Oolong wrote:When I first got my 360, all I really cared about was playing Street Fighter online against real people. I bought a MAS stick, and played Hyper for a while, and had a blast. I took a break from fighting games, and by the time I realized UMK3 and Fatal Fury Special had been released, I was about a month too late and people had already moved on to other games. On WarTech, I was about a year too late, and I just had no desire to play the story mode.
SFHD was a blast and I got in hundreds of matches against quality opponents. It was as close to the glory arcade days as I've experienced in some time. SF4 was released, and everyone soon migrated. The SFHD lobbies were empty, and I decided to give 4 a go even though I hadn't vibed with it at my local arcade. It was fun for a while even though I just did the same **** with Vega that I did in ST, but it got boring quick (competition or not).
I had no idea VOOT was coming out for the 360... not a clue until the week of the release. Just that prior weekend, I cracked open my DC and Saturn sticks for a buddy of mine who was visiting from L.A. He and I used to play VOOM back in the day, and it felt great to dust off those Twin Sticks, have a few beers, and just duel all night.
For the first week of playing ranked VOOT matches, I feared that the competition would dry up just as it had for previous games. Well, I'm convinced that it won't happen nearly as quickly with VOOT. Why? Because of our beloved Japanese player base. I'm so grateful that VOOT is a successful franchise overseas because when I log on at 2am PST, all I see are Japanese players packing the lobby with 1 or 2 bar connections producing lag-free matches. Without the JP players, I'm sure I'd be looking at empty lobbies that late at night.
This is my rant, and my reason for optimism

Oolong, I can soooooo relate to you. I've always been a HUGE SF head...very competitive back in '90-'93 on CE and Turbo, dabbled a bit with the Alphas, and skipped 3 totally. With 4 feeling like the direct sequel to 2, I was able to jump in with Bison (my main) with very little lost in translation. He translated so well in fact, that I still haven't fully integrated Focus Attacks into my game because, quite frankly, I survive just fine off of my 15+ years of muscle memory.
But I still went full steam ahead, and even placed 3rd in a local tourney after getting beat by the 1st and 2nd best player in town. Not bad for an old man (36) that has like NO time to play/practice. It was then I kind of hit a turning point. Yes, I still heart SF, and will still play 4. I also plan to try Blazblue and KoF. However, I'm not getting any younger and fresh experiences seem to be fewer and farther in between nowadays.
Enter VOOT.
Sure I'm not awesome like most of the diehards in here....but that kind of what makes it for me in way. It's all brand new to me...I mean, I've had the DC version forever, but going against living breathing pilots, plus the fact that this is revered arcade revision 5.66, makes it practically a brand new game anyway. For the 1st time in a long time, I am genuinely EXCITED!
Some might think that having a JPN heavy userbase is a drawback...I consider it a plus. I mean, I'd much rather spar against a seasoned JPN player than a fly by night, curious US Halo 3 player who won't even give the game a second look after getting most of the easy cheevs that night. Granted, those JPN players kick my teeth in (mostly), but if you want to get better, you have to spar against the best.
Besides, with Menthol having the foresight to create this site, I'm sure that we will always be able to find someone to play against. Better yet, one of our members even put together a google map of where people live, so if the sad day ever arrive where the servers are shut down, we might could meet up with someone, or even before any of that. Plus, with the way diehards also seem to be "t3h l337 h4X" nowadays, I'm sure SOMEBODY would set up a homebrew VOOT server so the problem would be mitigated within a month of XBLA shutdown.
The community is coming out of hiding.
It's a brave new world, my friend...and I'm just trying to get in where I fit in.
