The Mystical Chinese Banana Man That Saved My Best Friend's Life

"Best friend" seems a bit inadequate, so when people meet Erik I introduce him as my "hetero life mate." A title I feel is more thoroughly descriptive, with the added bonus of making people uncomfortable. I've known Erik for about twenty years now, and they haven't been easy.

To paint the picture for this story, one of my favorite stories to tell, the reader needs to imagine Erik as a thoroughly intense person. Like Jack Shepherd intense. When Erik got his first tattoo, he went right for his spine, because he heard it was the most painful place to get stabbed by a needle over and over again. It would be more meaningful that way, he felt. And when Erik learned about the early onset of arthritis nesting in his 24 year-old body, it didn't really occur to him to complain, or to alter any part of his lifestyle. He did things exactly the way he did before, only now they were harder. His sentiment was, "So there's pain - what of it?"

He just stretched several times day, took the multitude of pills prescribed to him, and ate a shitload of bananas. "The potassium" he explains, "is extremely important." Almost without exception, every  time Erik walks into a store he walks out with bananas. He eats them in 2 or 3 bites.

So when Erik and I set off on our first "hard" back country camping trip, as rated by the Shenandoah National Park website, Erik's pack was stocked with plenty of bananas. And tuna and cliff bars and peanuts and a trowel and four flashlights and five knives and his tent and his 9 mm. Again, intense. My pack had some of those things, minus the firearm, plus a few gadgets like the expensive GPS unit and the water purifier, plus a journal to record mileage and wildlife and things. 

The trip was planned for nine miles to the site and another nine back to the car, which isn't so daunting. Just a single night, and the Spring weather would be nice. But a couple hours into day 1, we began to notice how we'd been hiking downhill almost nonstop. Due either to hubris or ignorance, we weren't seriously concerned. It's not like we had to run back up the hill, we could go as slow as we needed to. How hard could walking get?

We found a place to camp on the crest of a hill, with a breathtaking view of the famed Shenandoah valley and plenty of flat ground to pitch our tent. We actually slept pretty well, and at first light we packed everything up, reset the GPS, and began the climb upward. 

It was somewhere between steps 25-30 that I thought to myself, "We've made a huge mistake." My legs were crying out in pain from the downhill hike the day before, and I started doing the math. I considered how much food we had, our access to fresh water, and the remaining hours of daylight - to that I added the elevation deferential between us and our car: 5,186 feet. Not good.

I wasn't imagining our emaciated bodies picked apart by carrion, mind you, as on the way down we saw a troupe of cheery boy scouts who surely would have carried us back to our car like dutiful Oompa Loompas. But even still, for me anyway, the fear was real; we were 1/10th of the way up the mountain and my body was already begging me to quit. 

I didn't say anything because I usually internalize my fears long before I express them. And Erik didn't say anything because he thinks and acts like a Combat Carl. So on we trudged for a little while, until I had my first breakdown. I leveled with Erik: "I'm going to have to leave my pack here on the mountain. I can come back for it next weekend. There's no way I can make it with the pack."

Erik was disgusted by my bargaining, and wouldn't consider it even for a second, even after I begged him. He said, "If you drop your pack, I'm going to carry it. But nothing is getting left on this mountain."

Combat Carl finds a way. 

He told me not to think about the miles ahead, or the depressing nature of the elevation behind us and the elevation in front of us. "Just focus on your next step," he said, "and when it hurts, just scream." And so I started to scream. Which means on that particular Sunday I had cried and screamed before 9:00am. 4,000 vertical feet to go. 

A mile or so later Erik sort of  . . . crumbled. Not in a metaphorical way, but was walking and then like a sandcastle he just sort of crumbled onto his ass. Through a grimace, he revealed to me what he'd been hiding: his arthritis was acting up and his legs, as I understood it, were losing flexibility. I fished through his pack to grab his medicine kit, and he found the medicine he had been prescribed to fight particularly painful attacks,

"You should take one too" he said. "It'll help."

He was not wrong. The next 8 miles were still miserable - we ran out of both food and water, and at times we moved so slowly I was worried the sun would set before we made it up the mountain - but we made it to the top, packs and all. I was emotionally compromised and physically shaking, but we were back on asphalt. In the car, a left on Skyline Drive, and back to civilization.

Except that's when the next attack came. Erik's legs seized up and it was all he could do to veer off onto a clearing on the shoulder. He spilled out of the car and onto the ground, and I looked on in horror as he seemed to be fighting through a considerable amount of pain. He was telling me not to call 911, but it didn't matter anyway because we were still up in the mountains and my phone had no service.

Suddenly, a small Chinese man was beside me. Looking back, I suppose he must have seen us and pulled his car over, but at the time I could have sworn he emerged from the forest. He wasn't ancient, but he was very old, and he spoke in whispy, broken English - and he wanted to help.

Erik got out ". . . bananas"

The situation was already pretty absurd, so I just threw it out there. "Sir, do you have any, um, bananas with you?"

"Yes, yes, wait." He went back to his car, and returned with an entire sack of bananas. There were perhaps three or four bunches of them. Apparently unphased by the sheer improbability of his good fortune, Erik began crushing the bananas one by one and throwing the peels to the side.

Largely useless throughout this whole ordeal, I began collecting the discarded peels. I then took a bunch out of the bag, and tried to hand the rest back to the Chinese Banana Man, but he refused. They were a gift, he said, and as Erik - still flat on his back on the side of the road - regained his sanity and control of his legs, I thanked our hero and sent him on his way.

We made it back home safely. I'm careful to check for elevations now before embarking on a trail.

The moral of the story is this: Thank you Chinese Banana Man, wherever you are.



They Are The Champions - A Layman's Guide to the MLG Anaheim 2014 Competitors

Mang0
Sometimes called “The Kid,” Mang0 is a fan favorite not only for his play, but for doing things like throwing his shirt into the crowd. His tattoos, long hair, and NSFW reputation make for a good player profile as the “bad boy” of Smash, but in the past year The Kid has cleaned up. He shaved his beard, landed a major sponsorship, and even became a proud father. He’s got more on the line than ever before.
Listen for: “Mang0” chants, or even louder “USA” chants when facing off against the Japanese or Swedish.

Mew2King
Dubbed “The Robot.” Originally known for compiling vast amounts of obscenely accurate game data, M2K eventually made a name for himself by using his frame-perfect play to become the top player in the world (for a short period of time, but by a terrifyingly wide margin).
Watch for: his trademark rocking back and forth during matches, then elation at his wins and devastation at his losses.

PPMD
Watch an interview with PPMD, and *try* not to be charmed by him. No really, that’s a challenge. His boyish and humble demeanor belong to a newcomer just happy to be included, and give no hint of his steady, seven-year climb to the top, nor to his headline victories over the past year.
Listen for: The “stack it up” chant when his Falco goes off with those seemingly endless combos.

Hungrybox
You saw him on stage at E3, getting into it with Nintendo’s president at the famed Nokia Theater. Well-spoken and well-groomed, Hungrybox has grown up inside the competitive Smash community, but breaks the gamer stereotype. While likeable as a person, he is often cheered against for his character and play style (would you root for this thing?), he has developed a habit of wearing headphones while he plays to block out the crowd.
Watch for: Head bopping to Kanye West and maybe even some silent rapping.

Armada
The Swedish Sniper. The Beast from Sweden. By far the most successful European player of all time (reference theChampionship Belt for illustration), and the only player to win major tournaments with Princess Peach . . . ever. Armada is coming off of a hiatus, and is still getting his swag back, but you’ll never hear him make excuses.
Watch for: His quiet face of concentration and focus, contrasted by fist pumps after a job well done.

Leffen
The Villain. Certainly the only competitor on this list who was banned from competing by an entire country. Since those (purposely not aforementioned) incidents a while back, Leffen has made efforts to rebuild burnt bridges, but not necessarily to rehabilitate his image. No, this player seems to relish his reputation for being a dick brutally honest, the same reputation which inspired a mock Twitter account for his ego that has over 1,000 followers.
Watch for: Aggressive tweets from the real Leffen, even mid-tournament; perfectly coiffed hair.

Zero
Gonzalo “Zero” Barrios and his white scarf have moved to the United States to beat you in video games. The cherry was placed on his budding competitive career when he won Nintendo’s invitational tournament  earlier this year.
Watch for: The scarf. Zero explains that it was a gift from his mother before he left Chile, and it represents strength, support, family, and country.

Soft
While some of the players on this list qualified for MLG in one event, this up-and-comer earned his autobid by putting in work all throughout the grassroots season, traveling all across the US and inspiring lots of people to say “wait, Soft is there? I thought he lived in Georgia??”
Watch for: his trademark play-to-win attitude.

Hax
Hax started in the Smash community when he was so young that his first team name was “The Little Rascals.” As the years have ticked by, he has enjoyed dramatic improvement, but remains unable to break down the final barrier and secure a spot among the highest tier of players. Hax recently switched his character main to achieve this, which has resulted insome challenges, and an initial step backward.
Watch for: 2 steps forward.

Remen
The wild card. Remen is the Dutch player who qualified for MLG Anaheim by winning the Japanese qualifier event. That event is the first tournament he has won in 9 years. A stroke of luck? The start of something new? After all, he was just picked up by LowLandLions.
Watch for: Other champions sleeping on the one player they don’t know.

Westballz
“He’s so hot right now.” This extremely technical and extremely incendiary player from Burbank is gunning to cause a huge upset. Over the past year, he has earned the rank of #1 in the most densely skilled region in the world right now, Southern California.
Watch for: High highs and low lows – it’s all or nothing with Westballz.

aMSa
Hailing all the way from Miyagi, Japan, here is a prime example of the kind of player that brings excitement to video game tournaments. What’s more, his humility, infamous kindness, and uncommonly used character have earned him a tremendous fanbase in a short amount of time; much of his travel this summer has been crowd-funded by his fans. It seems like everyone wants to rally behind The Red Yoshi.
Listen for: His deliberate-but-still-developing English. Earlier this year, he accidentally coined the phrase, “I pray to win.”

(originally published on MLG's blog, June 19th, 2014)

Team Meeting

TEAM MEETING

Okay Smashers, you’re probably wondering why I’ve asked you here. Well, we need to talk. It’s about doubles.
I have a burning passion for doubles, I really do. But rather than get on a soapbox and try to force that passion on the community, I think it’s time to do the right thing. I think we need to tilt our collective chin in the upward direction, shoulders back, and admit that it’s time to call it quits.
I think we need to abolish doubles tournaments.
As briefly as possible, I’m going to outline why I think doubles tournaments are no longer a worthwhile investment of our time, and I hope to Azen above that someone can write a counterpoint article that proves me wrong.
My principle and underlying argument is that the 2v2 medium of Smash competition has been in place for over 10 years, and has failed to take hold. I think it is better for us conscientiously kill it now, rather than watch it get dragged into the “platinum age” by a dull inertia. I think it might be more humane.
It’s Messy
Having four characters share one screen, especially in SSBM, is a hot mess underprime conditions. But imagine that you’ve got two to three foxes on the stage, and the stage is Dreamland. Now picture the way the camera zooms out – the stocks are in the way of the players, one of the foxes is a ghost, and green team is blending in with the bushes. Tell me that’s not a mess.
These aesthetic challenges compound the difficulty of simply trying to keep track of four players moving at split-second speeds. It’s hard to commentate properly. All of this means that spectators have trouble following these matches, and therefore become disinterested. In a word, they are inaccessible. I hear over and over again that casual players and spectators aren’t interested in doubles. And if spectators are the key to our future, then perhaps that future doesn’t feature doubles.
It’s Not Healthy Competition
Think about how you want our competitive scene to be represented, and how you’d like people to view us. Seriously, stop reading and think about it for a second. Now pick a tournament at random and look at the doubles results; odds are that no more than one team in the top five is a practiced unit. Rather, we tend to see teams cobbled together at the last-minute, and the two best players at the tournament almost invariably join together because it is their best chance to make money, and they just take 1st place by force.
But Smash 2v2 is incredibly complex. European teams have shown us just a sampling of what doubles should look like, and US teams are nowhere near it. If we haven’t, as a community, decided to take the time to harness the aforementioned mess in all these years, then I think it’s time to pull funding. Frankly it’s embarrassing to watch our best players bumble around the stage trying to make it through a doubles set with any kind of grace. (Of course there are exceptions, such as The Moon/DJ Nintendo, but these exceptions only prove the rule).
It Might Be Happening Anyway
I’ve attended tournaments with perhaps 30-50 people in the room, where only 5 teams enter. Often times the only teams that enter are ones that believe they have a chance at money.
I’ve been a spectator at home, trying desperately and unsuccessfully to find out details/results on a team tournament. Combing Reddit, Twitter, and Smashboards in vein and asking myself: isn’t the writing on the wall?
Ambiguity and apathy are our enemies, friends. We need to choose our goals wisely and work tirelessly toward them. Keeping that in mind, think of what we could do with the resources we would gain back by no longer hosting doubles. We could run smoother singles tournaments, less hectic and ending earlier, or perhaps add a new event – maybe crews? I’m just spitballing here, but what if we used the extra time to run boot camps where players new and old could sign up for on-site training?
Think about it, and share your opinions via your favorite social medium. Make your voice heard.
————-
Christopher “Wife” Fabiszak is a Melee enthusiast and author of Team Ben: A Year as a Professional Gamer

(originally published on Meleeiton.me, 04/21/2014)


Team Ben: A Year as a Professional Gamer


(Excerpt from my book,  available as a free download or in paperback, via the book's Tumblr page)

. . . two good things came out of MLG Chicago: the return of Azen and my proper introduction to KoreanDJ.
As this new era of Melee was ushered in, Azen must have seemed to many new players like more a legend than an actuality. But there he was at MLG Chicago. Azen is far from intimidating in stature, but wherever he played, people noticed and crowds gathered around. “Did you see Azen, the Master of Diversity, is here? I heard he can beat you with every character.” The master was rusty, but still placed top 5. As far as I was concerned, this meant the current talent at MLG was officially put on watch.
Especially you, Ken.
Then there was Daniel “KoreanDJ” Jung, a fireball kind of player from Massachusetts. He brought an unprecedented intensity with him to tournaments that instantly made me take notice. At Chicago he fought his way to 7th place, but it was getting to know him that really made me fear him as a competitor. I considered myself to be a pretty intense person, but DJ's passion, energy, and dedication were awe-inspiring. He was a renaissance man, bringing this energy to a long list of hobbies. After his gaming career ended he started his own business.
After the tournament he took me to the pro lounge where he showed me how he could play Guitar Hero on expert — backwards. Meaning, he faced away from the screen. I remember thinking, “who the hell is this guy?"