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The Reality of Tournament Nerves By Shujinkydink

STB Shujinkydink

Burning down in flames for kicks
To some im known as an offline player, to some an online player, to some, not at all. I started playing online and am still a huge advocate for the benefits of online play, regardless of some other opinions. To be fair, yes there is quite a difference between online and offline. To also be fair, general strategy does not change between the two too drastically as long as you develop your play around frame data and not just "what works". But im not really here to talk about that. Im here to talk about Tournament Nerves. The battle with nerves is one that any aspiring offline player should prepare for just as much as matchups, opponents, or controllers/converters. I've been to quite a few tournaments, and played on quite a few big stages and I can tell you from experience that these are absolutely real and they WILL affect your gameplay. Don't take this as an excuse for losing, because it 100% is not. You need to make sure before you enter a tournament that you can play under pressure, and the last few moments, when your both one hit away from winning, is usually the time where control of this takes center stage and decides the match. Alot of people will tell you, they don't get nerves anymore, or they dont exist or whatever. But anyone that sincerely and honestly wants to win, has nerves. Its how you control them that makes the difference between top players, and the rest. I've never been much of a "tough guy" type so I dont mind telling you that i do get nerves pretty badly, at most stages of the game. At Final Round this year i was sent to losers first round by Semi Evil Ryu, something i had actually never experienced, and the nerves for every match after that was by far the worst I've ever had. Confidence destroyed right off the bat, fear of going 0-2, travelling to play only a few games in tournament...definitely stressful. However having said that I learned a valuable lesson that day about nerves and the realization that i havnt been in a scenario like that before.


You can kind of train for nerves, but it takes a lot of work, and you can only train yourself. You cant force someone to make you nervous. I train this with my clan STB. We do innerclan tournaments from time to time, and i put a tremendous amount of pressure on myself to win it all. This ensures that I feel similar to the way i do in tournament and helps me get the feeling of how I play under pressure and the mistakes I need to focus on correcting in a somewhat casual atmosphere. Clan wars are even better and create even more nerves because its not just me thats at risk if i lose, its my clan. Im playing for everyone. I know not all of you are part of a clan or team, but get some friends together and make a small tournament online or something, and really push yourself to win it. Have some confidence and pretend like its the last game that defines who you are as a player.

Theres so much going on at tournaments its so easy to get overwhelmed by people yelling, screaming, getting hype, and TOs yelling at people. When I play my matches i HAVE to have headphones on. I dont really use it to listen to the music per se, just to neutralize all the sound so I can think. When I train at home, when i do my small tournaments or just a hype FTwhatever with a friend, i listen to the same song on repeat. This helps me drown out everything else and focus on what's happening in the game. Its a mental thing for me when i hear that song on my headphones in a tournament, it gives me that feeling of home, of comfort, of clear thought that really helps me perform at my best. I know some players such as Pig Of The Hut prefer to listen to game sound on headphones to listen for soundcues which is also recommendable. Play around with different things, if your superstitious play into that, i always wear a toque(or beanie as you weirdo americans call it) for good luck, even if im in california or vegas. If im not wearing it, im destined to fail and I honestly believe that and so far i havnt been too far off.

Knowledge of the game can only take you so far in a tournament setting. So much more is a mental battle in your head. I know it is for me, as confident as I am going into every tournament i feel like theres someone else in my head telling me im going to fail, and if I dont prepare properly for that imaginary person I probably will. I know there are a lot of tournament players on this site, but i wanted to share this since I know Injustice has grown the NRS community. I encourage everyone to try an offline tournament once, and I want everyone to come as prepared as possible because not everyone thinks of the mental side of it, I know I didn't. See you in the Bracket.

- Dink
 

cR WoundCowboy

WoundCowbae <3
For once, I agree with you :p. It can definitely take a long time to get a hold of your nerves. My only suggestion is to keep competing because I don't know how else you can conquer them. The more exposure, the better. You need to learn to use the nerves as a motivator and an aid; they can keep you sharp and on your toes. If you aren't nervous at all, it's probably because you don't care.
 

Circus

Part-Time Kano Hostage
It's sad when a lesser known player finally makes it to Top8 or far enough to be on stream on the main stage on finals day but then perform at a fraction at what they normally do because of nerves.

It happens allll the time, and it's the reason sometimes why common tournament go'ers end up on top. I choked HARD when I knew I was one match from losers finals at CEO2011. I seriously look back at my footage and smh, I was paralyzed by the nerves.

It's something you can't prepare for and definitely need to take into account to constantly keep yourself calm and use the nerves in a positive way.

I'm alot better with my nerves after that wtf'moment but some people end up carrying the nerves throughout alllllll matches when there is something on the line. coughOMGItsAndrecough
 

CrimsonShadow

Administrator and Community Engineer
Administrator
I always thought it was wild to see guys like Tyrant, who look like they just woke up and are reading the news with a bowl of cereal in Grand Finals. That is just another level of cool.
 

Mikemetroid

Who hired this guy, WTF?
Lead Moderator
The thing I did instantly my first tournament was to get to know and become friends with almost everybody around in the room. It helps.

Then eventually when you have your good/bad tournaments and after a few times playing on stream, the nerves just go away for people. I for one can go on sp00ky (actually prefer to go on it) for any type of play. Not many people even remember me, all the thousands of people watching will forget you unless you are going to cause a big upset. They are not going to look at you forever and say "man that guy sucks" every time they see your name.
 

Spinky

Neutral Skipper
Good read, I've been thinking about this for a while. I've never been to a tournament because I know I'd shit bricks as soon as I walked through the door.
 

SZSR

Champion
Tournament nerves have been the death of me as of late, my most recent Battle and Brew I was completely destroyed by my nerves.

And then at Final Round where I simply defeated myself because my nerves got to me, because I couldn't handle any of what was going on (the sickness, the stress, meeting people for the first time, everything).

This was the kinda read I needed to see. Thanks Dink.
 

Killphil

A prop on the stage of life.
What about them nerves you get when you can't speak to members of your own community? :p I was more nervous talking to you guys for the first time than actually playing you! Its like...hey, I'm in the presence of celebrities, what do, m8? lol

I will try the game sound on the headphones though. It really puts you into the game. Unfortunately for me it didn't save me against Pig's Sinestro in very late/very early casuals. :(
 

4x4lo8o

Warrior
Tournament nerves are a problem. Sometimes my hands shake so much I can barely even input basic strings.

I keep going to as many tournaments as I can, and I think it's getting better, but it's frustrating to show up and not be able to compete at my best
 

BenGmanUk

Get staffed bro
My first tournament was a couple of years ago for MK9 at the Emirates stadium at a tournament called EGL. There were only around 18 players I think but the first time I played on stream, I literally couldn't do anything correctly, to the point where I thought there was something wrong with my controller, screen lag etc.

After the game I went back on a practice station and could hit my combos just fine but as soon as I was in game it was a whole different story. At some points my right leg was shaking uncontrollably. I don't typically get nervous but if you have never been on stream knowing thousands of people are watching, its likely it will have an impact on you. I can't even imagine how much worse it would be at somewhere like Evo with people behind you shouting and trash talking you.

Great tournament, great experience, but you'll probably shit bricks if you're anything like me.
 

Lt. Boxy Angelman

I WILL EAT THIS GAME
I <3 Dink.

My mentality is all nerve-screwy, man. It's gotten better, but it's still in need of work.
I've only ever gotten to go to 3 tournaments total, and the last one was the worst of them.
NEC '13, I made it by the skin of my teeth over the last night before due to situations with my job, so I didn't so much as get to warm up until I got there, and I find out my 1'st round opponent is going to be Mono, the monstrous Noob Saibot from Puerto Rico, and one of my favorite players ever. THAT right there threw me out of whack from the word go.
2 matches later, I was in Loser's Bracket, and made the infinitely, unbelievably bad mistake of trying to fight James MK with Quan Chi. Another guy who'd always been one of my favorite people, great player, and I'd never so much as sparred with him or a legit offline Baraka before in my life. Didn't work. Didn't work at all.
It's not just what happens when you get to the show or before the clan war starts, it's the state you're in collectively before you even pick up a pad. You've gotta have your head on straight, or said nerves will work their way in and start digging.