Editing Randomness
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*[[Abra]] will get close to an opponent, teleporting with them to a random spot, often times off stage. | *[[Abra]] will get close to an opponent, teleporting with them to a random spot, often times off stage. | ||
== | ==Randomness in competitive play== | ||
Some randomness that can be controlled and/or has little impact on gameplay is considered acceptable (if undesirable) in competitive play. For instance, Star and Screen KOs occur randomly and cannot be disabled, so the mechanic is always active. However, excessive, uncontrollable randomness is usually considered degenerative to competitive play. The reasoning is that if randomness has too much of an impact on gameplay, the match could be decided by luck instead of the skill of both players, which is not considered fair or balanced. Therefore, to prevent people from winning by being the luckier player and to ensure the more skilled player wins, steps are taken to limit the effect of randomness in competitive play. These steps include turning off all items, using [[stage striking]] instead of random selection to choose the stage for the first game in a [[tournament]] set, and banning stages whose random events have too large of an impact on gameplay within the stage (such as [[WarioWare, Inc.]]). | Some randomness that can be controlled and/or has little impact on gameplay is considered acceptable (if undesirable) in competitive play. For instance, Star and Screen KOs occur randomly and cannot be disabled, so the mechanic is always active. However, excessive, uncontrollable randomness is usually considered degenerative to competitive play. The reasoning is that if randomness has too much of an impact on gameplay, the match could be decided by luck instead of the skill of both players, which is not considered fair or balanced. Therefore, to prevent people from winning by being the luckier player and to ensure the more skilled player wins, steps are taken to limit the effect of randomness in competitive play. These steps include turning off all items, using [[stage striking]] instead of random selection to choose the stage for the first game in a [[tournament]] set, and banning stages whose random events have too large of an impact on gameplay within the stage (such as [[WarioWare, Inc.]]). | ||
==Trivia== | ==Trivia== | ||