Have any suspect tests of Gen's 4/5 actually been carried out in the past couple of years?
Yes, there have been BW suspects since XY was released - in particular I believe Drought/Chlorophyll and Sand Stream/Sand Rush were banned.
Have any suspect tests of Gen's 4/5 actually been carried out in the past couple of years?
There are a lot of arguments on both sides and I totally respect that - I'm quite glad that many posters are sharing their opinions, but I think that the post I'm about to quote and respond to covers a lot of ground and seems to be getting the most attention, so I'm going to direct my response here mainly because there's a lot that contradicts my personal opinion and there are some points made here that I deem as quite lackluster that the general public seems to be disregarding.
I bold the last sentence for two reasons: it sets the tone for the entirety of the pro-ban argument (Mega Sableye is "unhealthy") and it, therefore, gives us a more defined window of what to talk address.
The definition of unhealthy in a tiering context can be seen here for those who are unfamiliar (I strongly advise that everyone reads this prior to posting), but I will leave it below for the sake of convenience.
IV.) Unhealthy - elements that are neither uncompetitive nor broken, yet deemed undesirable for the metagame such that they inhibit "skillful play" to a large extent
Just to expand on this a bit more, skill(ful play) can be defined as (from the same thread):
I.) Skill - the subjective metric we use to judge player worth in competitive Pokemon
B.) The majority of our potential suspect discussion will center around the defined versions of uncompetitive, broken, and unhealthy and how a particular suspect element lowers some component of player skill within those 3 constructs.
Now, there are some elements that can get in the way of skill determining the winner of a competitive Pokemon game - the one that seems to be at the heart of every single argument, be it directly or indirectly, is the element of team match-up. Some people get at it indirectly by saying that the lack of hazard play makes it so that they have to bring breakers, which makes playing against stall black-and-white/win-or-loss from team preview while others indicate it more directly. Regardless, I disagree with and am going to directly disprove both of these notions from a practical and fundamental standpoint. As the aforementioned tiering thread said on team match-up:
2.) Team match up is only a concern if no matter what the better player did, he had zero or an extremely slim chance of winning.
Essentially, the crux of every well articulated pro-ban argument boils down to the fact that the presence of Mega Sableye is a large contributor in stall's match-up's being very black-and-white, as I alluded to in the above paragraph. If there was any significant gray area, then this argument would be completely invalidated given the above quote from the tiering thread because there would not be "(zero or) an extremely slim change" for games to be won due to outplaying as opposed to match-up.
Looking at stall from a perspective of someone who has faced it dozens of times in tournaments, test games, and ladder alike, the playstyle's archetypes with Mega Sableye are far from being all "easy win" and "auto loss" from team preview. I have also been in the driver's seat, using Mega Sableye on ABR's stall team in dozens of test games, sadly, and even more during OLT once I hit a decently high part of the ladder. I know someone like ABR himself has far more experience with his stall team and Mega Sableye in general, don't get me wrong, but some of his past games/games he has specifically given people the team to use in are some of the best testaments to the fact that HIS stall team actually has had many competitive, high-level matches that are not determined inherently by match-up. I think the best way to break the ice here is to show some of the higher level games where stall has been used, with and without Mega Sableye, and to judge if it they were competitive and if Mega Sableye factored into the lack of competitiveness, if they weren't competitive (or if it factored into it being competitive, if it was competitive).
SPL (Sable stall didn't become much of a thing until midway through this and the metagame was a bit different at the start, but there are commonalities to non-sab meta stall and some other things, so it's all still very noteworthy)
http://replay.pokemonshowdown.com/smogtours-ou-112366 - week 1, cbb vs boudouche
CrashinBoomBang's team: Amoonguss / Chansey / Quagsire / Skarmory / Slowbro / Tyranitar
boudouche's team: Manectric / Keldeo-Resolute / Landorus-Therian / Alakazam / Excadrill / Tornadus-Therian
Doucher was in no way prepared for a stall team because he prepared for CBB to bring his normal offense; therefore, the game was not very competitive (the final score was 2-0, but Boud had no chance to win in a clean, well-played match from both sides). However, there was no Sableye on CBB's team - CBB's team is actually what some variants of non-Sableye meta stall looks like.
http://replay.pokemonshowdown.com/smogtours-ou-112882 - week 1, daft vs DD
Eric Pryclz's (daft) team: Amoonguss / Chansey / Quagsire / Skarmory / Slowbro / Tyranitar
Destiny Device's team: Garchomp / Thundurus / Bronzong / Latios / Venusaur / Landorus-Therian
Daft uses the same team CBB did, but DD was at least moderately prepared. Daft didn't play the early game all too well while DD did catch a lucky break early on, so this game could've gone either way in an ordinary playing-field, but regardless this was somewhat close and I'd say it's safe to say that this game was competitive (or at least would have been, still sorta was).
http://replay.pokemonshowdown.com/smogtours-ou-118614 - week 4, ben gay vs ary
craing's team: Mandibuzz / Chansey / Venusaur / Quagsire / Suicune / Doublade
Ary's team: Garchomp / Serperior / Slowbro / Tyranitar / Jirachi / Tornadus-Therian
Chansey of Ben Gay got haxed to shit by Torn-T and then a few other unfortunate things happened, but if you grant so many opportunities with such a passive stall like that (no pursuit or real backbone), the odds of that increase exponentially. With that said, it was a fairly competitive match - both players had a chance to win from the start and there's no denying this, imo. No Sableye here, either.
http://replay.pokemonshowdown.com/smogtours-ou-133285 - week 6, blunder vs xray
xRay~'s team: Garchomp / Tangrowth / Slowking / Tyranitar / Excadrill / Talonflame
blunderr's team: Amoonguss / Chansey / Quagsire / Skarmory / Slowbro / Tyranitar
This was kinda a blowout from the middle or some point when Mega Chomper started to do work and Quag got crippled...it just kinda fell apart systematically. Xray prepared thoroughly for Stall and beat it in; this game was not competitive. Chomper. No Sable in this one.
http://replay.pokemonshowdown.com/smogtours-ou-135546 - week 7, tdk vs jirache
Game of Odds's team: Clefable / Alakazam / Rotom-Wash / Heatran / Tyranitar / Latios
TDK's team: Amoonguss / Chansey / Quagsire / Skarmory / Slowbro / Tyranitar
Last game before ABR invented Mega Sable stall - you'll see some Sable as a comparative point in healthy doses soon, I promise. Anyway, this is a game using that same team CBB used, again, and both players had a chance to win. Yea, TDK only won at the end of the day due to hax and had a pretty certain loss had he not gotten lucky vs Alakazam there, but if Tar was played differently and TDK had some momentum in places he didn't, he definitely could've won this game (got his confirmation on this sentiment just now, too), so it's safe to say this game was competitive.
http://replay.pokemonshowdown.com/smogtours-ou-134492 - the birth of ABR's MegaSab stall
ABR's team: Sableye / Weavile / Skarmory / Chansey / Amoonguss / Quagsire
Tesung's team: Clefable / Starmie / Ferrothorn / Diancie / Volcarona / Landorus-Therian
★Tesung: o god
This was a slaughter; tesung had no chance to break Mega Sable stall. It was not competitive, but nobody had really ever seen something like this before, so you have to give it time to settle in before drawing much of a conclusion, in my opinion.
WCOP
http://replay.pokemonshowdown.com/smogtours-ou-170277 - Tele vs Xtra
idm tubby's team: Tornadus-Therian / Latios / Slowbro / Clefable / Ferrothorn / Garchomp
xtra's team: Sableye / Weavile / Skarmory / Chansey / Amoonguss / Quagsire
This game was Xtra's game, assuming he didn't fuck up majorly, from the get-go. That's because Tele's team was complete and utter shit and unprepared for stall, let alone a lot of other threats. Any stall would've easily fucked over this poor team as long as the user wasn't playing very poorly (btw, this replay cuts off, but xtra did win).
http://replay.pokemonshowdown.com/smogtours-ou-170539 - Fuga vs PDC
THE PDC SHOW's team: Sableye / Clefable / Chansey / Skarmory / Alomomola / Gliscor
Omfuga's team: Lopunny / Ferrothorn / Clefable / Landorus-Therian / Starmie / Tyranitar
I mean Fuga won easily, but PDC kinda fucked up and while that team Fuga used has been all over in OLT and after it was initially revealed in this match, it's not an auto-win vs Stall, imo. It can pressure stall well, but it's a competitive game while PDC's stall wasn't the norm and it was played poorly, PDC could've won and Sable would've played a big role in hazard control in that scenario, but it didn't make things unhealthy in any way, shape, or form...it made the game close given how things played out and both teams needed things to go to win the game, so there's nothing wrong here.
http://replay.pokemonshowdown.com/smogtours-ou-171443 - alastor vs asuka
Alastor Law's team: Raikou / Garchomp / Skarmory / Slowbro / Sableye / Gardevoir
Asuk4's team: Zapdos / Altaria / Doublade / Quagsire / Mandibuzz / Chansey
Shitty stall team, prepared opposing team (kinda weird w/ regular Sab tho), and poor play...not indicative of much
http://replay.pokemonshowdown.com/smogtours-ou-171659 - ren-chon vs tricking
Ren-chon's team: Clefable / Garchomp / Manaphy / Scizor / Landorus-Therian / Amoonguss
Re-Cion's team: Sableye / Weavile / Skarmory / Chansey / Amoonguss / Quagsire
Ren-Chon wasn't prepared for any stall, ABR stall won, that simple - I reckon that any variant of stall or really any fat team would've won unless Mana 6-0d them, so it's just lazy building
http://replay.pokemonshowdown.com/smogtours-ou-172093 - Laurel vs League
Laurel's team: Gliscor / Chansey / Suicune / Quagsire / Skarmory / Sableye
iloveleague's team: Clefable / Medicham / Latios / Garchomp / Rotom-Wash / Ferrothorn
I mean it was kinda a weird, mediocre battle, but both dudes very much had a chance to win and while MegaCham could've been used defensively for Cham and support wise, for checking spikes and such, it clearly wasn't the decisive factor here as League won and could've won in a clean game, pretty clearly. A team that had an answer to stall, but didn't over-prepare or bring an outright breaking core won against stall in a competitive (albeit kinda poorly played on both sides at parts) game - this has happened a lot of times, too, with and without Sable in the equation, but so many people completely overlook this prospect.
http://replay.pokemonshowdown.com/smogtours-ou-172100 - abr vs ben gay
ABR's team: Sableye / Dugtrio / Latias / Tangrowth / Heatran / Togekiss
craing's team: Diancie / Magnezone / Dragonite / Seismitoad / Talonflame / Mew
Idk if this qualifies as stall, but I mean for the sake of being inclusive and fair, this was not competitive, but Sab did nothing here and it was basically DNite fucking ABR's attempt at some funky early SabDug team up.
http://replay.pokemonshowdown.com/smogtours-ou-168427 - HSA vs JohnYiu
JohnxYiu's team: Latios / Volcarona / Gyarados / Landorus-Therian / Jirachi / Lucario
HSA's team: Sableye / Weavile / Skarmory / Chansey / Amoonguss / Quagsire
As lopsided as this looked because of how fucking poorly HSA played, this could've went either way -- HSA himself admits he could've won if he played well and John's team is really just a bunch of strongmons/sweepers thrown together, it's not a 100% win here and ABR said this in the chat, himself, during the game on smogtours. This had potential to be a close, could-go-either-way competitive game and Sab really was a non-factor here, but the stall team in general was not over-prepared for and yet not under-prepared for either by John's team and had prospect to be in for a close match if HSA didn't do...many bad things in his gameplay lmao (cwl)
http://replay.pokemonshowdown.com/smogtours-ou-170503 - Sakis vs Snou
Sakis's team: Garchomp / Excadrill / Tyranitar / Keldeo / Heatran / Celebi
Snou's team: Sableye / Gastrodon / Azumarill / Mew / Skarmory / Clefable
Saki's team was kinda standard looking, but it had Celebi and MegaChomp, so not so much in practice, but it still had a shot to beat stall, making the game competitive and match-up not the deciding factor. Sable didn't do anything ungodly here, as far as I'm concerned, and Snou won because he was the better player, for the most part. Nothing much more to it, no strings attached.
http://replay.pokemonshowdown.com/smogtours-ou-171669 - c0mp vs fruitdealer
c0mp00r's team: Slowbro / Talonflame / Tangrowth / Excadrill / Latios / Landorus-Therian
plopdealer's team: Slowbro / Sableye / Chansey / Skarmory / Serperior / Excadrill
Fruitdealer used a pretty damn stally team, Serp was the lone difference from sorta standard stall mons (Exca was SR Spin Mold Breaker, so it fits on stall kinda). This game came down to the wire and neither played all that poorly, imo, with both teams being legitimate - this was competitive, close, and Sab did nothing that stood out to me as being unhealthy. Imo, this is another testament to Sab being healthy
http://replay.pokemonshowdown.com/smogtours-ou-177072 - quaggster vs alexander
quaggsterrr's team: Sableye / Clefable / Reuniclus / Gliscor / Suicune / Dugtrio
Alexander's team: Ferrothorn / Latios / Garchomp / Tornadus-Therian / Slowbro / Clefable
Alex wasn't prepared for stall, Quaggster brought stall, and Quaggster won. This is how most of the games that are uncompetitve go and this isn't a testament to MegaSab at all; this is simply poor or lazy building by one players' behalf and poor/lazy building can get you burnt vs things that aren't stall, too, if the circumstances arise, so I don't think this is conclusive whatsoever.
http://replay.pokemonshowdown.com/smogtours-ou-175128 - tdk vs mob barley
TDK's team: Latios / Heatran / Amoonguss / Mandibuzz / Keldeo-Resolute / Diancie
Lysergic's team: Sableye / Poliwrath / Clefable / Chansey / Cresselia / Skarmory
This game was kinda cringe and decided by multiple crits for TDK, but I feel like this could've gone either way had TDK handled things aggressively. I'd say match-up played a slight role here as TDK wasn't exactly well-prepared, but he had beyond a shot in the dark and, given what I quoted from the tiering thread before about match-up, this is not enough to use match-up as a means of labeling something as unhealthy and while, sure, MegaSab played a role in this game, it was nothing that seemed to stand-out - it was just another Pokemon on a team in a competitive game and that's what it often is, when people prepare sufficiently for stall and aren't using one of the few strong breakers/breaker cores that make stall auto-lose, pretty much (and stall auto-losing can't be held for or against it, it's just a facet of the style that has no correlation to MegaSab being suspected, imo, just like people building poor teams and being underprepared can't be held for/against it because encouraging/making possible lazy teambuilding shouldn't be a reason for tiering decisions, ever).
http://replay.pokemonshowdown.com/smogtours-ou-177639 - fv vs k12
K-12TheMadchine's team: Sableye / Weavile / Skarmory / Chansey / Amoonguss / Quagsire
FlamingVictini's team: Landorus-Therian / Tyranitar / Alakazam / Cobalion / Amoonguss / Rotom-Wash
I have no clue how the fuck FV did it with the CM Cobalion and all that..I don't think k12 played optimally, but w/ Coba and MegaZam and general pressure, I reckon both players had a shot, even if K12 seemed to have a big advantage from team preview and, I mean, FV did win, so I guess this was a competitive game despite it being kinda odd.
No sab stall in tour playoffs last season, unfortunately, so not much more to go through - will go through OLT to further prove this point if I must
Here are some noteworthy statistics, too
In SPL, Mega Sableye won 4 of the 7 ORAS OU games it was used in that were recorded in the Usage Stats thread, but, once MegaSab stall became a thing and people adapted (or at least should've, but didn't and were lazy, which is on them in building) during WCOP 2016, the usage stat line on it was: | 36 | Sableye | 12 | 5.00% | 41.67% | kinda disappointing. This isn't strong evidence for or against it because usage stats can reflect poor play, poor building, etc. and it's just generally flawed to draw too strong conclusions off of them, especially if it's a smaller sample-size, which this is, but it certainly doesn't do Mega Sableye any justice despite many people noticing it being something that needed suspect attention as more time elapsed and the archetype developed into a popular one.
If it wasn't clear after that, which I hope you at least skimmed through, Mega Sableye stall teams are not totally match-up based. Mega Sableye stall teams can have competitive games and they do have competitive games a fair amount of the time. It is on the builder of the opposing team's shoulders if they fall-flat against Mega Sableye stall and cannot break them no matter what - that is either being lazy in trying to cut a corner or simply lackluster teambuilding - if I didn't have any revenge killer, then I wouldn't do well against offense, either, while if I didn't have consistent offensive presence and/or a hard-hitter, I wouldn't do well against balanced teams. It is true that the means of having success against stall are more defined and definite than the others, but that doesn't change the dynamic given the host of opportunities and the fact that, in practical terms as I very clearly showed above, it still tends to work out sufficiently. At the same time, if you prepare thoroughly for stall, then you can and will win almost all of the time because that's the risk that running stall entails in any competitive tier - if you have a bad match-up and your opponent doesn't fuck up when you're using full stall, you're losing. There is no reason whatsoever to fundamentally change stall as the general dynamic will still hold true and this suspect ladder is currently a strong testament to that, but, more reliably, past stall teams that lacked Mega Sableye like the one used multiple times in SPL (first by CBB week 1), that is also good in a non-Mega Sab metagame, is generating similar results and competitiveness to MegaSab stall. I didn't even want to get into this subset of a point, but in replacing Mega Sab, you open up plenty of options on stall - you can now be threatened/broken by less Pokemon/sets/cores/etc. than beforehand in return for losing convenient hazard counterplay (which a lot of people are making up with use of dual-defog, which seems to be working very well). Overall, you're just trading off ways of being broken - as generations continue to pile on, stall and stallbreaking both will gain tools in every OU generation and this is no stranger to that, but there is no standout reason, there is no epidemic involving stall's viability or unhealthiness in the metagame that warrants any tiering action whatsoever and I am adamant about that after giving this a thorough analysis.
I will give a specific response to the remainder of this post for the sake of closure and potentially reinstilling some key points with more specifics being incorporated, but the general gist of my argument is above.
I find it almost hypocritical of you to say this because you've had many close match-ups using stall, yourself, be it on the ladder during OLT or in tournaments. Regardless of that, however, because I am in no way trying to personally attack you as you are simply sharing your opinion and I wholeheartedly respect and value that, I do not agree with this analysis at all and the contents of my analysis of the battles before and the general premise of high-level teambuilding directly contradicts the notion that your Mega Sableye stall is predominantly match-up based --- it is not. If you wish to play people who build teams poorly/lazily, then perhaps it might seem this way, but that's viewing things through a skewed lens and it's been fairly set-in-stone that there are sufficient outs and means of at least making it a fair fight against your stall team.
I do very much understand that the 'conventional' means of breaking stall that aren't direct attacking/sweeping are put in check, to an extent, due to the presence of Mega Sableye and you have noted this in a proper fashion - that's a good foundation for an argument and I acknowledge this. However, there is nothing beyond a foundation; there is nothing to build upon when anyone tries to make a truly substance-based pro-ban argument because there is no problem with stall or Mega Sableye in the ORAS OU metagame, at the moment. Just because what's normal is out of the equation doesn't automatically warrant tiering action, especially when the alternative means of breaking stall - that pool of breakers and annoyances and so on and so forth - got much larger this generation and the tier's playerbase has taken full advantage of that, as I elaborated upon before.
In saying that "you either have that one Crawdaunt/Heracross or you don't" in regards to playing and having a competitive match against current meta stall is bullshit. You have lost with stall against a plethora of teams lacking either of those two and so have I and many others, cleanly. And beyond specific losses or potential hiccups in the record of stall's usage, there have been consistent defeats or at least possible defeats, meaning that the game was healthy and competitive, by simply well-built bulky-offensive or offensive teams that hit-hard, provide momentum over slower, passive teams, and string together some solid play, which has been demonstrated in many games that I analyzed above. You do need a breaker of some sort or a 'breaking core', but the pool of Pokemon that fit into those categories is far wider than you give it credit to be and that misrepresents the playstyle and inherently flaws your argument.
Perhaps you're looking at things in a linear fashion as it's true that very few things can, standalone, threaten your full stall team, but in the context of a game full of momentum and many other variables that come into play each and every turn, there are so many scenarios that arise in each game that can favor each player and, often times, teams that lack the Pokemon that makes stall click "x" from turn 1 can still fight it out with a chance to win because of giving themselves a path to victory with a well-constructed team that might not seem directly evident at first for the stall user. Pokemon is not a linear game - Pokemon is a complex game and the complexity of it tends to haunt the passive, stallier teams out there and that sentiment has been attested to by many of the above games and many things I have referred to, so, once again, your "you either have one of Craw/hera or you don't" is far-off.
Unfortunate.
I just wish to say that I do, however, agree with most of this sentiment. As stated in the thread I alluded to and linked above, a Pokemon can be banworthy based on being unhealthy or uncompetitve, not just broken. With that said, that doesn't mean that there is any tiering convention that enables you to vote on sheer convenience and that's what a vast majority of pro-ban posters/arguments are (not yours). There is no "easy way out", there is no "this is annoying" clause, and there is no "I don't like it, so let's ban it" line-of-logic and there never should be in tiering...that would cause so many potential ripple-downs and logical fallacies in present and future scenarios that can and will arise that our whole tiering system could plausibly be ruined as a byproduct of it. Stick to the status quo of banworthy clauses and tiering conventions, not making up novel, unprecedented reasoning that is not passable (this isn't aimed at ABR, it's aimed at the general public, branching off of the sentiment I am expressing in response/agreement with ABR's last paragraph).
Do not ban Sablenite.
Yes, there have been BW suspects since XY was released - in particular I believe Drought/Chlorophyll and Sand Stream/Sand Rush were banned.
Sableye, again. Earlier this year in conjunction with Shadow Tag, now on it'a own. Both times I questioned the sheer fact this thing got suspected.
Sableye is a great Mon, especially for teams or other Mons that need hazard control or just something that can deal with status. Especially balanced and Stall teams benefit from it's great typing, magic bounce and raw defensive stats.
Though it has it's fair share of weaknesses; coming to my mind are scald burns, fire types (Zard Y...) and fairy mons. All three things mentioned are extremely common in the OU tier and demand Sableye to have teammates that can deal with them.
Additionally we have threads like Mega Bunny completely shitting on it, and Clefable as a common counter.
Though I don't wanna talk much on that regard, but what would happen if Sableeye is sure to go?
Mega Medicham. This Mon is already a beast, 2hko'ing stuff that resist his STAB or straight up ohko's. Not many mons can claim to 2hko Clef, one of the most dangerous mons, and do the same to LandoT with a Zen Headbutt or well predicted Ice Punch. Sableye is one of it's only true checks/counter. With a Stab immunity and Access to Fake Out it can live any other hit (elemental punches) and proceed to burn or deal back high dmg with Foul Play. With Sableye gone this thing would surely become a problem.
Of course this is only a possebility
@ people who say "stall will be bad without mega sableye: Stall doesnt have a right to be viable
Hoopa-u invalidated stall, but it also had 0 switchins short of dogshit like mandibuzz and consistently put in work against balance and offense too. Being able to completely annihilate an entire playstyle while also being effective enough against others is ridiculous, and it being able to sponge almost every unboosted special hit didn't help either. Stall isn't invalid without mega sableye, other forms of stall are invalidated by mega sableye stall. And idk why people keep saying the mega fighters will be broken, first of all that's a horrible reason to vote no ban, and second of all there's plenty of other counterplay. If sableye is your lope "check" there's something wrong, and mega medi/mega gallade have plenty of other counterplay. Obviously without sableye mew will get a lot better which deals with fighting types fairly well among other things, but there's plenty of other counterplay to fighting megas people already use. And hell, if you think fighting megas might be broken anyways, that's still no excuse to vote no ban on what you feel is otherwise a banworthy threat. Also can you people PLEASE stop saying "sableye has counters it's not broken xD" that argument is so fucking bad on its ownI thought this was at the core of the reasoning for banning Hoopa? I don't know how many times I read in that thread, and then again in summaries, that 'Hoopa-U invalidates stall and thus should be banned.'
I don't know how much I buy the arguments that the OP fighting types (MMedi, MHera, Bunny, MGallade) will run rampant if Sab is gone, because most teams don't run Sab, but still find ways to deal with these. That said, I understand that for the stall playstyle, MSab is extremely helpful in holding back these monsters from having their way with the rest of the team, and it seems perfectly balanced and competitive that while the offense player gets a wide pool of OP breakers to work with, the stall player gets a blanket check mon to help them out.
Now as far as the stall v stall matchup goes, I don't know what to tell you. You both chose to bring MSab stall teams, so you're both gonna reap the consequences of your 300 hundred turn game or whatever. If you don't wanna play that game, bring a different team.
Stall isn't going to be unviable without Mega Sableye, megas like Mega Zard X and Mega Slowbro will be perfectly viable on stall without Mega Sableye. Mega Sableye is a very good stall mega, but stall certainly won't be unviable without Mega Sableye with these other megas being avaliable. Even in this Mega Sableye meta, good stall teams have been used without Mega Sableye like TDK's Mega Bro+TTar and TFL's Double Defog with Zardx>Sab teams. However, while these teams may be good, they simply have a nearly impossible matchup vs standard Mega Sableye stall, leading me into my next point...If mega Sableye is banned, stall teams will become way harder to actually use due to how many offensive threats there are at the moment.
That's actually not true. Any stall team without Mega Sableye faces a huge disadvantage vs any brand of Mega Sableye stall, it being a borderline unwinnable matchup. All of stall's standard ways of winning the game, chipping away at the opponent with entry hazards, putting a timer on things with status conditions, etc. with pretty much no room for error. If you take TDK's Mega Bro team and put it against say ABR stall, you realize that the team's main wincon in Slowbro is taken out of the picture since Amoong can just clear smog away its boosts and put it to sleep, not to mention that the team has a choice band Weavile to pressure Mega Bro. If megabro isn't a legitimate wincon vs the team, then the team is left to win with the usage of status and hazards to wear down the opposing team, but the problem lies here because Mega Sableye completely stops any setting of hazards and bounces back status to their original users.It doesn't dictate or require usage. A standard team without Sableye doesn't face a large disadvantage.
First of all, many Pokemon do a fine job dealing with Medicham. The departure of Mega Sableye also makes stallbreaker Mew and Reuniclus significantly more viable, and those just happen to be two stellar Mega Medicham answers, not to mention that there are other currently viable Pokemon for stall teams to use vs Medicham like Mega Slowbro and Mega Latias, so Medicham doesn't even become a problem with the departure of mega Sableye. Even if Mega Medi actually did become a problem with the departure of Mega Sableye, broken checking broken has never been a legitimate argument to keep anything in the tier, we just ban all of the broken elements from the tier until we have a healthy metagame, that has always been our mentality during suspect tests.Mega Medicham...With Sableye gone this thing would surely become a problem.
Also Mega Gallade. This guy has higher defenses than MegaCham or Bunny at the cost of less immediate power. He's also the only one of them with Access to SD. If Sableye goes, this will also be a problem.
ORAS OU will surely not die 2 weeks from now. Remember how long it took for XY to have a stable meta? I get it may seem late at this point due to Sun and Moon coming out in a bit, but I figure it's going to take even longer for SM to have a stable meta due to how much is being added in SM, compared to XY.It doesn't make any sense to ban something two weeks before the end of the tier. Especially when it was allowed for the entire tier.
That'd be like banning Chansey from RBY now, it doesn't make any sense. I personally don't think that MSab is broken, sure he's annoying on Stall, but Stall has Dugtrio and Skarmory to get rid of hazards anyway. It cripples bulky offense teams that use MSab, and that's not really necessary. But whether or not MSab is broken or not is irrelevant. This isn't the time for a suspect test...
I'd feel a lot better about this if we waited until we got the SM Pokemon, rather than hastily banning something NOW, where it'll stay for the rest of eternity because why not.
Also can you people PLEASE stop saying "sableye has counters it's not broken xD" that argument is so fucking bad on its own
I only said peculiar/suspicious only because I think this suspect is slightly late, that's all.
It's true that Gen 6 OU would probably still be played past the months of S&M - but will it be as relevant? Also, have any suspect tests of Gen's 4/5 actually been carried out in the past couple of years?
Also, I think with you saying 'MMedi does have counters not named MSab' - I think you're contradicting yourself a bit. If we're considering counterplay vs Megacham, then... other than the hassle around hazards, what makes Sableye more of a culprit then, say, Clef/Talonflame/Doublade etc.? Oh right Def Mew... well... that's not 'nerfing' Mega Medicham - it's just people aren't going to use it as much, yet it's still the same mon. As far as i'm aware: Megacham seems, I daresay, to be a flavor of the month - and you seem to be suggesting that Def Mew will be more of that if Mega Sableye ends up in ubers.
Relevancy of a tier has no impact on tiering decisions. For Arceus' sake if I remember correctly Smogon banned Sand Veil in Gen 3 or something (can't remember exactly) in either GEN 6 (or Gen 5 I forgot).
How am I contradicting myself? I didn't say "MMedi the uncounterable monster has counters outside of MSab" - THAT would be contradicting myself. I DID say that MMedi has counters that aren't Mega Sableye, which is a fact - Outside of Mew you have Doublade. Admittedly that's not a particularly viable Pokemon, and 2 isn't many, but we're dealing with a Pokemon that has (with an Adamant nature) an effective base attack stat of around 255. Furthermore, just having few to no counters doesn't make it broken - Look at Lucario, or Mega Charizard X - They have little to no counters but THEY'RE not broken (ok Xard is debateably but isn't really a problem at this point because Defensive Lando-T is everywhere and super duper splashable). Megacham is HARDLY a "flavour of the month" thing - It's BoltBeam set has been great for a while now, more than a month. If ANYTHING's the flavour of the month, it's Dugtrio, or Hydreigon or anything like that that has picked up traction in the last month. Flavour of the month is indicative of it being the good thing of ONE month. Also, you say I'm saying Def Mew is more of "that". Could you please specify what "that" is? Flavour of the month? Pft! Mew would have increased viability, but it wouldn't be the one 'mon people are saying is a fantastic Pokemon. People still do prepare for Mew pretty regularly, it IS still OU (somehow) after all.
Not an argument. First of all if MegaCham is broken it can also get banned. Focus on if the mon at hand is banworthy or not. Secondly it won't be busted, Doublade/Mew/Reuni will just get added to stall to counter it.You're admitting Mega Medicham only has a small handful of direct counters, and yet you're pro-ban on Mega Sableye? (Plus the fact you admit to Doublade not really being viable), don't you want to keep this thing in check? I think that's contradicting yourself slightly (and yes, I know you gave the examples of Lucario / Zard X).
What i'm saying is, I don't think it'd be fun to find out the hard way that MegaCham ends up putting a strain on the meta - and i'm anti-ban because of that. Can you imagine a meta where we find out that one of Talonflame/Mew/Reuniclus would be required on every team in the event of MegaCham? It seems a bit ridiculous at first, but with Mega Sableye having stuck with us basically until the end of ORAS OU - do you really think jumping at ghosts (pun kinda intended) for no reason is going to help anything? Just because you (by the sounds of it) find stall a bit annoying? I don't personally think that MegaCham is SUPER busted atm... but with certain things, it's better not knowing... no?
You're admitting Mega Medicham only has a small handful of direct counters, and yet you're pro-ban on Mega Sableye? (Plus the fact you admit to Doublade not really being viable), don't you want to keep this thing in check? I think that's contradicting yourself slightly (and yes, I know you gave the examples of Lucario / Zard X).
What i'm saying is, I don't think it'd be fun to find out the hard way that MegaCham ends up putting a strain on the meta - and i'm anti-ban because of that. Can you imagine a meta where we find out that one of Talonflame/Mew/Reuniclus would be required on every team in the event of MegaCham? It seems a bit ridiculous at first, but with Mega Sableye having stuck with us basically until the end of ORAS OU - do you really think jumping at ghosts (pun kinda intended) for no reason is going to help anything? Just because you (by the sounds of it) find stall a bit annoying? I don't personally think that MegaCham is SUPER busted atm... but with certain things, it's better not knowing... no?
The argument that MegaCham being potentially broken if MSab goes is a horrible argument against MSab being banned. If MegaCham is broken, which it likely won't be even if MSab left, it can be retested. Mega Gengar kept MKang down to a degree, doesn't mean Mega Gengar should have been kept just to preserve Mega Kangaskhan. There was a period in the XY meta after the ban of Aegi (one of MMedi's counters) where MMedi wasn't broken, why would it be different now? If for whatever unholy reason MMedi is broken after MSab goes, it can be dealt with later, probably while Sun and Moon isn't a stable meta (the quickban "phase" most likely, and I use phase lightly as quickbans can happen any time throughout a tier's lifetime, with phase being used to describe mostly the time before XY NP: 1 when things like MKang and MGeng were all getting the quickboot). Also, MSable isn't used on an absurd amount of teams (read: not a particularly great argument against it, megamence "only" saw 12% usage and it was the most broken piece of shit OU had seen since Darkrai, Deo-N and Skymin) and MMedi is still considered balanced vs non-stall playstyles, with non stall plastyles being the generally best playstyles for it to come up against. It's not broken now, and MSab isn't common enough for it to be the reason behind it not being broken, so I see no reason it would be broken now.
tl;dr: Broken does not and should not be kept to fix broken.
EDIT: Double Ninjad
Alright, I see. Still one thing that kind of remains unanswered:
You admit that Mega Sableye isn't used on a high amount of teams - so maybe we don't have as much experience vs it as we think is worth a ban? Thus (like I said earlier) Stall seems to be the only team archetype it has proper synergy with (also I reason I bought up Trick Room, which you rightly debunked).
Yes, it's true that I've not fought MSab as much as I would "like" (for the experience of handling it, not because I enjoy facing MSab), but I have still got to teambuild for it's hazard supporting shenanigans on the off chance it appears on ladder, and that's the bit that I feel MSab impacts largest - I have to pack dedicated rocks setters I wouldn't consider running otherwise (Rocks Heatran or SD Rocks Lando-T, for example) just so I can win the hazard game vs MSab if it pops up. The reason I likely don't see it is because a) I don't try to ladder too much anymore, b) I'm not a particularly amazing battler so I can't reach the higher echelons, and c) - the biggest factor - I am haxed to hell and back on ladder. I'm talking 7 consecutive Magma Storm misses, 6 consecutive Hydro Misses followed by a freeze, and 2 games in a row where their Ice Punch/Beam freezes my Rotom-W, it doesn't thaw, and that loses me the game. Sure, sometimes I'm that lucky back (double Ice Punch froze someone in a room tour in semis for example), but those are all RECENT things and those are the games I stop playing after because of tilt, and they're almost always the second or third battle in.
/haxmoan
If stall is a problem now, and wasn't back then, what could the issue possibly be other than Sableye?