The 2018 Japanese Evolution Championship Series, commonly referred to as Evo Japan 2018, was a fighting game event held in Tokyo, Japan on January 26–28. As mentioned in its namesake, the event was the first Evo event to take place in Japan and outside of the United States. The event offered tournaments for various fighting games, such as Street Fighter V, Tekken 7, and Super Smash Bros. for Wii U. Over 5,000 people registered for the event with Street Fighter V and Tekken 7's entrant numbers being on par with their respective Evo 2017 numbers.
Venue
Evo Japan 2018 was the first event in the Evolution Championship Series to take place outside of its usual Las Vegas. Instead it took place in the Japanese city of Tokyo. The first two days of the event took place at Sunshine City while the third day took place at Akiba Square.[1]
The event was initially scheduled for May 2011, but was postponed due to the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami. The pre-tournament, entitled [sài], featured Tekken 7, Guilty Gear Xrd REV 2, and Super Smash Bros. for Wii U. Street Fighter V's exclusion from [sài] was due to licensing issues which led to the latter of the three being included instead.[2][6]
Evo Japan 2018 was streamed entirely through Twitch. The streams were viewable in the English, Japanese, and Chinese languages. Capcom also ran their Capcom Fighters stream for Street Fighter V: Arcade Edition. The ARMS finals concluded on Friday while finals for The King of Fighters XIV and BlazBlue: Central Fiction concluded on Saturday. The rest of the lineup concluded on Sunday with Street Fighter V: Arcade Edition being the closing game for the event.[9][8]
A notable match in the BlazBlue: Central Fiction finals paired Yuta's Es and MokeMoke's Relius against each other. When MokeMoke was down a game and was about to take a game on Yuta, the latter retaliated with a clash mechanic giving him the set win advancing him to loser's finals.[11] In the Guilty Gear Xrd REV 2 event, Mikado Shodai was able to send Omito Hashimoto to the loser's bracket, but then proceeded to get double eliminated in his next two matches.[12]
On May 17, 2018, it was revealed that Evo Japan 2018 suffered a loss of over one million dollars. The reasoning is mainly due to its status as a free-to-enter event. According to Joey "Mr. Wizard" Cuellar:
“Japanese law only allows us to pay out 20 times the entry fee, so in order for us to pay out the amount that we want, we have to make the tournament free entry.”
In comparison, Evo 2017 charged $55-$75 for competitor pass depending on when players registered as well as an additional $10 for every game each player wanted to enter. In addition, the first two days of Evo Japan 2018 were free whereas the finals were paid entrance.[17]