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===''Brawl''=== | ===''Brawl''=== | ||
At 223 entrants, this is the largest ''Brawl'' singles event since {{Trn|Apex 2014}} in 2014, and the first ''Brawl'' singles event to surpass 200 entrants since the end of its main competitive lifespan. {{Sm|Bike}} upset {{Sm|686M}} in Winners' Top 24 with an upset factor 7, becoming the first player to get a major upset on 686M in the post-''Smash 4'' era. However, 686M tore up the Losers bracket, defeating 8 players, including {{Sm|Player-1}} twice in Grand Finals, to take the tournament. As 686M used {{SSBB|Ice Climbers}} for most of his run, this was the first ''Brawl'' major/supermajor won by a player who did not use {{SSBB|Meta Knight}} since {{Trn|Super Smash Con 2016}}. Also, since {{Sm|Mikeray4}} and {{Sm|Player-1}} won doubles using {{SSBB|Snake}} and {{SSBB|Diddy Kong}}, this was the first time since {{Trn|Critical Hit 3}}, the first | At 223 entrants, this is the largest ''Brawl'' singles event since {{Trn|Apex 2014}} in 2014, and the first ''Brawl'' singles event to surpass 200 entrants since the end of its main competitive lifespan. {{Sm|Bike}} upset {{Sm|686M}} in Winners' Top 24 with an upset factor 7, becoming the first player to get a major upset on 686M in the post-''Smash 4'' era. However, 686M tore up the Losers bracket, defeating 8 players, including {{Sm|Player-1}} twice in Grand Finals, to take the tournament. As 686M used {{SSBB|Ice Climbers}} for most of his run, this was the first ''Brawl'' major/supermajor won by a player who did not use {{SSBB|Meta Knight}} since {{Trn|Super Smash Con 2016}}. Also, since {{Sm|Mikeray4}} and {{Sm|Player-1}} won doubles using {{SSBB|Snake}} and {{SSBB|Diddy Kong}}, this was the first time since {{Trn|Critical Hit 3}}, the first ''Brawl'' major, that a team won a major doubles bracket without using Meta Knight. | ||
===''Smash 4''=== | ===''Smash 4''=== |