Super Smash Bros. Brawl Challenges: The Stats
Exclusive to the Nintendo Wii console, Super Smash Bros. Brawl is the third installment in the crossover fighting game franchise, succeeding the 2001 hit, Super Smash Bros. Melee. Created by Sora and published by Nintendo, the Super Smash Bros. Brawl challenge was initially released in Japan on January 31, 2008; in the U.S. on March 9; and in June of the same year for Australian and European audiences.
Within the fighting video game genre, Super Smash Bros. Brawl competitions are considered beat ‘em up games (or melee battles), because they involve characters facing off against a group of enemies—generally in a scrolling manner—as opposed to a series of one-on-one fighting competitions. Another distinct element of Super Smash Bros. Brawl game battles is the use of ring-outs instead of knockouts; here, opposing characters are “killed” by sending them careening off the screen versus being knocked out in the standard style.
For BringIt members who are disappointed with the lack of M-for-mature-audience massacres in Super Smash Bros. Brawl, there’s a very adult advantage: making money! BringIt enables you to block, attack, and throw combos against competitors from all over the globe and earn money for your mite. In other words, teen-appropriate Super Smash Bros Brawl tournaments feel very grown up when you’re depositing wads of money into your big-boy bank account.
Online Super Smash Bros. Brawl Tournaments: Features & Upgrades
Super Smash Bros. Brawl video game challenges deliver all the badass brawling of the previous Melee matches, with some significant enhancements. Primarily, Super Smash Bros. Brawl differs from its predecessor via the following improvements:
- More controllable characters—a selection of 35 to be exact—make challenges more visually stimulating and give gamers their first-ever opportunity to control third-party (i.e. non-Nintendo) characters
- Online Super Smash Bros. Brawl battles—a first for the franchise—enable fans to compete remotely against any opponent worldwide using a Nintendo Wi-Fi connection (and BringIt members to take their cash, as an added incentive)
- Supped-up single-player modes—including 62 tri-level Events, Stadium mode, and an unbelievably imaginative Adventure mode, titled Subspace Emissary (SSE), which allows Super Smash Bros Brawl fighters to navigate intricate storylines and side-scrolling levels as well as obliterate a number of all-new enemies
- Final Smash actions—offer the initial opportunity for Super Smash fans to perform character-specific extreme-attacks, resulting in a slew of destructive consequences
The Super Smash Bros. Brawl Tournament on BringIt
Signing up for a free BringIt membership enables you to compete for cold, hard cash against brawlers in both your backyard and across the ocean in two-player online Super Smash Bros. Brawl battles and multiplayer, bracket-style Super Smash Bros. Brawl video game tournaments. Since BringIt holds all money safely and securely in an FDIC-insured escrow account until a winner has been determined and confirmed, there’s no having to trust that some guy in Taiwan will really send you cash after you kicked his butt in Brawl. So join BringIt now to challenge, play, and earn in a Super Smash Bros Brawl competition! Because who really cares if you are essentially being killed by a cartoon character…when you’re walking away with your wallet that much wider.







