Smasher:Miya (Honshu)
| Miya "ミーヤー" | |
|---|---|
| Character info | |
| Smash 4 main | Donkey Kong |
| Ultimate main | Mr. Game & Watch |
| Other Ultimate character | Steve |
| Retired Ultimate characters | Simon, Bayonetta, Joker |
| Team info | |
| Sponsor(s) | FENNEL |
| Former sponsor(s) | flat-gaming |
| Rankings and results info | |
| Most recent ranking | |
| Best historical ranking | |
| Best tournament result | |
| Personal and other info | |
| Birth date | |
| Location | Tokyo, Kantō |
Miya (ミーヤー) is a Super Smash Bros. Ultimate Mr. Game & Watch player with a Steve secondary from Hyōgo Prefecture, Kansai who is currently residing in Tokyo, Kantō. He is considered to be the greatest Mr. Game & Watch player of all time, one of the greatest Ultimate players of all time, and one of the greatest Japanese players of all time; he was especially known for being the second-best player in the world in both halves of the 2024 season. His breakout tournament was winning Kagaribi 8, which made him the first and only Mr. Game & Watch player to win a major. Since then, he has won over 20 other majors, the most major wins out of any player in Ultimate, and is the fifth player to win a major in each of Ultimate's three superregions. He was also ranked 1st on the 26th SP Smashmate season and is the first player to achieve a rating of over 2,600 on Smashmate.
In Super Smash Bros. for Wii U, he was a Donkey Kong main. He won a set over bt.yamato.
Playstyle[edit]
Miya's playstyle is characterized by his precision, consistency, and offensive pressure and advantage state. A player with incredibly mastery of his character's movement, Miya rarely ever sits still or holds shield, only using shield to find parries or instantly counterattack. His knowledge of his character allows him to make use of every single move in Mr. Game & Watch's kit, allowing him to have creative setups to further his advantage. Said advantage state is at the forefront of why Miya is so feared, while Mr. Game & Watch doesn't have the most true combos in the game, Miya needs only a single hit to keep his opponents in terrible positions and dominate with stage control. Whether that be endless juggling with up-air, looped nair combos, or offstage edge-guarding, building damage on opponents is of little concern to Miya.
While Miya seemingly is always throwing out moves, he notably is often not trying to actually hit his opponent, but rather use Mr. Game & Watch's disjointed hitboxes to box and trap his opponents. This trap-like and counterattack-based playstyle has labeled him as more of a defensive player, even though he is less reliant on shielding or camping than other players.
Taking advantage of Mr. Game & Watch's floatiness, Miya fearlessly goes for deep edgeguards using back aerial offstage and is able to make it back thanks to up-b's high vertical distance coupled with the ability to airdodge out of it. In niche situations he uses down aerial and and up-b to intercept exploitable recoveries before using back aerial to finish the job. This gives Miya a threatening presence offstage as he fiercely edgeguards his opponents to the point of where they're unable to recover. While Miya's offstage edgeguarding is extremely effective, he is more well-known for his ledge-trapping, able to force his opponents into checkmate scenarios with Chef, burning their invincibility so as to take a kill with forward tilt or back air, or else simply rack up more damage with nair. It is not uncommon for him to force his opponents to play entire stocks on the ledge.
When the time calls for it, Miya doesn't hesitate to use Judge, a move that Mr. Game & Watch players seldom use, to take an early stock should he get a 9. This has been successful in sets against players such as Hurt or Glutonny.
However, while Miya's style is oppressively effective against almost all players, he is notably steadfast in his strategy and has difficulty when his opponents are able to adapt to his habits or face characters that neutralize Mr. Game & Watch's unique strengths, leading his playstyle to become panicked and erratic rather than precise and overwhelming. When faced with difficult matchups like Zero Suit Samus, Miya is more prone to counterpicking to his highly effective Steve than sticking it out with Game & Watch.
Tournament history[edit]
Smashmate warrior[edit]
Miya's competitive career began in Smash 4 playing Donkey Kong. However, he only had one recorded offline appearance, where he placed 65th at Sumabato 27. As such, in the offline metagame, Miya received little to no recognition. This trend carried over into the early metagame of Ultimate, though Miya's performances at his earliest events were better than his sole performance in Smash 4. Despite his notoriety with Mr. Game & Watch later on in his career, Miya actually began his Ultimate career playing Joker, Bayonetta, and the Belmonts at these offline events.
Things were different on Japan's online ladder Smashmate. Though he likely participated in prior seasons, he was first ranked on the ladder in Season 16 of Smash 4, where he was ranked 67th with a score of 1,844. He remained mostly active on the ladder in Ultimate and was first ranked 5th in Season 5, but for the following seasons he was never ranked higher than that, though he often ranked in the top 20. This changed during the COVID-19 pandemic, when online play became the norm for the next year, giving Miya greater exposure to Japan's competitive scene. As such, Miya gradually became a stronger player, and eventually surpassed 2,500 on Smashmate in Season 19, becoming the second player to ever surpass that milestone; he was ultimately ranked 2nd that season. The player who first scored above 2,500 and who was also the player ranked above him was acola, sparking a rivalry between the two.
From then on, Miya remained in the top 8 on Smashmate, often ranking in the top 3. He achieved his first-ever 1st place ranking in Season 21, and has since scored above 2,600 on the ladder, becoming the only player to ever do so.
First major win and becoming Japan's second prodigy[edit]
With his prowess on the Smashmate ladder, it wouldn't take long for Miya to establish himself in the offline scene as well, though very few expected how quickly it would take Miya to do so. His first notable event in the post-pandemic metagame was the Shikoku edition of Maesuma Offline. Though acola was also present at the event, he was upset early in bracket and eventually fell to 4th. This gave Miya an opportunity to make a strong impression at his first notable offline event, which was exactly what he did: aside from a game 5 set against Yn, Miya was able to cruise through the event, defeating Asimo twice along the way, to win his first offline event.
While an impressive victory, Miya's performance at Maesuma Offline was quickly overshadowed a few weeks later. Though a COVID-19 outbreak forced many players to drop out, Kagaribi 8 remained a major with many strong legacy talent in attendance, several of which were also major winners. As such, many players were shocked to see Miya, the 24th seed at the event, win the entire event without dropping a single set, in a run where Miya defeated ProtoBanham, Shuton, and Abadango twice. Not only did this run make Miya one of the lowest seeds to win an event, but it also became the first major won by a Mr. Game & Watch. The latter was an especially notable achievement, as the best Mr. Game & Watch player at that time, Maister, had repeatedly failed to win a major. Therefore, this performance made Miya an immediate contender for Maister's title.
Unfortunately, in what would become a repeating pattern with Miya, he followed up the best performance of his season with the worst performances of his season, as he fell to 49th at Maesuma TOP 9 after losing to Masha and Kome, then fell to 17th at Sumabato SP 30 after losing to Jogibu and Shirayuki. These performances, taking place over the course of two months, led many North American players to question whether Miya's victory at Kagaribi 8, and thus Mr. Game & Watch's first major victory, was a fluke.
It wouldn't be until Maesuma TOP 10, three months after Miya's first major victory, where he would rebound. After falling to Yoshidora in top 16, Miya made an incredible Losers run which included defeating Hero, Yaura, and Yoshidora in the runback, before bowing out at 2nd after losing to acola in Grand Finals. He then followed it up with several strong superregional performances, which includes winning KOWLOON 3 defeating both Kome and kameme twice and winning his first overseas event at Apex 2022. These strong performances culminated in his victory at Seibugeki 12, where after falling to Losers incredibly early to Tsubaki, Miya would once again go on an incredible Losers run, winning a total of 13 sets and defeating kameme, Repo, and Umeki twice. These performances not only made Miya notorious for his long Losers runs, but also challenged the skepticism from the previous months.
Though he had qualified for the Smash World Tour 2022, the event was controversially cancelled. As such, Miya was invited to the Scuffed World Tour, which was the final event of his season. Although he did not place highly, he was nevertheless able to make a noticeable impact. After 3-0ing Onin, Miya faced off against Sparg0 in a highly-anticipated set, especially as Sparg0 was known for being great against the Mr. Game & Watch matchup thanks to his record over Maister. Miya was able to prove his prowess by going up 2-1, forcing Sparg0 to switch off his Cloud and go Pyra and Mythra instead, where he ultimately defeated Miya 3-2. Though Miya ultimately bowed out at 9th after losing another game 5 to Glutonny, he was able to showcase that he had the skills to challenge the best players in the game.
With these strong performances in spite of his late start to the season and small slump, Miya was ranked 17th on the half-year UltRank 2022 and 20th on the full-year OrionRank 2022, the highest-ranking player who did not appear on the OrionRank Mid-Year 2022. This was not enough for Miya, however, and he wanted to not only prove that he was the best player in Japan, but one of the best in the world.
Becoming one of the best[edit]
Miya began the 2023 season with a decent performance at JAPAN 24, where he debut his new secondary Steve to mixed success, as it resulted him losing a set against Futari no Kiwami Ah~!; however, it did see a strong performance against KEN, forcing him off his Sonic and instead to switch to Sephiroth. Ultimately, Miya placed 2nd the event, losing to acola. The following few months, however, led players to once again question Miya's standing at the highest level of competitive play. His major performances in the first two months of the season were lackluster for a contender for Japan's throne, as he placed 13th at Umebura SP 9, losing to Atelier and DIO, before following it up with a devastating 49th at Kagaribi 9, losing to Australian invader Sriks and Jagaimo. Though he had a few superregional wins during this time, he also had several underperformances, losing to Jogibu and Tsubaki for 3rd at Toyota Grand Slum 13 and being double-eliminated by Yaura at Okasuma SP 11 in a matchup that favored Mr. Game & Watch.
Fortunately, Miya was able to turn his season around by winning Maesuma TOP 11, where he was finally able to defeat acola. These fortunate events ended Miya's slump, and for the rest of the year, Miya placed no lower than 7th at every event he attended. This included winning 9 other majors and supermajors throughout the LumiRank 2023 season, the most out of any other player. The second half of the year especially had Miya's strongest performances yet, as he not only won his first P-tier event at Kagaribi 11, but he was able to overcome his bracket demon acola, and in-turn become a small bracket demon for acola: though their record in the first half of the year was solidly in acola's favor (1-6), Miya was able to catch up to their record in the second half of the year (3-2 for the second half of the year, with Miya winning their final three encounters of the season).
Miya also traveled rather frequently in the second half of the year, and his results internationally were just as incredible. This included his run at Super Smash Con 2023, where despite being sent into Losers early, he was able to perform an incredible Losers run, eliminating Shuton 3-2, Light 3-1, Tweek 3-2, DDee 3-0, KEN 3-1, and Zomba 3-1 before losing to Dabuz yet again to place 3rd; his victory at Rise 'N Grind 2023, where he was able to win his runback against Glutonny; and his 2nd-place finish at Port Priority 8, where he further improved his record against America's best players. These performances, which all took place in the second half of the season, led many to believe that, had the LumiRank 2023 season been split into two distinct seasons, Miya would have been ranked first in the second half of the year; alternate global ranking LunaRank Zenith notably did just that.
As for the full year, Miya unfortunately did not have a great argument to be ranked first. The first two months of Miya's season still remained a notable stain on an otherwise-pristine season, as it meant that Miya not only had two major placements outside the top 8, but also two sub-top 150 losses (Futari no Kiwami Ah~! and Sriks). In addition, though Miya was able to catch up on his record against acola in the second half of the year, their record for the overall season remained heavily in acola's favor (4-8). Finally, Miya also had a losing record against the two other contenders for the throne, Sparg0 (0-2) and Sonix (1-3). Conversely, all three players had won several majors throughout the year, with all three also having at least one P-tier win. As such, Miya's negatives greatly dragged down the rest of the season when compared to the other three players, while their strengths were somewhat similar overall, if not just a bit better for Miya. This led him to rank 3rd on the LumiRank Mid-Year 2023 and, following an explosion of strong performances from Sonix, rank 4th on the full-year ranking.
Regardless, Miya was able to establish himself as one of the best players in the post-pandemic metagame. Alongside acola, Sonix, and Sparg0, the three players were able to win ever major in the second half of the year where one of them was in attendance except Tera. Their strength were especially proven at the final big event of the season, Watch The Throne, where all four placed in the top four at the event. Due to their prowess compared to the rest of the competition, players began referring to these four players as the "Four Horsemen".
Fight for the throne[edit]
2024 was an even better year for Miya in spite of the fall of the "Four Horseman" moniker almost immediately after it was coined. This fall was the result of acola's lower attendance, Sparg0's inconsistency, and Sonix's repeated 2nd-place finishes, leading to many other players outside the Horsemen winning majors. In contrast, Miya continued to dominate most majors he attended: in the LumiRank 2024.1 season, Miya won a total of 7 majors, more than double the player with the second-most major wins (Hurt with 3). Among the seven wins was the Golden Week event Kagaribi 12, which was not only the largest event of the season, but also the largest Smash event in Japan. With these results, many players believed Miya had a great chance at being ranked 1st for the season.
Countering these positives, however, were some underperformances that were scattered throughout Miya's season. Though he was able to win the largest event of the season, Miya performed horribly in the second-largest event of the season, GENESIS X, where he was upset by Raflow 2-3 before eventually being eliminated by Zackray 0-3 for 17th, his worst major performance since Kagaribi 9. Miya's other two American events were just as underwhelming. Though he placed 2nd at Litvitational 2, it came with two losses to Light, a player he had defeated twice before. The following event, Cirque Du CFL 3, saw Miya fall to SHADIC 1-3 before being eliminated by Peabnut 2-3 for 7th. Finally, Miya also underperformed at his final 2 Japanese events. At Sumabato SP 47, Miya was upset in his third round by Shion, and though he made a strong Losers run, he was eventually eliminated by Yone_pi for 9th, the first Japanese event where he failed to make Grand Finals. A similar performance took place at the next Sumabato Miya attended, as he was upset in his third round by Kashiya and eventually was eliminated by Snow for 13th. These weaker results and losses to players ranked outside the top 50 resulted in an inconsistent season, leaving him at 2nd that season and over 5 points away from the #1 player, acola.
The second half of the year initially seemed to be the exact same as a weird pattern emerged: following every major victory was a major underperformance, then the cycle repeats itself. This pattern technically began with Miya's Sumabato SP 49 performance but lasted for several months in the season. For example, right after Miya won Kowloon 12 with Kagaribi, he fell early at his next major, Supernova 2024, losing to Marss and Sonix for 13th, only to then win Maesuma'JAPAN West 24. On the surface, this created yet another inconsistent season for Miya, as he would win several majors, such as Umebura SP 11, but then underperform at several other majors, such as Riptide 2024. With Sparg0 cleaning up his inconsistency issues during this season, many believed that Miya would once again be ranked 2nd for the LumiRank 2024.2 season.
Fortunately for Miya, these results were actually not as bad as they seemed to be. Though he fell early at several events, all of his losses were to players who were eventually ranked in the top 50, meaning that Miya's head-to-head was really good and in fact comparable to Sparg0's. In addition, Miya's peaks challenged Sparg0's peaks during this time, especially as both players had the same number of P-tier wins. Most notably, the two had an even head-to-head, with Miya defeating Sparg0 at Litvitational 3 and the first set of Grand Finals at Don't Park on the Grass 2024, while Sparg0 evened up their record by winning their Winners Final set and the reset at the latter event. This contrasted previous seasons, where Sparg0 had a dominant record over Miya. With virtually the same strengths, many players believed that Miya had a really great chance to take the #1 spot from Sparg0 despite Sparg0's better consistency at majors, especially as, a day prior to the ranking's unveiling, it was revealed that the gap between #2 and #1 was the closest in Ultimate history.[1] Ultimately, however, Miya fell short, scoring 0.9 points below Sparg0, and as such finished 2nd once again.
Though there was no year-long ranking, Miya was ranked 2nd on the LumiRank 2024 Japan, behind acola. With Sparg0 ranking below Sonix on the LumiRank 2024 North America and Miya ranking above Sonix on both half-year rankings, many players believed that Miya would have ranked 2nd had there been a full-year ranking.
Breaking MkLeo's record[edit]
Throughout the 2024 seasons, Miya won a total of 12 majors. This allowed him to tie MkLeo's all-time major count of 24 by DELTA 9, making Miya the first player to tie MkLeo's record since Tweek won Low Tier City 7 in 2019. This led many to question whether it was time for someone to break MkLeo's record, which he has held since CEO 2019. Though Miya struggled to win a major for several months, he was ultimately able to do so near the start of the LumiRank 2025 season by winning Sumabato SP 55, becoming the first player since the early metagame to break MkLeo's record.
Continued battle for the throne[edit]
With a highly successful 2024, Miya would defend his title as one of the world's best players, but found a few uncharacteristic placements throughout the first half of the 2025 season. At the first major of the season, Smash Awesome!, he would suffer a disastrous loss to SSSR who ultimately ranked 145th on the LumiRank Half Year 2025, marking an upset factor of 11, and one of a few of his questionable losses throughout the season. Despite the setback, Miya would make a 7-set Loser's run, and would be eliminated by Akakikusu, to place 7th. Miya would still remain generally consistent for many months until LVL UP EXPO 2025; where he would lose to omega and Marss for 33rd, one of the worst placements of his career, and marking by far his worst placement of the entire season.
Nevertheless, Miya would continue to excel at many events, although not to the same degree as 2024. Miya would only find victory at 4 majors; Sumabato SP 55, DELTA 10, Uzes Symphonic Gaming Festival 2025, and DELTA 11, less than the amount he won both of the 2024 half-seasons, and additionally suffering from a slump from Sumabato SP 55 to DELTA 10. Additionally, while Miya continued to excel at other events, other challengers to the throne would outperform Miya in various regards; Doramigi and Hurt would emerge as frontrunners for the throne, both of them remaining particularly consistent at other majors, and the recurring acola would find victory at Kagaribi 13, the most difficult Ultimate tournament of all time. This left very little room for Miya to claim the throne, as he lacked a Premiere-level win, and had suffered from the aforementioned underperformance at LVL UP EXPO 2025, and his loss to SSSR at Smash Awesome!. As such, Miya would slip to 4th on the LumiRank Half Year 2025.
Unexpectedly, Miya would greatly rebound within the second half of the year. Starting from Supernova 2025, Miya would never miss a Grand Finals appearance at any event he attended, and never lost to a player outside of the top 20 at ranked events, his worst loss being to Raru at S Factor 12, who ranked 12th at the time. This period was contrasted with Doramigi's dominance, who similarly appeared in Grand Finals with every tournament, often pitted against Miya, who would defeat him every time, with an exception in Kagaribi 14. Additionally, Miya would prove to be one of the fiercest opponents for the other best players in the world, never losing to Hurt, Sonix, and Tweek, holding a dominating 5-2 record against Doramigi, who was ranked as the best player in the world at the time, and holding a near-even set count against Shuton and acola. Additionally, Miya would find his first Premiere-level win at Supernova 2025, and also won Riptide 2025, 2 of the largest events in the season. This gave Miya, alongside Doramigi, a chance to claim the throne.
Rankings[edit]
Super Smash Bros. for Wii U[edit]
| Season | Ranking | Rating | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 16 | 67th | 1,844 | |
| 17 | 34th | 1,922 |
Super Smash Bros. Ultimate[edit]
LumiRank[edit]
| Ranking | Time period | Rank | Character(s) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| UltRank 2022 | June 18th - December 18th, 2022 | 17th | ||
| LumiRank Mid-Year 2023 | December 19th, 2022 - July 23rd, 2023 | 3rd | ||
| LumiRank 2023 | December 19th, 2022 - December 17th, 2023 | 4th | ||
| LumiRank 2024.1 | December 18th, 2023 - July 15th, 2024 | 2nd | Mii Swordfighter was only listed on the full top 50 graphic. | |
| LumiRank 2024.2 | July 16th - December 16th, 2024 | 2nd | ||
| LumiRank Half Year 2025 | December 17th, 2024 - July 7th, 2025 | 4th |
OrionRank Ultimate[edit]
| Ranking | Time period | Rank | Character(s) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| OrionRank 2022 | December 22nd, 2021 - December 18th, 2022 | 20th |
OrionRank/LumiRank Japan[edit]
| Ranking | Time period | Rank | Character(s) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| OrionRank 2022 Japan | December 22nd, 2021 - December 18th, 2022 | 8th | ||
| LumiRank 2023 Japan | December 19th, 2022 - December 17th, 2023 | 2nd | ||
| LumiRank 2024 Japan | December 18th, 2023 - December 16th, 2024 | 2nd |
Smashmate[edit]
| Season | Ranking | Rating | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0.5 | 24th | 1,993 | |
| 5 | 5th | 2,102 | |
| 6 | 29th | 1,951 | |
| 7 | 13th | 2,020 | |
| 8 | 5th | 2,051 | |
| 9 | 7th | 2,121 | |
| 15 | 12th | 2,215 | |
| 16 | 5th | 2,302 | |
| 18 | 20th | 2,191 | |
| 19 | 2nd | 2,502 | |
| 20 | 5th | 2,341 | |
| 21 | 1st | 2,504 | |
| 22 | 1st | 2,505 | |
| 23 | 3rd | 2,403 | |
| 24 | 5th | 2,410 | |
| 25 | 1st | 2,513 | |
| 26 | 8th | 2,374 |
Tournament placings[edit]
Super Smash Bros. for Wii U[edit]
| Tournament | Date | 1v1 placement | 2v2 placement | Partner |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sumabato 27 | August 12th, 2018 | 65th / 251 | — | — |
| for Final Online |
April 8th, 2024 | 4th / 64 | — | — |
| Supernova 2024 | August 8th, 2024 | — | 3rd / 45 | KEN |
Super Smash Bros. Ultimate[edit]
| Tournament | Date | 1v1 placement | 2v2 placement | Partner |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sumabato SP 3 | April 14th, 2019 | 33rd / 318 | — | — |
| COLORS 01 Doubles | October 5th, 2019 | — | 1st / 12 | Starl |
| Sumabato SP 9 | November 10th, 2019 | 25th / 320 | — | — |
| Sumabato SP 15 | November 15th, 2020 | 33rd / 160 | — | — |
| Maesuma TOP 8 | June 11th-12th, 2022 | 65th / 590 | — | — |
| Maesuma Champion Series 17 |
June 29th, 2022 | 2nd / 16 | — | — |
| Maesuma Offline (Shikoku) | July 9th, 2022 | 1st / 155 | — | — |
| Maesuma Champion Series 18 |
July 20th, 2022 | 1st / 16 | — | — |
| Kagaribi 8 | July 30th-31st, 2022 | 1st / 491 | — | — |
| Sumabato SP 29 | August 14th, 2022 | 2nd / 146 | — | — |
| MaeTami Summer Festival 2022 |
August 19th, 2022 | 2nd / 16 | — | — |
| Maesuma TOP 9 | August 27th, 2022 | 49th / 473 | — | — |
| Sumabato SP 30 | September 23rd, 2022 | 17th / 216 | — | — |
| Maesuma TOP 10 | October 15th-16th, 2022 | 2nd / 476 | — | — |
| Sumabato SP 31 | October 23rd, 2022 | 2nd / 207 | — | — |
| Maesuma Champion Series 20 |
October 29th, 2022 | 9th / 16 | — | — |
| KOWLOON 3 | November 5th, 2022 | 1st / 362 | — | — |
| Apex 2022 | November 18th-20th, 2022 | 1st / 607 | — | — |
| Maesuma Champion Series 21 |
November 29th, 2022 | 1st / 16 | — | — |
| Seibugeki 12 | December 3rd, 2022 | 1st / 373 | — | — |
| Scuffed World Tour | December 18th, 2022 | 9th / 16 | — | — |
| JAPAN 24 | December 24th-25th, 2022 | 2nd / 24 | — | — |
| Sumabato SP 34 | January 4th, 2023 | 1st / 157 | — | — |
| Umebura SP 9 | January 7th-8th, 2023 | 13th / 1,024 | — | — |
| KOWLOON 4 | January 21st, 2023 | 1st / 243 | — | — |
| Toyota Grand Slum 13 | January 28th, 2023 | 3rd / 256 | — | — |
| Kagaribi 9 | February 4th-5th, 2023 | 49th / 1,248 | — | — |
| Okasuma SP 11 | February 18th, 2023 | 2nd / 128 | — | — |
| Maesuma TOP 11 | March 5th, 2023 | 1st / 512 | — | — |
| Seibugeki 13 | March 12th, 2023 | 1st / 350 | — | — |
| Sumabato SP 36 | March 25th, 2023 | 1st / 254 | — | — |
| Maesuma Champion Series 25 |
March 28th, 2023 | 1st / 16 | — | — |
| Midobura SP 2 | April 7th, 2023 | 1st / 60 | — | — |
| KOWLOON 5 | April 8th, 2023 | 2nd / 471 | — | — |
| Sumabato SP 37 | April 22nd, 2023 | 1st / 260 | — | — |
| Maesuma TOP 12 | April 30th, 2023 | 2nd / 512 | — | — |
| TOKYO SMASH BOOT CAMP | May 3rd, 2023 | 1st / 16 | — | — |
| DELTA 4 | May 4th, 2023 | 1st / 256 | — | — |
| Kagaribi 10 | May 6th-7th, 2023 | 7th / 1,024 | — | — |
| MaesumaHIT Champion Series 5 | May 13th, 2023 | 1st / 8 | — | — |
| Battle of BC 5 | May 19th-21st, 2023 | 5th / 652 | 4th / 124 | acola |
| Toyota Grand Slum 14 | June 17th, 2023 | 1st / 210 | — | — |
| Sumabato SP 39 | June 18th, 2023 | 2nd / 204 | — | — |
| Maesuma TOP 13 | June 24th-25th, 2023 | 1st / 541 | — | — |
| Seibugeki 14 | July 1st, 2023 | 4th / 272 | — | — |
| UltCore | July 22nd, 2023 | 1st / 300 | — | — |
| Super Smash Con 2023 | August 10th-13th, 2023 | 3rd / 2,607 | 1st / 567 | acola |
| KOWLOON 7 | August 26th, 2023 | 1st / 298 | — | — |
| Maesuma TOP 14 | September 3rd, 2023 | 1st / 392 | — | — |
| Sumabato SP Ultimate | September 16th-17th, 2023 | 3rd / 291 | — | — |
| DELTA 5 | September 23rd-24th, 2023 | 3rd / 292 | — | — |
| Kagaribi 11 | October 7th-8th, 2023 | 1st / 1,472 | — | — |
| Rise 'N Grind 2023 | October 13th-15th, 2023 | 1st / 443 | — | — |
| Seibugeki 15 | October 28th, 2023 | 1st / 300 | — | — |
| Port Priority 8 | November 11th-12th, 2023 | 2nd / 710 | — | — |
| Maesuma TOP 15 "FINAL" | November 25th-26th, 2023 | 1st / 379 | — | — |
| Watch The Throne | December 8th-10th, 2023 | 3rd / 16 | — | — |
| DELTA 7 [FAT] | December 23rd, 2023 | 1st / 235 | — | — |
| Umebura SP 10 | January 6th-8th, 2024 | 2nd / 1,275 | — | — |
| KOWLOON 9 with Sumabato | January 13th-14th, 2024 | 1st / 895 | — | — |
| Pre-Genesis X at Guildhouse (Thursday) | February 15th, 2024 | 1st / 160 | — | — |
| GENESIS X | February 16th-18th, 2024 | 17th / 1,505 | 5th / 302 | Maister |
| Maesuma'Champion Carnival |
February 25th, 2024 | 2nd / 107 | — | — |
| Sumabato SP 45 | March 3rd, 2024 | 1st / 309 | — | — |
| Litvitational 2 | March 8th, 2024 | 2nd / 16 | — | — |
| Cirque Du CFL 3 | March 9th-10th, 2024 | 7th / 225 | 2nd / 49 | Asimo |
| Maesuma'U22 | March 23rd, 2024 | 1st / 262 | — | — |
| Sumabato SP 46 | April 14th, 2024 | 1st / 307 | — | — |
| Maesuma'GRAND WARS | April 27th, 2024 | 1st / 318 | — | — |
| DELTA 8 | May 3rd, 2024 | 2nd / 516 | — | — |
| Kagaribi 12 | May 5th-6th, 2024 | 1st / 2,030 | — | — |
| Sumabato SP 47 | May 19th, 2024 | 9th / 312 | — | — |
| 95 Kings of Fields 4 | June 1st-2nd, 2024 | 1st / 347 | — | — |
| Sumabato SP 49 | July 14th, 2024 | 13th / 317 | — | — |
| Kowloon 12 with Kagaribi | July 27th-28th, 2024 | 1st / 1,428 | — | — |
| Supernova 2024 | August 8th-11th, 2024 | 13th / 2,281 | 5th / 497 | Hurt |
| Maesuma'JAPAN West 24 | August 31st-September 1st, 2024 | 1st / 24 | — | — |
| Riptide 2024 | September 6th-8th, 2024 | 13th / 1,024 | 1st / 145 | Hurt |
| Umebura SP 11 | September 14th-15th, 2024 | 1st / 1,023 | — | — |
| Litvitational 3 | October 18th, 2024 | 5th / 16 | — | — |
| Cirque 4 | October 19th-20th, 2024 | 1st / 145 | 1st / 29 | Hurt |
| THE SHIBUYA "FIST" TOURNAMENTS 1 | October 25th, 2024 | 4th / 16 | — | — |
| DELTA 9 | October 27th, 2024 | 1st / 380 | — | — |
| Luminosity Makes Moves Miami 2024 | November 1st-3rd, 2024 | 9th / 365 | — | — |
| Sound Check - The Don't Park on the Grass 2024 Prelocal | November 15th, 2024 | 2nd / 123 | — | — |
| Don't Park on the Grass 2024 | November 16th-17th, 2024 | 2nd / 344 | 2nd / 71 | Shuton |
| LACS Rivals | November 23rd-24th, 2024 | 1st / 8 | — | — |
| THE SHIBUYA "FIST" TOURNAMENTS 2 | December 14th, 2024 | 1st / 16 | — | — |
| Smash Awesome! | December 21st-22nd, 2024 | 7th / 722 | — | — |
| Maesuma'TOP 1 | January 4th-5th, 2025 | 4th / 579 | — | — |
| Seibugeki 18 | January 12th, 2025 | 4th / 477 | — | — |
| Sumabato SP 55 | January 19th, 2025 | 1st / 354 | — | — |
| Fly High!! 11 | January 26th, 2025 | 1st / 72 | — | — |
| Pre-Genesis X2 at Guildhouse (Wednesday) | February 12th, 2025 | 1st / 128 | — | — |
| Pre-Genesis X2 at Guildhouse (Thursday) | February 13th, 2025 | 1st / 159 | — | — |
| GENESIS X2 | February 14th-16th, 2025 | 7th / 924 | 3rd / 178 | Hurt |
| The Game Expo 2025 | March 21st-22nd, 2025 | 1st / 83 | 1st / 22 | Kinaji |
| Battle of BC 7 | March 28th-30th, 2025 | 9th / 433 | 1st / 89 | Hurt |
| DELTA 10 | April 12th, 2025 | 1st / 505 | — | — |
| LVL UP EXPO 2025 | April 25th-27th, 2025 | 33rd / 665 | 5th / 80 | Shuton |
| Kagaribi 13 | May 4th-5th, 2025 | 3rd / 2,548 | — | — |
| KOWLOON 16 | May 11th 2025 | 7th / 393 | — | — |
| Uzes Symphonic Gaming Festival 2025 | May 31st-June 1st, 2025 | 1st / 292 | 1st / 73 | Tea |
| DELTA 11 | June 28th, 2025 | 1st / 443 | — | — |
| S Factor 12 | July 26th-27th, 2025 | 5th / 1,051 | — | — |
| Supernova 2025 | August 7th-10th, 2025 | 1st / 2,432 | 3rd / 434 | Hurt |
| Umebura SP 12 | August 23rd-24th, 2025 | 2nd / 987 | — | — |
| Riptide 2025 | September 5th-7th, 2025 | 1st / 952 | 4th / 169 | Hurt |
| IMPACT MAJOR 1 | September 15th, 2025 | 1st / 161 | — | — |
| Sumabato SP 63 | October 26th, 2025 | 1st / 346 | — | — |
| Kagaribi 14 | November 2nd-3rd, 2025 | 2nd / 1,520 | — | — |
Trivia[edit]
- Miya is one of five players to win an Ultimate major while being seeded outside of the top 16 (Kagaribi 8 as the 24th seed), alongside ProtoBanham (won Kagaribi 4 as the 24th seed), Quidd (won Let's Make Big Moves 2022 as the 32nd seed), Kuro (won Umebura SP 6 as the 37th seed), and acola (won Kagaribi 7 as the 57th seed).