In 2014, Nintendo of America president Reggie Fils-Aime, beloved among the Super Smash Bros. competitive community, formally blessed the group before that yearâs EVO fighting game tournament. It was the first year that Nintendo had officially sponsored the event. âToday, youâre all showing your abilities at Super Smash Bros. Melee,â he said in a video message. And then, with a wink and a nudge to the Smash diehards watching: âYou never know, I might show up to challenge you someday. And if we do ever go head to head, pleaseâno Johns.â
If youâve spent any significant time around competitive Super Smash Bros. players, or devotees of any fighting game, youâve heard the phrase. A âJohnâ is any excuse made by a losing player. My hands were still wet from washing them. Itâs cold in here. Iâm hungry. The joystick is sticky. Vibration was on. Thereâs controller lag. The television screen is too far away. Generally, a John is a transparent attempt to deflect blame from the loser and chip away at the glory of the winner.
âNo Johnsâ is such a ubiquitous phrase in the Smash scene that itâs even inspired regional variations around the world. No Stacos. No Tiesos. No Joshis. Igna Yunas, in Swedish. It even made it into Smash itself: One of the ârandomâ names that players can assign themselves in the Wii U and Switch versions of the fighting game is NOJOHNS.
Like a lot of living catchphrases, the particular circumstances of its creation have been smoothed over like a shard of sea glass, smooth enough now to be thrown out by anyone into any water. But there is a real John, a Smash player from the Crystal City, Texas region. (Kotaku tracked down John, but speaking through a friend, he declined to be interviewed. We are withholding his last name for privacy reasons.) And his story, told through his childhood friends, is a throwback to an early sort of virality that, today, might seem quaint to competitive gamers used to hearing some huge, new meme every week.
âI never thought it would turn into anything this big,â said Smash player Roberto âRob$â Aldape. The phrase had its origin in the late 1990s, when Aldape was a freshman in high school and playing the latest Nintendo 64 games with his crew: Jesse âZuluâ Fuentes, Adrian âCavemanâ Sanchez, and John. John always had the latest Nintendo 64 games and he was often quick to pick up on their mechanics, which endeared him to the boys.
âI remember John being really smart. He always had a bunch of games compared to me,â said Aldape. Aldapeâs strict parents didnât let him hang out at friendsâ houses or attend sleepovers before high school, and so now, whenever he had a chance to game with his buddies, he took full advantage. When Super Smash Bros. 64 came out, theyâd grind on the game for hours at whoeverâs house was free.
John, said Fuentes, was actually pretty good at Smash, especially with the F-Zero fighter Captain Falcon. âHe was a great player, actually. You know, one of the best. But when heâd lose, heâd always have an excuse, which was kind of humorous.â Aldape and Fuentes shared some of the earliest Johns: My eyes are itchy. My wrist hurts. My controller isnât working properly. âIf I hit him off the edge, and he was trying to come back in and I spike him, heâd lessen what I did,â said Aldape. âLike, âYou werenât doing something badass. It was me pressing the wrong button.ââ
One day, when the friends were playing without John, someone made an excuse for their loss. As Fuentes tells it, he was the first to say âNo Johnsâ in response. They all started saying it, eventually even when John was present. âI was kind of embarrassed, but I did eventually say it to him,â said Fuentes. ââNo Johns.â Heâd get mad, turn red.â
The motley crew of high school freshmen from Crystal City is now famous among old-school competitive Smash players. In the early 2000s, Aldape, Fuentes, and Sanchez moved on from pummeling each other in suburban Texas basements, first to Smash tournaments in San Antonio, then to huge events in California or Chicago. On the Smashboards forum, Aldape would trash talk opponents heâd faced, using the phrase. As Fuentes and Aldape became more competitive with 2001âs Super Smash Bros. Melee and entered the greater, budding Smash competitive circuit, they used their local phrase freely in their one-on-one matches and while commentating on othersâ.
âWhen we started destroying kids at Smash, weâd get the excuses, and say âNo Johns.â Iâd go on Smashboards later and be like, âNo Johns,â you got beat fair and square,ââ said Aldape. Over the course of a year or two, Aldape said he began hearing other people say it independently of him. It spread and spread. At a tournament in Chicago, which he would go on to win, Aldape knew that the phrase had taken on its own life when he was flabbergasted to see a competitor show up wearing a T-shirt that read âNo Johns.â
âI was like, what the fuck, man? Heâs using my word!â
Smash commentator DâRon âD1â Maingrette heard the term first in 2005 at a New York City venue called Neutral Grounds. âSeeing people get upset after the results of their match, members would just yell âNo Johns!ââ he said. âThe moment theyâd hear that, theyâd clam up.â
Maingrette didnât know who John was, or even if there was a John, but he understood the implication. âI immediately thought to myself, âIf I enter future tournaments, Iâm not gonna lose and make excuses. I donât want to be the subject of that.ââ
I didnât get any hand warmers. I didnât warm up properly. I didnât get enough sleep last night. Thereâs television lag. These are some of the Johns that Maingrette says heâs heard over the years. When asked whether heâs ever Johned, Maingrette said he has, but only one that he believes is really true. âIf I wash my hands with cold waterâI always wash my handsâI lose the blood flow and my hands canât react as fast. I donât play at my best.â
âNo Johnsâ didnât just catch on in the U.S. Smash scene, either. âOne time right after I lost a set, I got up and went straight to get a Coke,â said Luis âTiesoâ Rivera, a Smash player from Tampico, Mexico. âMy excuse was that I was feeling kinda sick in the set since my sugar levels were down.â His friends immediately turned it into a verb: Tiesar, meaning âto pull a Tieso,â meaning to make an excuse.
âItâs half true, half not,â said Rivera of his âlow sugarâ complaint. âI was in fact feeling sick, but there was no way I knew why.â Looking back on the tournament, Rivera said he ânever stopped complainingâ the whole time. After that, Riveraâs friend, who goes by Waymas, put âTiesarâ in SSBWiki.comâs entry for âNo Johnsâ under the âregional variantsâ section. Riveraâs not bothered by it. âItâs a fun way for our scene to have fun with its members,â Rivera said.
Jose âJoshiâ Rodriguez started hearing âNo Johnsâ in his Spanish Smash community as early as 15 years ago. âJoshiâ also appears under the Wikiâs âregional variantsâ section, which, Rodriguez said, was used to âdegradeâ him. âWe were sort of a meme in the community,â he said.
âActually, I did put a lot of âexcuses,ââ Rodriguez said. âI still do it today. Iâm sort of an analytical and very outspoken person, so every time I lost, I always analyzed my match out loud. Some people took it the wrong way and thought they were excuses.â If an opponentâs attack penetrates his shield because he didnât pull it fast enough, Rodriguez said heâd make a comment about that. âI can sympathize, because itâs not cool to have someone pinpoint the things like that: It makes your victory feels worthless, like it was some sort of luck factor. It was not my intention, but well.â
Rodriguez isnât happy about the way âNo Joshisâ has caught on. A while back, he says, it was a meme, but ânowadays if someone says it, it is to outright downplay or hurt me.â Rodriguez said he stopped playing Smash in part because of those jokes.
âI fought hard to earn places and respect and I was still a meme,â he said. âImagine that using your name as a bad-meaning adjective. It feels nothing short of âYou are so horrible that you are your own person and itâs helpless.ââ
Although his friends from the Crystal City crew went on to become fixtures of the competitive Smash scene, John himself would demur. Sometimes, heâd attend tournaments, but wouldnât compete. He went on to pursue other things, like college and the army.
âEverybody would use the term, âNo Johns, No Johns,â and people would laugh, and it kind of just caught on, but nobody ever knew who John was,â said Jesse Fuentes. John has remained under the radar ever since, although there have been multiple attempts to find and interview him, once by the makers of the 2013 documentary The Smash Brothers
Looking back on the time at which âNo Johnsâ was created, Aldape said, he and his friends werenât supportive enough of each otherâs successes. Getting better meant being extra critical of yourself, why you lost, and sometimes, that expressed itself in a John. âWe didnât give each other props. We werenât used to that. When I did something good, I knew myself I did something good and I never had anyone tell me, âNice.ââ
Adape remembered the first tournament he attended where someone actually complimented his gameplay, in San Antonio. âI went to that tournament, and I was doing good. I kept hearing people say âNice.ââ Aldape wasnât sure he had heard them properly. But then he started using âNice,â too, when a competitor would pull off a clutch spike or a tight combo.
âThe way I picked up âNice,ââ Aldape said, âwas the way other people picked up âJohn.â