It looks like there will be 10 wildcard machines as the following line is: "The Top 12 Twin Galaxies ranked players..." That's a bit too many in my opinion.
I agree. It should be 8 wildcard machines.
(Actually, if I were to reorganize this from the ground up, I'd be even stricter than Dave! I think that there should be only *six* dedicated machines, for the current/former world champions and the absolute best players (>1.1M), with EVERYBODY else sharing the remaining machines and no "wildcard division" at all, because that solves a bunch of problems, makes the dedicated machines more exclusive/special/yadda yadda, but that's another post.
)
Under the current structure though, yes, the scarcity of the wildcard machines should be enforced.
Does everyone think there will be more or fewer wildcard contestants this year?
I guarantee that there will be more this year.
Here are the people who (I think) are 90-100% sure to be there playing as a wildcard:
- Eric Tessler
- John Salter
- Ross
- Corey
- Svavar
- Ethan
- Daniel Desjardins
- Shawn Robinson
- Chris P
- Daniel Dock
- JC
- Shane
- Jeremy
- George Riley
- Todd Lalonde
- Allen
- Mitch
- Ken
- Jon McCourt
- Kayla
That's 20 already, and that's just my quick back-of-the-envelope rundown. This isn't counting off the street drop-ins, surprises, "demoted" Top 12 players, the Denver Players Guild, or anybody else I'm forgetting at the moment. I would not be surprised if there were 30 or more.
The 8 pre-qualifier spots will be spoken for as of October 13th, but from my list alone that still leaves 12, at an absolute minimum, playing the live qualifier round on Friday, and only 8 get through that.
Just one player needing to be eliminated so that there will only be 16 on Saturday makes the qualifier rounds (both live and online) necessary. We'll hit 17 wildcards, don't doubt that!
As exciting as they are, and as fun as it is to sweat over the wildcard spots, the reality is that the online qualifier series is really more of a practical thing. It's a hedge against what happened last year, when there were too many players for the number of machines and they had to devise an elimination scheme at the last minute, which a lot of people didn't like. The pre-qualifiers just give 8 people an absolute guarantee that they're in no matter what. The live qualifier field will be much softer than the online qualifier field, but it's still needed.
In fact, it's arguably better to walk in off the street so you get playtime on Friday.
I'm not sure in what sense you mean. Friday wildcard scores don't count in the overall tournament standings. Friday is a self-contained tournament solely to determine who moves onto Saturday. So extra playtime won't do you any good in the context of the KO3 scoreboard.
In any case, considering that the wildcards actually have to pay to enter, and that Friday scores don't count for the tourney, I think they deserve whatever time they can get on Friday.