Good things are worth the wait, which is the best explanation for how I found myself playing in a re-scheduled Christmas Darklight tournament with Team Pyrus Uprising on the day before Easter. :)
I took a leisurely drive in after having been on Long Island the night before,
arriving at Laser One in New Jersey by mid-afternoon for a few practice games
and a chance to reacclimate myself to the arena and the system. Because
Darklight is a somewhat rare laser tag system to find in the U.S. I always
enjoy the opportunity to play something a little different.
With a quick review of the basics, I was good to go.
I appreciated the invite from team captain Devin to join Team
Pyrus Uprising for the competition that would include five different game
formats throughout the night. I looked forward to playing with my new teammates
including Devin (Storm Taker), Anthony (Penigetti), Alex (AL-Dawg), Chaim
(Gate) and Jack (IDK).
We set up home base at a party table and started putting together
our strategies for each of the game formats.
This was a small tournament, but had some cool moments. Four teams
gathered in the briefing room to hear the arena owner, Jim, give instruction
about each format as we went along.
And our team had some good success right out of the gate. In fact,
we were undefeated right up until game six of the tournament. Too early to
celebrate Chaim?
The first basic team game was a pretty easy win against the team
calling themselves the Goon Squad, but the second game we played was a little
more interesting. You see, by eyeballing the other teams we had made some
guesses about how things might go and the team to watch appeared to be the Lift
Dawgs, mostly because of one player named KC. I had played a couple of practice
rounds with him earlier and he seemed like the only major threat on that team,
but his teammates looked more formidable than the others. The Bombers were actually
the bigger surprise, with free agent Top Hat making their team significantly
stronger and appearances can be deceiving. To my eyes, each of these teams had
one strong anchor player and a roster of players, perhaps with less experience,
but definitely with plenty of heart and motivation.
To our surprise, even though we won our game against the Bombers,
it was way closer than we expected. We won the game in the final second. I know
because I did it. As the clock was counting down the final five seconds I was
standing near a GEM, directly across from one guy who was prematurely
celebrating and shouting “we won!” and I looked down to check my credits. I had
enough and took a Hail Mary shot at the GEM, quite literally as the countdown
hit “one” and I got it! That was the point shift that allowed us to win that
game, albeit with a much closer margin than anyone expected. Perhaps this other
team was not to be underestimated after all!
This is the way the schedule was set up (although a few things
would change before the night was done).
The next game we would play would be Team Blasters, played against
the Lift Dawgs. Jim tried to hype things up a bit by announcing his prediction to
the group that this game would be the one that would decide the rest of the
night. We could only hope so because we won that game against the Lift Dawgs by
a pretty solid lead. OK Chaim, you can bring out the balloons now. Chaim?
Chaim? Where did he go? Good thing we had an alternate player, just in case,
lol.
We had another couple of games that went in our favor.
Then in our sixth game in the Rush format we took our first loss
of the night against the Lift Squad. Coincidentally, this was the point where
the tournament shifted for other reasons as well. Jim announced that a couple
of players from one of the teams had to leave, so the decision had been made to
merge the remaining players from Goon Squad and the Bombers and re-work the
schedule, which changed all the match-ups for the remaining games. I won’t
judge whether or not this was the right call considering the experience levels
and the casual nature of this event. I will say this is not how I would have
handled it in any other tournament setting, but one of the things I have learned
from events like this is that adaptability is a virtue.
Three big things happened as a result of this change. First, we now
had to go up against the Lift Dawgs two additional times. Second, we now had to
play four back-to-back games without breaks. Third, the final format was played
with three teams in the arena instead of two.
We lost both games in the Pink Panther format, which was (to my
mind) the most unbalanced of the game opportunities. This is not a new opinion,
I have felt that in the past as well. This is the format that I think should be
dropped from tournament play because it plays more like an escalation game.
But, when you are served mashed potatoes, you eat mashed potatoes.
The final format, Borg Acquisition, was the most complicated based
on the informational write-up, but my choice was to not overthink it. I went
immediately for the GEMs and took three of them within the first minute or so
of the game and a fourth after that. This is how our team won the second-to-last
game of the night and brought this tournament to an exciting finale. Everything
came down to the very last game. Mathematically, because of the changes that
had taken place, there were a couple of scenarios that could potentially take
place. At this point we were five points behind, but that did not mean the end
at all.
What it meant was that we would have to win this game for one of
two things to happen. If we won and Lift Dawgs came second that would tie it up
and we would have to face them in a tie-breaker. Or, if we won and by chance
the Goon Squad came in second (a real possibility as they had only been behind Lift
Dawgs by 27 points in the last game), then we could win it outright. All of
this was announced before we went in, so the game was intense!
Cut to the chase, Team Lift Dawgs won the final game, meaning they
won the tournament and Team Pyrus Uprising took second place. My congratulations
to the Lift Dawgs and all the players who brought an excellent challenge. It
may have been a small event, but it was absolutely worthwhile and I had a
wonderful time!
This wrapped up a really fun event and an awesome weekend of tag.
I look forward to returning to Laser One in the future and thoroughly enjoyed
my time playing with Team Pyrus Uprising. And of course, it was great to get to
play Darklight again, as it is always a blast to tag some blob lights!
Comments
or Questions?
Contact: Tivia@tiviachickloveslasertag.com
Websites: www.tiviachickloveslasertag.com and www.photonforever.com
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