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Tougeki – Super Battle Opera

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Tougeki – Super Battle Opera
2012 event logo
SportFighting games
Founded2003
Ceased2012
CountryJapan
Last
champion(s)
Fuudo (SF4)
Tougeki 2009 Final at JCB Hall in Tokyo

Tougeki - Super Battle Opera (闘劇, Tōgeki, lit. fighting drama) (SBO), also known as the Arcadia Cup Tournament[1] was an annual Japanese fighting video game tournament hosted by the magazine Arcadia. Several games are represented at a single year's tournament, with the lineup changing every year. Which games are to be represented are decided by the organizers of the event. It was considered one of the two most prestigious fighting game tournaments, along with the Evolution Championship Series. It was suspended indefinitely in 2012.[2]

Tougeki generally begins in April with the qualifications rounds, which were spread over all of Japan and were distributed over a number of months. The finals were then held over two to three days, usually in August. "Tougeki" typically referred only to the finals.

For 2012, Tougeki was held as part of the larger outdoor gaming event GAME SUMMER FESTIVAL 2012, which also included Ongeki ~Game Sound Impact 2012~, for music games, and Wasshoi 2012 Summer!, for shoot 'em up games, and was held in Narita, Chiba.[3] The event was streamed on niconico for 1500 niconico points (1500 JPY) for one day, and 2500 niconico points (2500 JPY) for two days. As the first tournament held outdoors, there were many reported problems with the event, including low attendance, very high temperatures, glare on the screens, and network problems that required tournament matches to be restarted. Extended tournament run time caused many entrants to miss the final train of the day, many of whom resorted to sleeping on the streets of Chiba.[4]

History

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The 12th Super Battle Opera took place in 2012 on August 4 and 5, and featured the following games:[5]

Singles 1 vs. 1

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Teams 2 vs 2

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Teams 3 vs 3

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Format

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Each tournament is played either individually or in teams of up to three players and uses a single-elimination system to determine a winner. The qualifications are done on a regional level using a two-tier system: Players form their teams and compete at local arcade halls in a single elimination tournament. The winners then go on to a regional playoff, and the winners of this playoff are granted a spot in the finals in Tokyo.

American and European players have been granted special spots at the Tougeki finals. In Europe, the representatives are decided by the Tougeki France organization.[6]

Though a few arcade machines are set up for casual play at the finals, the main focus is on the tournaments.

Champions

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DVD releases

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A few months after the finals in Tokyo, DVD movies containing all matches in the playoffs were released by Enterbrain, the owner of Arcadia. The movies were released in a number of volumes, containing a number of discs. Each disc containing one entire tournament.

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References

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  1. ^ See the text in the logo
  2. ^ "Beast Note: Tougeki suspended indefinitely". 28 March 2013.
  3. ^ "Tougeki 2012 -SUPER BATTLE OPERA- Results". shoryuken.com. 4 August 2012. Archived from the original on 10 October 2012. Retrieved 17 October 2024.
  4. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: "Tuesday S1 Ep22 - Haters Haters". YouTube.
  5. ^ "Tougeki -Super Battle Opera-". Archived from the original on 18 July 2004. Retrieved 18 July 2004.
  6. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 8 February 2009. Retrieved 14 September 2006.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  7. ^ "Super Battle Opera – Tougeki". Kumagumi.
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