May 25, 2012

Tier Lists



Tier Lists are theoretical.

I'm not saying I disagree with the idea and creation of tier lists because I personally believe that characters in fighting games are all relatively good when it comes to their abilities, especially when you take the time to study their stats (frame data, good pokes, etc.) and practice to the max.

I look at tier lists as the characters who look good theoretically on paper, have little or no (lol) bad matchups and those who keep appearing in the top 8s and 16s of tourneys.

I also like to add this post made by fellow Mahvel player Anton Gabriel Largoza-Maza .
When it comes down to the knitty-gritty, it all comes to down to:
1) how the player will utilize his character
2) how the character fits the player's play style
3) how long will the character last to the player.
It's not really about character A having a specific tool that outmatches character B or the overall potential of character B over character A in terms of being put in all positions of the match. Therefore rendering a tier list as completly useless except for bragging rights for the player.

In the end, use the characters you like and fit you and practice.



-Chady

May 1, 2012

Arcadia's Compiled Tier List for TTT2

Arcadia, Japan's premiere gaming magazine, compiles this tier list information via input from top Japanese Tekken players, including Fukushi and Yuu, so the information is based more off high-level competition than popular opinion.

 S – Devil Jin, Kazuya, Heihachi
 A – Nina, Feng, Steve, Bob
 B – Lars, Leo, Jinpachi, Armor King, Jack-6, Bryan, Hwoarang, Dragunov, Lee
 C – Marduk, Jaycee, Bruce, Lei, Ganryu
 D – “the rest”
 Uncertain – Ling, Miguel, Paul (These characters aren't regularly used in Japan.)

 Now bear in mind that this tier list for TTT2 is very early and this is Japan, were tiers tend to fluctuate in a short moments notice. This is also more about how good they are overall and not so much matchup based (For example, Steve may be good here but he still loses to most of Zaf's crap, completely like how it's a bad match up for him in T6.) In Tekken, remember that you're percentage of winning is based on the tools you shall, learning the frames and moves that are good, sidesteppable etc. and exploiting the weaknesses of your opponents. This is what makes Tekken a good fighting game because in a sense, the worst characters can compete with the best characters. Sure, it will be hard but that's what makes it fun. DORYA!

 -Chady