EVO 2016: The Top Fighting Game Tournament Turns 20

The time has come for the greatest fighters to assemble in Vegas and hash it out in the biggest fighting game tournament around. EVO, or Evolution Championship Series, celebrates its 20th anniversary this year, and to match it, this year’s festivities are easily the biggest they’ve ever been.
Starting off as only a two-game tournament called Battle by the Bay, EVO has since grown to be a sort-of World Cup for all fighting games. Massive attendance is reported across all nine of the official games, with Street Fighter V having 5107 confirmed participants, almost twice the amount of the next highest pool of fighters.
EVO is where dreams are made and careers are forged, as players compete in pools to earn a berth into the main tournament bracket. This means pros can theoretically fall early on to a nobody with the right moves, and everyone has to earn their spot on the main stage at Mandalay Bay.
On the Street Fighter front, all eyes will certainly be on Tokido, a player whose Ryu handed Justin Wong a sour defeat at NorCal Regionals and took down Infiltration, the third place winner at last year’s Street Fighter IV tourney. Though he looked shaky in the early month or two of Street Fighter V, Tokido has bounced back with grace, and is certainly a favorite going in. These three will likely all be eyeing each other headed into the EVO tournament.
Don’t count out The Beast, though. Daigo Umehara has long been a dominant presence in EVO, and the first EVO showing of Street Fighter V could be his chance back at the title, after a disappointing finish at last year’s event. Other players to watch will be Fuudo, another talent from the Street Fighter IV days, as well as the American competitors in PR Rog and Ricki Ortiz.
Switching gears to Super Smash Bros., the Wii U version has the next highest entry pool, and will likely see some fierce competition in pools. This is likely to be an inflection point for the game, as it has routinely tussled with Melee for the spotlight at larger events like EVO. Top players to watch here are ZeRo, who alternates between Diddy Kong and Sheik, and Nairo, who bounces between characters but is well-known for his Zero Suit Samus. Players of Smash on the Wii U will be looking to cement it as one of the top games in the fighting game community, and solidify their spot in the EVO pantheon for years to come.
Melee, on the other hand, has made some waves coming into the tournament. Some top players have been vocally questioning standard EVO practices, asking for floats out of pools (top players not having to win in pool matches to place in the main tournament) and criticizing tournament structure. These complaints haven’t stopped them from showing up in Vegas, but it’s at least sufficed for some drama going into the event.