In my first article, I gave a higher level overview of the lifetime stats of Mango and Mew2King. I wanted to break it down further by looking at only matches from 2012 and onward. Even then some of the older matches may be outdated as the two players have developed their gameplay over the years.

2012 – Now Stats

Player 2012 2013 2014 Total
Mango 3 19 33 55
Mew2King 2 29 26 57

Table 1: Win totals by Game Count

As we can see here, Mew2King had a fairly dominant 2013 against Mango, winning 60.4% of the matches. During this year, Mango had a mini hiatus, taking care of personal life with his family. Regardless, Mew2King had very strong sets against Mango at Apex 2013 and other tournaments as well. In 2014, Mango regained form, but Mew2King still managed to give Mango trouble in many of their encounters.

2012 – Now, Breakdown by Character

Mango’s Fox vs Mew2King’s Sheik (10 Matches)

Stage Wins Losses Win %
Battlefield 2 1 67%
Dreamland 3 2 60%
Final Destination 0 0 0%
Fountain of Dreams 1 0 100%
Pokemon Stadium 0 0 0%
Yoshi’s Story 1 0 100%
Total 7 3 70%

 

Many people complained when Mew2King didn’t play Sheik against Mango’s Fox in grand finals of Big House 4. However, Mew2King’s Sheik has historically done poorly against Mango’s Fox. Furthermore, players such as Fiction, Colbol, Silent Wolf, PewPewU, and SFAT have taken several matches against Mew2King’s Sheik as Fox. Although Mew2King may have wanted to have “fun”, it makes sense why he wouldn’t want to go Sheik.

As a side note, Mew2King will never go Sheik on Final Destination and Pokemon Stadium against Mango.

Mango’s Fox vs Mew2King’s Marth (26 Matches)

Stage Wins Losses Win %
Battlefield 0 0 0%
Dreamland 4 1 80%
Final Destination 0 5 0%
Fountain of Dreams 7 0 100%
Pokemon Stadium 0 4 0%
Yoshi’s Story 2 3 40%
Total 13 13 50%

 

A much more even match! Mew2King thrives on Final Destination and Pokemon Stadium against Mango’s Fox. I’ve mentioned in previous articles that Pokemon Stadium is a fantastic stage for Marth’s that have strong platform/grab games. The one question I had during Big House and Evo was Mew2King’s insistence on playing Fountain of Dreams. He’s 0-7 in his last 7 games as Marth against Mango’s Fox. Also to note, Mew2King never will play Marth on Battlefield against Fox.

Mango’s Falco vs Mew2King’s Marth (39 Matches)

Stage Wins Losses Win %
Battlefield 1 1 50%
Dreamland 0 0 0%
Final Destination 7 10 41%
Fountain of Dreams 3 2 60%
Pokemon Stadium 2 6 25%
Yoshi’s Story 6 1 86%
Total 19 20 49%

By far, this is the most commonly played matchup between the two. Surprisingly, Mango has taken 7 games on Final Destination against Mew2King’s Marth, a counter-pick widely regarded in Mew2King’s favor. Similar to the vs. Fox matchup, Mew2King thrives on Pokemon Stadium against Mango’s Falco. Yoshi’s seems to favor Mango. The other maps don’t have large enough sample sizes to make any conclusions. In general, Mew2King doesn’t play Marth on Battlefield or Dreamland against Fox/Falco.

Mango’s Falco vs Mew2King’s Sheik (26 Matches)

Stage Wins Losses Win %
Battlefield 4 3 57%
Dreamland 1 5 17%
Final Destination 0 0 0%
Fountain of Dreams 3 2 60%
Pokemon Stadium 0 0 0%
Yoshi’s Story 7 1 88%
Total 15 11 58%

 

On Dreamland, Mew2King does really well against Mango’s Falco. This may be due to Sheik’s maneuverability on the stage along with the ability to run away from extensive pressure. On other stages such as Battlefield and Fountain of Dreams, Mango and Mew2King went even. On Yoshi’s, Mango does really well, which is probably due to Falco’s strong combo game on the stage along with the ability to control stage for long periods of time.

Miscellaneous Matches (9 Matches)

Mango M2K Mango Win M2K Win
Captain Falcon Sheik 1 6
Marth Sheik 0 1
Jigglypuff Fox 0 1

 

As expected, Mango’s other characters didn’t fare too well against Mew2King’s characters.

Conclusions

Even if you take out Mango’s 8 games as Falcon and Marth, he holds a meager 54-50 lead in game counts against Mew2King. Even during Mew2King’s downswings, he’s always given Mango some difficulty. It’s strange looking back that these two have played each other for 8 years (2007-2014). Moreover, this is double the length that Azen and Ken played each other at their peaks (~2002 – 2006/7). When we look at the history books of Melee, this could possibly be the main rivalry that people talk about to their kids.