Rapper Lupe Fiasco got his want a shot at world Street Fighter champion Daigo Umehara granted, and also the two dueled yesterday at Street Fighter 5's launch gala in San Francisco. Incredibly, Fiasco won, 3-2, however in the eyes of numerous this outcome is hardly final.
Viewers may judge on their own; the whole match is above. Longtime Street Fighter fans and merely about anyone who understands the main difference between elite competitors and enthusiasts, in anything, fight to believe the earth's most famous and successful competitor in the sport could lose upright to a celebrity interloper. That's not to express the match and it is aftermath isn't entertaining.
In the very best three-of-five match, Fiasco (as Ken) prevailed over Umehara (as Ryu) 3-2, winning the very first, fourth and fifth games.
To Kotaku, a Mad Catz representative vowed the fight wasn't staged. Bear in mind this was an exhibition contest. Tennis pros playing in exhibition matches are notorious for tanking sets to ensure the show goes the distance and also the fans obtain money's worth, before playing the final set around the square. Maybe that is what happened here and Fiasco legitimately surprised Umehara at the conclusion.
Indeed, should you go towards the 18 minute mark from the above video, where Fiasco lands his final KO, neither competitor seems certain of what has happened or what should come next. Fiasco seems confused in regards to what round they're in for the ultimate game, after which after getting the official notice it's all regulated over, appears like he really can't believe he just won.
The fighting games community subreddit Kappa, among many more on social networking, isn't going for it. "Daigo is really a pro, man,"said one commenter. "Watching him whiff grabs and DPs just close enough to appear legit towards the casual observer, but knowing they'd miss, all of the hype parry attempts, everything.
"Booked much better than a year's price of Monday Night Raw," he concluded. Another thread mockinglyproclaims the United States' superiority to Japan in Street Fighter 5 based around the victory.
That can be a bit of a stretch, but one thing is perfect for sure: Fiasco is undefeated in the career.
http://blog.bizbilla.com/game-is-good/user/show/2673/rapper-lupe-fiasco-got-his-want-a-shot-at-world-street-fighter-champion-daigo-umehara-granted
Viewers may judge on their own; the whole match is above. Longtime Street Fighter fans and merely about anyone who understands the main difference between elite competitors and enthusiasts, in anything, fight to believe the earth's most famous and successful competitor in the sport could lose upright to a celebrity interloper. That's not to express the match and it is aftermath isn't entertaining.
In the very best three-of-five match, Fiasco (as Ken) prevailed over Umehara (as Ryu) 3-2, winning the very first, fourth and fifth games.
To Kotaku, a Mad Catz representative vowed the fight wasn't staged. Bear in mind this was an exhibition contest. Tennis pros playing in exhibition matches are notorious for tanking sets to ensure the show goes the distance and also the fans obtain money's worth, before playing the final set around the square. Maybe that is what happened here and Fiasco legitimately surprised Umehara at the conclusion.
Indeed, should you go towards the 18 minute mark from the above video, where Fiasco lands his final KO, neither competitor seems certain of what has happened or what should come next. Fiasco seems confused in regards to what round they're in for the ultimate game, after which after getting the official notice it's all regulated over, appears like he really can't believe he just won.
The fighting games community subreddit Kappa, among many more on social networking, isn't going for it. "Daigo is really a pro, man,"said one commenter. "Watching him whiff grabs and DPs just close enough to appear legit towards the casual observer, but knowing they'd miss, all of the hype parry attempts, everything.
"Booked much better than a year's price of Monday Night Raw," he concluded. Another thread mockinglyproclaims the United States' superiority to Japan in Street Fighter 5 based around the victory.
That can be a bit of a stretch, but one thing is perfect for sure: Fiasco is undefeated in the career.
http://blog.bizbilla.com/game-is-good/user/show/2673/rapper-lupe-fiasco-got-his-want-a-shot-at-world-street-fighter-champion-daigo-umehara-granted
No comments:
Post a Comment