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Doubleelimination

Double elimination is a competition format in which a participant is not eliminated after a single loss. Instead, competitors are given a second chance, and a second loss eliminates them from the event. This structure aims to reduce the impact of a single poor performance and to provide a clearer assessment of skill over multiple matches.

In typical double-elimination tournaments, the field is divided into two brackets: a winners' bracket and a

Variants and variations: The exact implementation can differ by game or event. Some tournaments require the

Applications and notes: Double elimination is commonly used in esports, card and fighting game tournaments, and

losers'
bracket.
Teams
or
players
with
zero
losses
compete
in
the
winners'
bracket,
while
those
who
lose
a
match
drop
into
the
losers'
bracket.
A
loss
in
the
losers'
bracket
eliminates
a
participant,
whereas
a
loss
in
the
winners'
bracket
sends
them
to
the
losers'
bracket.
Participants
continue
to
accrue
losses
until
only
one
competitor
remains
with
fewer
than
two
losses.
The
final
usually
pairs
the
last
undefeated
team
from
the
winners'
bracket
with
the
last
survivor
from
the
losers'
bracket;
final
rules
vary,
and
some
formats
require
the
winners'
bracket
champion
to
be
defeated
twice
or
to
undergo
a
bracket
reset
to
claim
the
title.
final
to
be
a
multi-match
series,
while
others
allow
a
single
decisive
match
with
potential
rematches
in
a
bracket
reset.
The
primary
goal
is
to
balance
fairness
and
practicality
by
ensuring
that
a
single
upset
is
less
likely
to
determine
the
entire
outcome.
other
events
where
longer
formats
are
feasible.
It
trades
additional
playtime
for
increased
resilience
against
upsets
and
a
more
accurate
ranking
of
participants.