I hope this thread steers itself back to being somewhat informative about the event and a bit less about bickering. From what I understand so far, MAME players are invited to compete, but just not with a dedicated machine -- the Wildcard Division has been greatly expanded this time around with a whole bunch of machines so hopefully play time for those players will be less of an issue now.
If the tournament organizers stand by this decision -- perhaps we should discuss some other ideas. I'm still not clear on exactly how the Wildcard format will work this year so maybe this is already happening -- but I think a cool idea would be (assuming Wildcard players can afford and are able to extend their trip) to have any Wildcard players who are around on, say, Wednesday and Thursday compete against each other, using all 20-something available machines, for the chance at using, say, an additional 4 dedicated machines for the main tournament over the weekend, boosting the dedicated machine total to 16 which "could" be filled by MAME players if they do well in this pre-tournament (although we wouldn't want to take 4 machines away from the Wildcard players -- it would be nice if MORE machines could be squeezed in to do something like this, which may or may not be logistically feasible).
Also, although it's certainly NOT official, it seems pretty clear that exceptions WOULD be made if something extraordinary happens on the MAME side. For all players involved, it would just be nice if the tournament organizers would spell out this unwritten criteria. For example, I'm assuming that if someone beats the existing arcade WR score of 1,138,600 in MAME that person is absolutely getting a dedicated machine. Too high? Well, what about if someone were to beat the KO2 first place score of 1,107,600? (or was it slightly less?) To me, that might be the minimum logical point at which an exception should "OBVIOUSLY" be made for a MAME player. Below this it becomes pretty subjective and I'm sure the tournament organizers are wary of a situation where a half dozen MAME scores roll in at the last minute that are in that range near Billy and Steve's arcade scores and then what do you do?
I've said a couple of times that in my own personal experience, transitioning from MAME to an arcade cabinet did NOT happen over night. It took me probably about 10 different play sessions before I was comfortable enough with the controls to feel like I could be competitive at a live event. If a MAME players shows up and literally has never played on a cabinet, there IS a real possibility that this player could be given a dedicated cabinet for the event and that player never scores higher than 250k, which would essentially screw the bubble boy who would have at least been competitive. Some MAME players have not had that much of an issue with the transition, but I know I did and others did also. So, I don't think this whole issue is that cut and dry. BUT, it would be nice if everyone involved would work towards SOLUTIONS instead of being uninclusive and just disillusioning people away from the contest and the community.