>>99826467 (1/2)Divegrass differentiates between official cups like the 4cc or /vt/ League. The official events are serious (not really) where your team can actually win something. Winning /vt/ League means, your team becomes the host of the next cup. So usually everything has something to do with the hosting team. vtl6 was /mayo/, so the referees were Joshus and other things from that thread. The slide (the animation that plays between cuts) were Joshus splashing mayo and the UI had a pink touch.
vtl7 was /holoX/ where everything became purple. /holoX/ used world domination as topic. The referees were graduated vtubers under some holoX helmet to hide their faces (see
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yrmxddymIao ). The idea was, that they've graduated to join holoX. As it was explained during the final match, when HoloX Allstars played against /uuu/, the match happened in the /holoX/ secret den (their stadium) but a small detail was changed: The 5 holoX members were sitting around as giants and watched the match because vtl7 wasn't real. They forced players from all teams who were eliminated in group phase to play for them by using the remote control buckets from the first Spongebob movie. So there's a lot creative stuff you can do.
In addition to that you get also a stadium built for your team which is also used as /vt/'s stadium for the 4cc which is quite cool.
The official events also please the numbers people because only official events influence the ranking of teams (
https://implyingrigged.info/wiki//vt/_League_Rankings ). Those numbers doesn't really mean anything.
>CupsA cup is basically what it means: Some cup to win. So usually there's some ranking system (like Bundesliga or Champions League). There's a single winner at the end.
>FriendliesThis is just for fun on the surface. Teams can decide who they want to play against and give that match a funny name like "Color War" between /choc/ and /pink/ or HoloXBreak between /nepolabo/ and /holoX/ (because of the game). Or you just play for fun because you just want to have it happening. /holoX/ played against /fvr/ in friendlies after they sent them to fl8v0rtown again in the official cup (fl8v0rtown was the 8-0 win from /mayo/ vs /fvr/ in vtl5 and /holoX/ (the gen team of Koyori) embarrassed them again in vtl6 with a match result of 6-1).
It's just for fun and banter.
>InvitationalsBasically loose tournaments. There's some divegrass event on almost every weekend. These events have own rules (PES version, team and player parameters) and who can participate. There a complete joke tournaments with joke teams) Just check them here:
https://implyingrigged.info/wiki/Invitationals There are also vods of some
Personally, I like to stay in the /vt/ space.
>I want to start doing something since you decided to resign (I'm lazy and like I said I don't like responsibility, but oh well, no one here is willing to do it anyway)That's how I ended up in vtl, too. I'm in vtl business for a year now and I work for 3 teams, I was lucky that my main team did not need much attention for vtl8 so I had time to create the models for /okfams/ on my own. This was my own choice. I could also just have filed out some pastebin document, get some models from different sources and link them so one of the aes people would create them for me.
If you team doesn't want to change any players or music, it's really not much work. And it's often, that there are other people who can help you with stuff like our crest got created by some great artist and also our winning anthem (the long medley of the original songs) was also mixed by someone else. I just gave some feedback and advice to make it suitable for it's intended purpose.
It was way too long, so we played with cutting parts out and speeding up)>DeadlinesThese are important. Signups for events open and close at a certain date. Sign up so people can set up the event with the teams. Other deadlines like aes, audio or tactical are basically dates where you must have submitted your contents. This is kinda serious. Miss one of these dates and you get punished like losing the rights to caretake a team.