Hello! I've been around here for about 3/4 of a year (with frequent posting for the past half-year or so) and have seen quite a few people join, so I was just wondering: how did everyone get into competitive Smash?
I guess if I'm asking for stories, it's only fair I give you mine. I'll spoiler it in case you don't want to kill your finger while scrolling down the page or in case you just don't care about me.
Now that I've spent 45 minutes writing out what brought me to competitive Melee, I want to hear how everyone else got where they are today.
I guess if I'm asking for stories, it's only fair I give you mine. I'll spoiler it in case you don't want to kill your finger while scrolling down the page or in case you just don't care about me.
My Smash story all began when I was about 6. In 2003, I unwrapped my brand new copy of Super Smash Bros. Melee to much confusion. At that point in time, I only had a PS2, GBC, and GBA. Since those were the consoles I had, I figured someone bought me a game for the wrong console until I opened my GameCube about a minute later. I played Melee like crazy ever since I opened it and have never stopped. Right out of the box, I decided that my main was going to be Pikachu (Pokemon Yellow and Silver were two of my favorite games at the time) and I was gonna be the best Pikachu in the world.
Fast-forward about a month and I had unlocked all of the characters, including a red-haired swordsman named Roy. Because my hair is red, Roy looked cool, and the people across the street said he was the best character in the game (I didn't pick up on the fact they were joking until years later), I naturally switched to Roy as my main.
Then, in early 2008, I ran into a significant problem. I had gone on Smash Bros Dojo! every day to get updates on Brawl, hoping that Roy would somehow work his way into the game. I was disappointed to find that after the last character for the roster was named, Roy was nowhere to be found. Because of this, I deduced that I would need to switch mains completely in order to practice for Brawl. This was when I switched over to Falco because I had played Star Fox 64 and loved the blue bird's sarcastic tone. This was also the time I learned about basic techniques like L-Cancelling, Wavedashing, etc. Unfortunately, I never actually used these in play as I didn't need them to beat my friends.
For the next 2 years, I played Brawl pretty often but never stopped playing Melee. Brawl just felt slow and unresponsive compared to Melee, even at a casual level. In 2011, I started talking to one of my friends at school about Melee. Her brother @
RaphaelRobo
plays Melee competitively and knowing I was the best in my friend group (by far), I said that I might be able to beat him.
Freshman year in High School (2012-13) is when I started to get into competitive Melee. I knew and had read about the Gannondorf vs Falco matchup, had been practicing and 4-stocking level 9 CPUs, and was ready to fight when he came home from college. When he came downstairs, he hadn't played in a couple months, so I thought it was gonna be an easy fight (even though he knew how to use and implement Wavelanding, L-Canceling, Dashdancing, etc.)...
I got 3-Stocked.
I sat there shocked, taking in the fact that I wasn't the best in the world. I didn't know what a set was at the time, so I just shook his hand and said "Good game". After this occurred, he brought me and one of my friends upstairs (at the time, my friend mained Kirby in Brawl and didn't have Melee) and showed us PM 2.5. While my friend was groveling over the fact Kirby wasn't in the game, I was astounded that people made Brawl feel like I thought it should have in the first place.
After this whole event, I went home and practiced like crazy. I wanted to get better at this game. I couldn't believe that a game I had played and loved for the past 9 years could be so fluid and complex without me even knowing about it. About half a year later, a sax in our marching band (maining Mario) decided to challenge me to Melee, stating that he was superior. I went over to his house and he had a beautiful home theater.
The only problem was the video was run through a bunch of boxes, it was being projected, and I was using a Wavebird. The match was a rollfest because I couldn't do any tech with that lag, in addition to the fact that while I could do all of the tech in training mode, it didn't translate to an actual match because I didn't have anyone good to play against that I knew. He won by one stock, stated that he was the supreme ruler of Melee, and then I challenged him to come over to my house (I've always had a CRT that I've gamed on.) He accepted and then lost.
This starts the period where me, the Kirby main (who switched to Marth as soon as we started getting serious), the sax player (switched to Luigi, then Marth, and is now a Fox main), and another friend (started out with Ganondorf, then went Falcon, then went Fox) started getting serious about the game. We also figured out that three other players that were in our marching band (a Marth/Shiek main, a Shiek main, and a Roy/Pichu/Falco-When-He-Needs-To-Be-Serious main) were better than us and this started the group of friends I'm currently in.
To speed along the process, significant events were a Melee and Project M crew battle between Apex and Holly Springs (we had to add a person who only played PM and a person with little Smash experience because they wanted 7 people, so we lost) and we all got much better in general by fighting each-other frequently.
Then, on September 13th, 2014, I went to my first tournament. The whole group went (plus one of the Shiek main's friends and another senior from our Marching Band) and we were all pumped. We all ended up losing early, but we had a good time, played lots of friendlies, and learned a lot. Two months later, I decided to change mains to Falcon and have rarely looked back.
Now, for the slitghtly tragic part. Because our weekly (Stuff N' Such) is on Sundays and I go to both morning and evening services, I can't ever enter the tournament because I'm not ever sure it will be over before 5:30. I will eventually make it to a Stuff N' Such, but I'm not quite sure when or how. Probably when I get my own car...
Fast-forward about a month and I had unlocked all of the characters, including a red-haired swordsman named Roy. Because my hair is red, Roy looked cool, and the people across the street said he was the best character in the game (I didn't pick up on the fact they were joking until years later), I naturally switched to Roy as my main.
Then, in early 2008, I ran into a significant problem. I had gone on Smash Bros Dojo! every day to get updates on Brawl, hoping that Roy would somehow work his way into the game. I was disappointed to find that after the last character for the roster was named, Roy was nowhere to be found. Because of this, I deduced that I would need to switch mains completely in order to practice for Brawl. This was when I switched over to Falco because I had played Star Fox 64 and loved the blue bird's sarcastic tone. This was also the time I learned about basic techniques like L-Cancelling, Wavedashing, etc. Unfortunately, I never actually used these in play as I didn't need them to beat my friends.
For the next 2 years, I played Brawl pretty often but never stopped playing Melee. Brawl just felt slow and unresponsive compared to Melee, even at a casual level. In 2011, I started talking to one of my friends at school about Melee. Her brother @

Freshman year in High School (2012-13) is when I started to get into competitive Melee. I knew and had read about the Gannondorf vs Falco matchup, had been practicing and 4-stocking level 9 CPUs, and was ready to fight when he came home from college. When he came downstairs, he hadn't played in a couple months, so I thought it was gonna be an easy fight (even though he knew how to use and implement Wavelanding, L-Canceling, Dashdancing, etc.)...
I got 3-Stocked.
I sat there shocked, taking in the fact that I wasn't the best in the world. I didn't know what a set was at the time, so I just shook his hand and said "Good game". After this occurred, he brought me and one of my friends upstairs (at the time, my friend mained Kirby in Brawl and didn't have Melee) and showed us PM 2.5. While my friend was groveling over the fact Kirby wasn't in the game, I was astounded that people made Brawl feel like I thought it should have in the first place.
After this whole event, I went home and practiced like crazy. I wanted to get better at this game. I couldn't believe that a game I had played and loved for the past 9 years could be so fluid and complex without me even knowing about it. About half a year later, a sax in our marching band (maining Mario) decided to challenge me to Melee, stating that he was superior. I went over to his house and he had a beautiful home theater.
The only problem was the video was run through a bunch of boxes, it was being projected, and I was using a Wavebird. The match was a rollfest because I couldn't do any tech with that lag, in addition to the fact that while I could do all of the tech in training mode, it didn't translate to an actual match because I didn't have anyone good to play against that I knew. He won by one stock, stated that he was the supreme ruler of Melee, and then I challenged him to come over to my house (I've always had a CRT that I've gamed on.) He accepted and then lost.
This starts the period where me, the Kirby main (who switched to Marth as soon as we started getting serious), the sax player (switched to Luigi, then Marth, and is now a Fox main), and another friend (started out with Ganondorf, then went Falcon, then went Fox) started getting serious about the game. We also figured out that three other players that were in our marching band (a Marth/Shiek main, a Shiek main, and a Roy/Pichu/Falco-When-He-Needs-To-Be-Serious main) were better than us and this started the group of friends I'm currently in.
To speed along the process, significant events were a Melee and Project M crew battle between Apex and Holly Springs (we had to add a person who only played PM and a person with little Smash experience because they wanted 7 people, so we lost) and we all got much better in general by fighting each-other frequently.
Then, on September 13th, 2014, I went to my first tournament. The whole group went (plus one of the Shiek main's friends and another senior from our Marching Band) and we were all pumped. We all ended up losing early, but we had a good time, played lots of friendlies, and learned a lot. Two months later, I decided to change mains to Falcon and have rarely looked back.
Now, for the slitghtly tragic part. Because our weekly (Stuff N' Such) is on Sundays and I go to both morning and evening services, I can't ever enter the tournament because I'm not ever sure it will be over before 5:30. I will eventually make it to a Stuff N' Such, but I'm not quite sure when or how. Probably when I get my own car...
Now that I've spent 45 minutes writing out what brought me to competitive Melee, I want to hear how everyone else got where they are today.