Editing Tournament

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Single elimination tournaments are the least common of the four formats for ''Super Smash Bros.'' and video games in general. Despite this, tournaments sometimes use them for side events like [[crew battle]]s to save time. Despite single elimination's flaws, [[Tournament legal (DSB)|Japanese ''Smash 64'' tournaments]] often use the single elimination format, even in large, national tournaments. Some early ''Melee'' tournaments used single elimination.  
Single elimination tournaments are the least common of the four formats for ''Super Smash Bros.'' and video games in general. Despite this, tournaments sometimes use them for side events like [[crew battle]]s to save time. Despite single elimination's flaws, [[Tournament legal (DSB)|Japanese ''Smash 64'' tournaments]] often use the single elimination format, even in large, national tournaments. Some early ''Melee'' tournaments used single elimination.  


In a single elimination bracket, players are arranged into a hierarchical structure where matches are played between two entrants; the winner advances to play another player the next round, and the loser is eliminated from the tournament. The player who wins the very last match of the bracket, after all other entrants have been eliminated, is the winner of the event, and the person who loses the final match finishes in second place. Most sports tournaments (like the [[Wikipedia:NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Championship|NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Championship]]) use a single elimination format.
In a single elimination bracket, players are arranged into an hierarchical structure where matches are played between two entrants; the winner advances to play another player the next round, and the loser is eliminated from the tournament. The player who wins the very last match of the bracket, after all other entrants have been eliminated, is the winner of the event, and the person who loses the final match finishes in second place. Most sports tournaments (like the [[Wikipedia:NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Championship|NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Championship]]) use a single elimination format.


Single elimination brackets are often described in terms of the number of entrants playing in the bracket. Because half the remaining players are eliminated during each round of the bracket, the total number of rounds is based on the [[Wikipedia:logarithm|base-2 logarithm]] of the entrant count (rounded upwards). A three-round bracket is used for 8 players, four rounds for 9 to 16 players, five rounds for 17 to 32 players, and so on. A bracket's ''size'' is usually defined as the smallest power of two that is greater than or equal to the number of entrants. Thus, a bracket with 47 entrants is referred to as a ''64-man bracket'', because 64 is the smallest power of two which is greater than 47. The size of the bracket also reflects the total number of matches throughout the entire bracket: for an ''n''-size bracket, ''n-1'' matches must be played in total.
Single elimination brackets are often described in terms of the number of entrants playing in the bracket. Because half the remaining players are eliminated during each round of the bracket, the total number of rounds is based on the [[Wikipedia:logarithm|base-2 logarithm]] of the entrant count (rounded upwards). A three-round bracket is used for 8 players, four rounds for 9 to 16 players, five rounds for 17 to 32 players, and so on. A bracket's ''size'' is usually defined as the smallest power of two that is greater than or equal to the number of entrants. Thus, a bracket with 47 entrants is referred to as a ''64-man bracket'', because 64 is the smallest power of two which is greater than 47. The size of the bracket also reflects the total number of matches throughout the entire bracket: for an ''n''-size bracket, ''n-1'' matches must be played in total.

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