Editing Smasher:Hungrybox
From SmashWiki, the Super Smash Bros. wiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
The edit can be undone. Please check the comparison below to verify that this is what you want to do, and then publish the changes below to finish undoing the edit.
| Latest revision | Your text | ||
| Line 108: | Line 108: | ||
Finally, throughout his career, Hungrybox also became notorious for going to the final game against many prominent ''Ultimate'' players. Notable examples include going to game 3 against {{Sm|Salem}} at Smash Conference United and going to game 5 against {{Sm|Miya|p=Honshu}} at {{Trn|Cirque Du CFL 3}}. | Finally, throughout his career, Hungrybox also became notorious for going to the final game against many prominent ''Ultimate'' players. Notable examples include going to game 3 against {{Sm|Salem}} at Smash Conference United and going to game 5 against {{Sm|Miya|p=Honshu}} at {{Trn|Cirque Du CFL 3}}. | ||
During the [[COVID-19 pandemic]], Hungrybox took an active role in streaming and hosting online events, beginning with {{Trn|The Box}}, a massive online event that went on to become the largest ''Smash'' event of all time when including DQs. He then began hosting weeklies and monthly events alongside {{Team|Team Liquid}}, aptly titled "{{Trn|The Box: Juice Box}}" and "{{Trn|The Box: Lunch Box}}", and The Box eventually became one of the largest tournament series in the online metagame. Though the series eventually died out with the return of offline competitive play in 2021, it was eventually revived after Team Liquid partnered with Coinbase to form {{Trn|The Coinbox}}, which went on to become the premier online series during the post-pandemic metagame, with many of the game's best players regularly competing in the event, especially {{Sm|Sparg0}} and {{Sm|Sonix}}, and the series often being compared to Japan's [[Smashmate]]. His efforts in hosting online events | During the [[COVID-19 pandemic]], Hungrybox took an active role in streaming and hosting online events, beginning with {{Trn|The Box}}, a massive online event that went on to become the largest ''Smash'' event of all time when including DQs. He then began hosting weeklies and monthly events alongside {{Team|Team Liquid}}, aptly titled "{{Trn|The Box: Juice Box}}" and "{{Trn|The Box: Lunch Box}}", and The Box eventually became one of the largest tournament series in the online metagame. Though the series eventually died out with the return of offline competitive play in 2021, it was eventually revived after Team Liquid partnered with Coinbase to form {{Trn|The Coinbox}}, which went on to become the premier online series during the post-pandemic metagame, with many of the game's best players regularly competing in the event, especially {{Sm|Sparg0}} and {{Sm|Sonix}}, and the series often being compared to Japan's [[Smashmate]]. His efforts in hosting online events was lauded by many in the ''Ultimate'' community, and helped him become a notable figurehead in the community despite being a ''Melee'' player. | ||
Content-wise, Hungrybox notably performed a "90-day ''Ultimate'' detox", where he attributed his performance decline in ''Melee'' to also playing ''Ultimate'', and chose to drop ''Ultimate'' for 90 days to see if his ''Melee'' results would improve. Hungrybox especially hoped to win {{Trn|Supernova 2024}}, which took place at the end of the detox. Ultimately, the effects of the detox remained inconclusive, though Hungrybox failed to win a single notable event during this time, including Supernova 2024. | Content-wise, Hungrybox notably performed a "90-day ''Ultimate'' detox", where he attributed his performance decline in ''Melee'' to also playing ''Ultimate'', and chose to drop ''Ultimate'' for 90 days to see if his ''Melee'' results would improve. Hungrybox especially hoped to win {{Trn|Supernova 2024}}, which took place at the end of the detox. Ultimately, the effects of the detox remained inconclusive, though Hungrybox failed to win a single notable event during this time, including Supernova 2024. | ||