The last Apex qualifier came to a close last night and the results left me more confused than ever. Here are some of Tafo’s thoughts as we head into Apex.

1. The hierarchy at the Top.

The era of the “5 gods” has officially passed. In 2009-2012, it would be rare to see a “god” lose, but now it seems to happen at every large tournament. Even if a god lost, it was even rarer to see a non-god outplace a god. In the case of Paragon, Westballz (4th) outplaced Armada (5th). Furthermore, Armada looked rather shaky against Colbol, narrowly scraping by as Colbol foolishly tried to edgeguard Armada. Although Leffen did defeat Armada in the tournament, he also lost to Plup in winner’s.

Even though the gods have lost much more frequently in 2014-2015, there is still a gap between the “big 6” and everyone else. Let’s not get ahead of ourselves and say that someone is a “god” just because they win 1 set.

Here’s how I view the Top of Melee

S+ Tier
Mango/PPMD/Armada – All have 60% win rates against the big 6 and still for the most part rarely lose to non-big 6 players

S Tier
Hungrybox/Leffen/M2K – All have roughly 40% win rates against the gods and have 1 very deficient matchup (Hbox vs Mango, Leffen vs M2K, M2K vs Armada). The people in S-Tier also have not won nearly as many majors compared to S+. They are stepping up and a clear gap over the next tier. Still, there is great separation between S and S+ if you look at the overall numbers.

A+
Westballz/Hax/Axe/Plup

2. Plup is good.

Beats Leffen. Gets 9th at almost every super national. Plays Samus. Yea… That’s impressive.

3. Mew2King’s Marth/Sheik are good. His Fox….

Despite rarely playing Melee, Mew2King has the Marth punishment game down to a “t”. His raw fundamentals still overcome the majority of the field. With that being said, his Fox could use some work…

4. Leffen belongs in the “Top 6”, but still has holes.

Anyone that says Leffen doesn’t belong in the upper echelon is silly. Yet, he still has question marks going to Apex. He lost to SFAT in two money matches and to Plup winner’s. Although it remains a good bet to say Leffen will finish in the Top 5 at Apex, it’s not guaranteed.

5. The Florida Homecooking

Over the weekend, we saw Colbol > SFAT, Plup > Westballz (in winners) and Leffen , Hungrybox > Armada and M2K. The Florida natives played very well and defended their turf amazingly in both singles and doubles.

6. The end of Armada/M2K in Doubles

It’s clear that Mew2King was shaking off rust with his lackluster performance in doubles at Paragon. It’s also clear that Armada was more used to Android’s Sheik, who plays much more aggressively than M2K. A lack of synergy and, in general, poor play led them to lose for the first time since they played PPMD/Mango at a previous regional.

This was also the first time that ArM2K didn’t finish first at a tournament. With Armada having a strong preference to team with Android, this may be the end of one of the most dominant doubles teams that we have seen in melee history.

7. Doubles is fun to watch

It’s hard not to love teams at the top level. It’s arguably more fun to watch than singles when played well. Shroomed and SFAT showed amazing team synergy to beat ArM2K and almost beat Hungrybox/Plup in their sets. Even though Hbox and Plup don’t play fast characters, they still make it work with their amazing zoning and ability to see two steps ahead of everyone else. Pay attention to where Hbox and Plup position themselves to secure hits or cover their partner’s deficiencies. I wish doubles garnered more attention because it has another layer of depth that’s not seen in singles.

8. 20xx is the same as it has always been

People panicked over the saturation of Fox players after Do You Fox With It and The Big House 4. At Paragon, we saw ~ 2 Fox players in the Top 8 (I’m going to give +0.5 for Armada and Mew2King). Among the Top 8, we saw a Pikachu, Sheik, Marth, Peach, Jigglypuff, and Falco. Don’t worry, the meta is fine.

9. Armada’s Fox??

People forget that Armada’s Fox beat Leffen in a set 3-0 earlier in 2014. He has the fundamentals of a top player, so it shouldn’t be a surprise that he can take games against Hungrybox or Leffen, even though no one expected the trenching on Leffen in g3 and g4. It seems to be a viable option for him at future tournaments when he has to play against Hungrybox or a defensive Fox.

10. Axe’s Falco

Someone please put an electric shocker on Axe if he every thinks about going anything other than Pikachu in a tournament match. His Pikachu is leagues better than his others. His other characters (Fox, Falco, Young Link) are impressive, but they are in no way ready to face a player such as Mew2King.