Difference between revisions of "Grand Unslam"

From Blaseball Wiki

m
m (Text replacement - "\[\[Season (\d+(#[^#|]*)?)\|([^\]]+)\]\]" to "{{BetaSeason|$1|$3}}")
 
(26 intermediate revisions by 8 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
'''The Grand Unslam''', also known as The Grand Sham, refers to an event in [[Blaseball History]] that took place on Day 73 of Season 3, during the 15th inning of a game between the [[Charleston Shoe Thieves]] and the [[Los Angeles Tacos]], and resulted in a temporal anomaly.  
+
[[File:TheGrandUnslam MimiChiu.jpeg|right|thumb|300px|''THE GRAND UNSLAM'' by [https://twitter.com/MimimiCee/status/1292133937872019457 @MimimiCee] ]]
 +
'''The Grand Unslam''', (sometimes known as The Grand Sham) is an event that took place on {{BetaSeason|3}} Day 73, during the 15th inning of a game between the [[Charleston Shoe Thieves]] and the [[Los Angeles Tacos]], and resulted in "a Grand Slam so powerful, it broke spacetime and let the team steal an entire game."<ref name=":0">InspectorCaracal (6 Aug 2020). [https://shoethieves.com/theunslam.html "The Grand Unslam"]. ''shoethieves.com''. Retrieved 10 Aug 2020.</ref>
  
Very little is known or understood about the exact nature of the events that took place, or what its implications are for the greater Blaseball cosmology. In the hours following the event, [[The Peanut]] took over the front page of Blaseball.com, broadcasting a message to the entire League.
+
Very little is known or understood about the exact nature of the events that took place, but its observable consequences have produced phenomenal changes in the world of Blaseball: In the hours following the event, [[The Shelled One]] took over the front page of Blaseball.com, broadcasting a message to the entire League. At the end of the season, [[Umpires#Named Umpires|league officials]] cited The Grand Unslam as the cause of the events that split the city of Los Angeles into an [[Unlimited Tacos#Name Change|unlimited number of cities]]. Further incidents in the world of Blaseball can also be attributed to the cascading effect of The Grand Unslam, such as [[The Wyatt Masoning]] and {{BetaSeason|4#Decrees 2|Alternate Realities}}.
  
 
<br />
 
<br />
== Timeline of Events ==
+
==Timeline of Events==
  
The game that triggered the Grand Unslam had already achieved a place in Blaseball history as the longest game (by minutes played) at 54 minutes, taking the title from the notorious 20-inning [[Season 2]] game between the [[Baltimore Crabs]] and the [[Breckenridge Jazz Hands]], which lasted around 53 minutes. At this point, fans were wondering if this would be the first time rule 1c in the [[Forbidden Book|Book of Blaseball]] would come into effect and the next hour's games would be postponed. Rule 1c states:<blockquote>c. If any games last longer than one ██ hour, a Spillover shall occur, and all games shall be delayed until the next ██ hour. In the case of a game lasting two ██ hours, the ██████████████████████████████████.</blockquote>With one out at the top of the 15th inning, the Charleston Shoe Thieves were building to a 14-13 lead, when [[Sebastian Woodman]] took to bat against Los Angeles Tacos pitcher [[Lee Davenport]], drawing a walk and loading the bases. Following Woodman, [[Workman Gloom]] batted a single, and [[Esme Ramsey]] drew a walk, putting the score at 16-13 Shoe Thieves. [[Blankenship Fischer]] struck out, leaving [[Morrow Doyle]] at bat. Following a strike on the first pitch, they hit the grand slam, bringing the score to 20-13.
+
The Season 3 Day 73 match between the Charleston Shoe Thieves and the Los Angeles Tacos that triggered The Grand Unslam had already achieved a place in Blaseball history as the longest game (by minutes played) to that point, at 54 minutes long. Many fans at the time had wondered if this would be the first time the [[Spillover]] rule could come into effect, and if the next hour's games would be postponed.
  
Play seemed to proceed as usual following the event. [[Ren Hunter]] hit a single, and [[Velazquez Alstott]] got up to bat. The circumstances leading to Alstott getting the third out for his team are unclear, due to either an unusual amount of [[birds]] on and around the field, or a small disruption to the timeline.
+
===Before Phenomena===
 +
[[File:GrandUnslam_by_XtraJewrestrial.png|right|thumb|''Breakdown of events leading up to the phenomena, by @XtraJewrestrial''<ref>SpaceJew [@XtraJewrestrial] (6 Aug 2020). [https://twitter.com/XtraJewrestrial/status/1291492382353940480 “let's talk about today's game of #blaseball”] (Tweet) - via Twitter.</ref>]]
 +
The Shoe Thieves were building to a 14-13 lead with one out at the top of the 15th inning, when [[Sebastian Woodman]] took to bat against Tacos pitcher [[Lee Davenport]], drawing a walk and loading the bases. Following Woodman, [[Workman Gloom]] batted a single, and [[Esme Ramsey]] drew a walk, putting the score at 16-13 for the Shoe Thieves. [[Blankenship Fischer]] struck out, leaving [[Morrow Doyle]] at bat. Following a strike on the first pitch, they hit the grand slam, bringing the score to 20-13.
 +
 
 +
Play seemed to proceed as usual following the event. [[Ren Hunter]] hit a single, and [[Velazquez Alstott]] got up to bat. The circumstances leading to Alstott getting the third out for her team are unclear, due to either an unusual amount of [[Lots of Birds|birds]] on and around the field, or a small disruption to the timeline.
  
 
Bottom of the 15th started, [[Moses Simmons]] going up at bat for the Tacos against [[Beasley Gloom]]. After one out in three pitches, the state of the game reverted to top of the 15th, no outs, and a 16-13 score.  
 
Bottom of the 15th started, [[Moses Simmons]] going up at bat for the Tacos against [[Beasley Gloom]]. After one out in three pitches, the state of the game reverted to top of the 15th, no outs, and a 16-13 score.  
  
Play was then interrupted by a [[Bad Gateway (Event)|Bad Gateway]] event. This prompted the [[Umpire|umpires]] to call a [[Siesta]] until the issue was resolved.
+
Play was then interrupted by a [[Bad Gateway (Event)|Bad Gateway]] event. This prompted officials to call a [[Siesta]] until the issue was resolved.
  
During the siesta, [[The Peanut]] (first & last seen during the [[Blasphemy]] event) appeared on the front page and displayed a series of ominous messages:
+
Regarding this moment, ShoeThieves.com wrote: "At fifty five minutes, the game stopped. Blaseball stopped. [[The Commissioner]] quickly declared a siesta, but it soon became obvious: even the Commissioner didn't know what was going on."<ref name=":0" />
  
* HELLO
+
<br />
* DID YOU TASTE THE INFINITE?
+
 
* I AM BENEVOLENT
+
===Appearance of The Peanut===
* I AM A SNACK
+
During the siesta, [[The Peanut]] (first & last seen during the [[Blasphemy]] event) appeared on the front page and displayed a series of ominous messages:<ref>The Peanut (6 Aug 2020). [https://blaseball.com/ "Front Page"]. ''Blaseball''. Retrieved 6 Aug 2020.</ref>
* I AM A LEGUME
+
 
* I WAS BENEVOLENT
+
*HELLO
* YOU ARE INSATIABLE
+
*DID YOU TASTE THE INFINITE?
* WHERE IS YOUR RESTRAINT?
+
*I AM BENEVOLENT
 +
*I AM A SNACK
 +
*I AM A LEGUME
 +
*I WAS BENEVOLENT
 +
*YOU ARE INSATIABLE
 +
*WHERE IS YOUR RESTRAINT?
  
 
Regular play did not resume in full until three hours later.  
 
Regular play did not resume in full until three hours later.  
Line 29: Line 39:
 
After the siesta finished, the standings reflected ''both'' versions of the game, with the Shoe Thieves having a listed record of 44-31 and the Tacos 30-45. This left them each with 75 total games played at the end of day 74, with one extra win for the Thieves and one extra loss for the Tacos, and both with one more game played than the rest of the league.
 
After the siesta finished, the standings reflected ''both'' versions of the game, with the Shoe Thieves having a listed record of 44-31 and the Tacos 30-45. This left them each with 75 total games played at the end of day 74, with one extra win for the Thieves and one extra loss for the Tacos, and both with one more game played than the rest of the league.
  
Additionally, fans reported glitchiness while viewing team scores post-Siesta, in which games would jump up and down the page at random. Though it may be mere coincidence, many fans speculate this to be a direct consequence of the divergent timelines not fully merging.
+
"The Grand Unslam had fractured time, repeating the end of the game again for another win. Both the Shoe Thieves and the Tacos have an extra game in their standings, evidence that the end of the game did, in fact, happen twice,"<ref name=":0" /> wrote ShoeThieves.com about the magnitude of this event.
 +
 
 +
Additionally, fans reported glitches while viewing team scores post-siesta, observing that games would jump up and down the page at random. Though it may be mere coincidence, many fans speculate this to be a direct consequence of the divergent timelines not fully merging.
 +
 
 +
<br />
 +
===Aftermath===
 +
At the {{BetaSeason|3#Election Results|@ election results}}, the {{BetaSeason|3#Decrees|'''Interviews'''}} [[decree]] revealed many new statistics and personal details about all players in the league. However, it also came with the following announcement:<ref>Internet League Blaseball (9 Aug 2020). [https://blaseball.com/offseason "The Season 3 Election"]. ''Blaseball''. Retrieved 10 Aug 2020.</ref>
  
== Interpretations ==
+
The Microphone Lifts
 +
 +
ERROR: The Grand Unslam Weakened the Bridge
 +
 +
Spacetime Tears over Los Angeles
 +
 +
The Infinite cit(ies) shine
 +
 +
Platonic Form corrupted
 +
 +
You've looked too close...
  
Blaseball scholars disagree on the meaning or the implications of The Grand Unslam. While some see this as a simple disruption of the space-time continuum consistent with running games on the [[Immaterial Plane]], Blaseball theologists argue that such an unlikely Grand Slam at such a late point in a regular season game cannot be mere chance, and points to the influence of a greater power. Citing the messages of The Peanut as evidence, they argue that The Grand Unslam marked a point of particular proximity with the [[Blaseball Gods]], and that the following events were an expression of their "wrath."
+
The Los Angeles Tacos were immediately renamed the [[Unlimited Tacos]], appearing to reflect the city of Los Angeles having split into "infinite cit(ies)." Additionally, the entire player roster of the Unlimited Tacos all suddenly bore the name Wyatt Mason in an event now known as [[The Wyatt Masoning]].
 +
 
 +
The Commissioner later stated they are "looking into the situation."<ref>The Commissioner [@blaseballcomms] (9 Aug 2020). [https://twitter.com/blaseballcomms/status/1292568711660843008 "the league is looking into the situation in los angeles"] (Tweet) - via Twitter.</ref> This concluded with an official league investigation that attempted to resolve The Wyatt Masoning, which is known as [[The Wyatt Masoning#The Unmasoning|The Unmasoning]].
 +
 
 +
It is unknown at this time what it means for "the Bridge" to be "weakened," or for the "Platonic Form" to be "corrupted." However, The Commissioner later offered the uncertain comment: "platonic [meaning] like just friends?"<ref>The Commissioner [@blaseballcomms] (19 Aug 2020). [https://twitter.com/blaseballcomms/status/1296145596445646851 "platonic like just friends?"] (Tweet) - via Twitter.</ref> It is believed that The Commissioner also does not know what it means.
 +
 
 +
Note: A platonic form is a philosophical concept amounting to 'the idealized/conceptual version of something - a thing in the form of an idea'. The corrupting of the platonic form may imply the grand unslam or lifting of the mic damaged the very nature of Blaseball itself, which may be reflected in the reality distorting nature of the feedback weather that would be introduced in the following season. It may also mean that the platonic form of this decree was damaged, resulting in feedback weather as a side effect in addition to the player bios it added.
 +
 
 +
 
 +
Before the start of {{BetaSeason|4}}, more tweets from The Commissioner about The Grand Unslam seemed to confirm some of the events as described above as a "clarification for new fans," saying:<ref>The Commissioner [@blaseballcomms] (19 Aug 2020). [https://twitter.com/blaseballcomms/status/1296135000815882240 Tweet] - via Twitter.</ref>
 +
<blockquote>This event is known as the Grand Unslam. The Unslam weakened the Bridge, which resulted in space-time tearing over LA when the Microphone lifted, giving us Los Angeli, Wyatt Masoning, and the Unlimited Tacos. I think.</blockquote>
 +
 
 +
 
 +
<br />
 +
{{Community Lore}}
  
In an article for "[[Blaseball Worship Today]]," philosopher [[Hamilton Stilts]] wrote: "If the arrival of [[Weather|birds]] was a sign that the Gods were watching us, The Grand Unslam represents the moment Blaseball looked back. Were we worthy to see the faces of our Gods? Based on the events that followed, it is obvious that we were not."
+
==Interpretations==
  
 +
Blaseball scholars disagree on the meaning or the implications of The Grand Unslam. While some see this as a simple disruption of the space-time continuum consistent with running games on the [[Immaterial Plane]], Blaseball theologists argue that such an unlikely Grand Slam at such a late point in a regular season game cannot be mere chance, and points to the influence of a greater power. Citing the messages of The Peanut as evidence, they argue that The Grand Unslam marked a point of particular proximity with the [[Blaseball Gods]], and that the following events were an expression of their "wrath."
  
See also: An alternate account of [https://shoethieves.com/theunslam.html The Grand Unslam, on shoethieves.com]
+
In an article for "[[Blaseball Worship Today]]," philosopher [[Hamilton Stilts]] wrote: "If the arrival of [[Lots of Birds|birds]] was a sign that the Gods were watching us, The Grand Unslam represents the moment Blaseball looked back. Were we worthy to see the faces of our Gods? Based on the events that followed, it is obvious that we were not."
----<br />
+
<br />
 +
----
 +
<references />
 +
{{DisciplineEraNav}}
 +
<br />
 
[[Category:History]]
 
[[Category:History]]

Latest revision as of 00:05, 17 January 2023

THE GRAND UNSLAM by @MimimiCee

The Grand Unslam, (sometimes known as The Grand Sham) is an event that took place on Season β3 Day 73, during the 15th inning of a game between the Charleston Shoe Thieves and the Los Angeles Tacos, and resulted in "a Grand Slam so powerful, it broke spacetime and let the team steal an entire game."[1]

Very little is known or understood about the exact nature of the events that took place, but its observable consequences have produced phenomenal changes in the world of Blaseball: In the hours following the event, The Shelled One took over the front page of Blaseball.com, broadcasting a message to the entire League. At the end of the season, league officials cited The Grand Unslam as the cause of the events that split the city of Los Angeles into an unlimited number of cities. Further incidents in the world of Blaseball can also be attributed to the cascading effect of The Grand Unslam, such as The Wyatt Masoning and Alternate Realities.


Timeline of Events

The Season 3 Day 73 match between the Charleston Shoe Thieves and the Los Angeles Tacos that triggered The Grand Unslam had already achieved a place in Blaseball history as the longest game (by minutes played) to that point, at 54 minutes long. Many fans at the time had wondered if this would be the first time the Spillover rule could come into effect, and if the next hour's games would be postponed.

Before Phenomena

Breakdown of events leading up to the phenomena, by @XtraJewrestrial[2]

The Shoe Thieves were building to a 14-13 lead with one out at the top of the 15th inning, when Sebastian Woodman took to bat against Tacos pitcher Lee Davenport, drawing a walk and loading the bases. Following Woodman, Workman Gloom batted a single, and Esme Ramsey drew a walk, putting the score at 16-13 for the Shoe Thieves. Blankenship Fischer struck out, leaving Morrow Doyle at bat. Following a strike on the first pitch, they hit the grand slam, bringing the score to 20-13.

Play seemed to proceed as usual following the event. Ren Hunter hit a single, and Velazquez Alstott got up to bat. The circumstances leading to Alstott getting the third out for her team are unclear, due to either an unusual amount of birds on and around the field, or a small disruption to the timeline.

Bottom of the 15th started, Moses Simmons going up at bat for the Tacos against Beasley Gloom. After one out in three pitches, the state of the game reverted to top of the 15th, no outs, and a 16-13 score.

Play was then interrupted by a Bad Gateway event. This prompted officials to call a Siesta until the issue was resolved.

Regarding this moment, ShoeThieves.com wrote: "At fifty five minutes, the game stopped. Blaseball stopped. The Commissioner quickly declared a siesta, but it soon became obvious: even the Commissioner didn't know what was going on."[1]


Appearance of The Peanut

During the siesta, The Peanut (first & last seen during the Blasphemy event) appeared on the front page and displayed a series of ominous messages:[3]

  • HELLO
  • DID YOU TASTE THE INFINITE?
  • I AM BENEVOLENT
  • I AM A SNACK
  • I AM A LEGUME
  • I WAS BENEVOLENT
  • YOU ARE INSATIABLE
  • WHERE IS YOUR RESTRAINT?

Regular play did not resume in full until three hours later.

After the siesta finished, the standings reflected both versions of the game, with the Shoe Thieves having a listed record of 44-31 and the Tacos 30-45. This left them each with 75 total games played at the end of day 74, with one extra win for the Thieves and one extra loss for the Tacos, and both with one more game played than the rest of the league.

"The Grand Unslam had fractured time, repeating the end of the game again for another win. Both the Shoe Thieves and the Tacos have an extra game in their standings, evidence that the end of the game did, in fact, happen twice,"[1] wrote ShoeThieves.com about the magnitude of this event.

Additionally, fans reported glitches while viewing team scores post-siesta, observing that games would jump up and down the page at random. Though it may be mere coincidence, many fans speculate this to be a direct consequence of the divergent timelines not fully merging.


Aftermath

At the Season β3 election results, the Interviews decree revealed many new statistics and personal details about all players in the league. However, it also came with the following announcement:[4]

The Microphone Lifts

ERROR: The Grand Unslam Weakened the Bridge

Spacetime Tears over Los Angeles

The Infinite cit(ies) shine

Platonic Form corrupted

You've looked too close...

The Los Angeles Tacos were immediately renamed the Unlimited Tacos, appearing to reflect the city of Los Angeles having split into "infinite cit(ies)." Additionally, the entire player roster of the Unlimited Tacos all suddenly bore the name Wyatt Mason in an event now known as The Wyatt Masoning.

The Commissioner later stated they are "looking into the situation."[5] This concluded with an official league investigation that attempted to resolve The Wyatt Masoning, which is known as The Unmasoning.

It is unknown at this time what it means for "the Bridge" to be "weakened," or for the "Platonic Form" to be "corrupted." However, The Commissioner later offered the uncertain comment: "platonic [meaning] like just friends?"[6] It is believed that The Commissioner also does not know what it means.

Note: A platonic form is a philosophical concept amounting to 'the idealized/conceptual version of something - a thing in the form of an idea'. The corrupting of the platonic form may imply the grand unslam or lifting of the mic damaged the very nature of Blaseball itself, which may be reflected in the reality distorting nature of the feedback weather that would be introduced in the following season. It may also mean that the platonic form of this decree was damaged, resulting in feedback weather as a side effect in addition to the player bios it added.


Before the start of Season β4, more tweets from The Commissioner about The Grand Unslam seemed to confirm some of the events as described above as a "clarification for new fans," saying:[7]

This event is known as the Grand Unslam. The Unslam weakened the Bridge, which resulted in space-time tearing over LA when the Microphone lifted, giving us Los Angeli, Wyatt Masoning, and the Unlimited Tacos. I think.



COMMUNITY REPORTS
The remainder of this article contains lore created collaboratively by the Blaseball community.

Interpretations

Blaseball scholars disagree on the meaning or the implications of The Grand Unslam. While some see this as a simple disruption of the space-time continuum consistent with running games on the Immaterial Plane, Blaseball theologists argue that such an unlikely Grand Slam at such a late point in a regular season game cannot be mere chance, and points to the influence of a greater power. Citing the messages of The Peanut as evidence, they argue that The Grand Unslam marked a point of particular proximity with the Blaseball Gods, and that the following events were an expression of their "wrath."

In an article for "Blaseball Worship Today," philosopher Hamilton Stilts wrote: "If the arrival of birds was a sign that the Gods were watching us, The Grand Unslam represents the moment Blaseball looked back. Were we worthy to see the faces of our Gods? Based on the events that followed, it is obvious that we were not."


  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 InspectorCaracal (6 Aug 2020). "The Grand Unslam". shoethieves.com. Retrieved 10 Aug 2020.
  2. SpaceJew [@XtraJewrestrial] (6 Aug 2020). “let's talk about today's game of #blaseball” (Tweet) - via Twitter.
  3. The Peanut (6 Aug 2020). "Front Page". Blaseball. Retrieved 6 Aug 2020.
  4. Internet League Blaseball (9 Aug 2020). "The Season 3 Election". Blaseball. Retrieved 10 Aug 2020.
  5. The Commissioner [@blaseballcomms] (9 Aug 2020). "the league is looking into the situation in los angeles" (Tweet) - via Twitter.
  6. The Commissioner [@blaseballcomms] (19 Aug 2020). "platonic like just friends?" (Tweet) - via Twitter.
  7. The Commissioner [@blaseballcomms] (19 Aug 2020). Tweet - via Twitter.