game I posted on Twitter making a joke of how badly I was getting bodied and was happy to see the Rivals Twitter encouraged me and linked me to the main and academy Discord without me even tagging them. I’ve heard Dan and Etalus commonly play online as well. It feels like even if they weren’t developers, they’d still be an active and important part of the community and that’s what I appreciate about them.

-a4955

I owe quite a lot to the Rivals community. At the time of the game’s release I was dealing with anxiety and depression, and games were my natural escape. From the very beginning, I made friends with those who streamed Rivals. It was never my intention to dedicate so much of my time to RoA, but the more I played, the more people I met, the more I felt this game had something special about it. The only reason I’ve stuck around for so long and reached the level of play I have is because of the friendships (and future marriage) I’ve obtained throughout my time playing. Rivals has changed my life for the better, and I couldn’t be happier to be a part of the community.

-Joshua “Windows” Rabow

It’s a community united by their love of competing and improving. The Rivals academy is a great example of that.

-Creatorbeats

The Rivals community means a lot. It taught me that a game’s players can always be encouraging — and that talking with developers can actually do something. Meeting people like LBO and Dan Fornace really changed my outlook on the game from “okay” to “best game”

-Tayson Jorgensen

Everyone in this community has been really fun and helpful. When I first started playing Rivals of Aether, I was of course, not very good at the game. But as time went on, it was becoming clear that I was not getting any better. Unwilling to give up, I kept entering matches with the hopes of improving in some way, or learning new tricks. Maybe a little here and there, but all in all, I was still really bad. But that all changed when someone stopped after a match and pointed me in the direction of the Rivals of the Aether Discord. There I met a vast community of players all willing to help in any way they can. From then on, I have made new friends, gotten better at the game, and enjoyed the amazing media, general, and announcement posts from the wonderful people here. I am glad to have found this place, and I hope that many others find their way here to share in that.

-Matthew Harris

I started playing rivals a year and a half ago. I usually went to Melee locals but didn’t have anyone to play against at home, so I thought playing rivals online would help me improve. But, about a year ago my brother had a bad car accident that left him severely injured. I started playing rivals every day because I couldn’t go out anymore after that. Many months later he was back home and we were living together as a family again. When things were starting to look up, I lost my father and grandfather within a week of each other. During that time I had the support of my friends, family, and even the rivals community. Everyone put up with the stupid things I would say and even make me laugh from time to time. I love playing Rivals with you guys.

-Vaporeon

The RoA community means so much to me, my life simply would not be the same without it. It’s allowed me to travel the world, achieve the impossible childhood dream of being a sponsored gamer and meet people that I’m now happy to call my friends. Thanks for putting this amazing game together guys, you’re awesome!

-Eu | Tom

Who are your favorite people in the Rivals community and why?

No great community would be complete without its share of big personalities. From top players to content creators and everything in between, you shared with us all the people who make this community shine!

Alpharad: His videos on rivals are what really got me first exposed and interested in the game. I checked it out and fell in love with Orcane (I mean, who didn’t) who eventually became my main. I recently came back to the game (once again thanks to Alpha’s videos on the new DLC)after a hiatus and have fallen in love with the game all over again.

-Paleo99

My favorite people in the community are the ones who encourage new players to continue playing. The ones who will stop being serious in an exhibition match just to try and teach their opponent something new. The ones who mentor others. The ones who help answer questions. All of the people like that are a big reason why many of the newer players haven’t given up yet, and it’s a big part of what will keep our scene alive in years to come.

-Zam

Windows and Fullstream, and Bumble for a very different reason. The reason I like Windows and Fullstream is because I really look up to them and the amount of time and dedication they put into getting better at the game while simultaneously helping to grow the community by exposing outsiders to this game. I like Bumble because he’s a pretty good shitposter and he’s chubby.

-The Clownster

Slime Mage has single handedly done so much for EU that I can’t believe he’s not getting paid for it. Between having a hand in organizing offline tourneys, streaming and restreaming online tourneys, uploading vods and combo videos, and managing the EU discord, he’s been a real model citizen who deserves a lot of kudos. He’s had a helping hand in every corner of the EU online scene. The fact that he’s also really good at the game and an all round nice dude is, like, the slimy icing on top.

-Age

Simple, Bumblebomb and Nebtune, best commentators for RoA in my opinion ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

-Jazzy

All the Aus top players are dope dudes. Neeson, Callisto, SNC, Jamwa, Billy and Dave are all dank AF.
Kaos is a **** homie as well, chilling with him at Shine was dope. Just talking about fine food, pressures of international tournaments and just generally feeling sorry for everyone living in America. It was great.
Speaking of America, my trip there woulda been grim if not for a few dudes, mainly Toko and MSB. I was with Toko almost 24/7 for a month, and not once was he anything less than dope. Also how can you say no to MSB’s Jersey boy accent? (Spoilers, you can’t)
Other honorable USA mentions are: Risky, Sama~senpai , Turq, Niki, Dbrick, Adi Daddy, Hunter and Mr n Mrs Fullstream.
Also last up is the Devs. Even *if* the game was garbo tier, Trev, Etalus n Dan are all made chill dudes. Some of the best parts of SmashCon were trashing Dan n Trevor on a Melee (then getting rekt in PM by Trev) and having some KBBQ with George n Trev. I’ll see you lads at BAM10.

-Gabe

Sushi has been one of my favorite players since I first ran into him on twitch while looking for streamers to play, he was really good and his overall attitude was great. Was fun finally being able to meet him and play in person over Thanksgiving break.

-Razgriz

RiskyCB is my favorite person in the rivals community because he’s a beta tester and a real buddy of a streamer. I’m glad he made it into G5 through AZ’s funding!!

-ZeeBee

Thanks again to everyone who decided to share with us and the community. We had so many responses to this that we’ll have to wrap up tomorrow with part 2. Make sure you come back for more stories on our proudest moments and favorite events.

Patch 1.2.4 Notes

We’re releasing a small patch today that’s a partner to the larger 1.2.3 from last week. Since this mainly involves optimization and some bugfixes, we’re avoiding most of the fanfare of a normal patch. You can find the full notes and leave comments below as always.

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  • Respawn time before you can leave the platform increased from 1.5 seconds to 2 seconds.
    We’re tired of seeing characters like Zetterburn and Forsburn get punished for landing super deep kills. Our original concern with a long respawn time was related to characters like Etalus armoring during the down time. Since players can do that anyway, we feel comfortable extending the respawn time.
  • Unique victory screen backgrounds have been added for Ranno and Clairen.
  • Some audio files and memory processes have been optimized.
  • Players can no longer buffer a reverse Dtilt or Utilt after a whiffed jab.
  • Releasing left or right will no longer clear the dash buffer.
    While this fixed a bug with keyboard controls, it made buffering 1 frame dash inputs almost impossible.
  • Players can no longer dash during the first 3 frames of crouching.
    This is a new fix made to prevent the bug that made crouching take 3 extra frames when using keyboard controls.

Bugfixes

  • Assorted visual bugs (most appearing on pause) have been cleaned up.
  • Two Ranno tongue/stage related crashes have been fixed.
  • Fixed a bug with the flinch state that made flinching Kragg’s Pillar by crouch cancelling last longer than it should have.
  • Speed is now capped on Absa’s Uspecial when entering parry stun to prevent shenanigans:

Training Mode

  • Setting damage in training mode options now sets player damage as well as CPU damage.

Maypul

  • Nair hit lockout time has been shortened to the minimum value. This is to prevent Lily from missing her attack when Maypul Nairs someone right next to her.
  • The knockback angles for Uair 1 and 2 have been reverted back from 70 > 60.
  • Uair hits 1 and 2 now have double scaling only when Uair is performed after tethering.
    Our goal is to keep tether Uair good while preventing it from being 100% guaranteed. This change introduces a 50/50 on DI by allowing opponents to escape tether Uair combos. but doing so leaves them open to being KOed by tether Nair combos.

Clairen

  • Energy field lifetime reduced from 15 seconds > 10 seconds.
    In a previous update, the lifetime was accidentally changed from 10 to 15 seconds. This is just reverting that change to the previous state Clairen was released in.

Etalus

  • Etalus Dash Attack can no longer destroy projectiles
    This attack was designed to be inversely disjointed and lose to projectiles. However in scenarios where Etalus and the projectile are moving at the right speeds, dash attack could break projectiles. We decided to make this work as intended and prevent Etalus dash attack from ever breaking projectiles.

What does the Rivals community mean to you?

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As we make our way to the end of a year full of firsts for our community, now’s the perfect time to reflect on what Rivals means to us. Over the next few days, we’ll be giving a number of different prompts and asking for people to share their proudest moments, favorite memories, and other Rivals stories here.

New prompts will be added each day so keep an eye out for a topic that speaks to you. After we’ve heard from everyone we’ll choose some to put together in an article and share them with the world.

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