Difference between revisions of "Spillover"

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Tag: 2017 source edit
Tag: 2017 source edit
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Currently, no game has ever come close to approaching two hours.
 
Currently, no game has ever come close to approaching two hours.
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The longest playoff game by innings and time was a 23-inning, 54 minute game between the [[Canada Moist Talkers]] and [[Breckenridge Jazz Hands]] in the [[Season 5#Postseason|Season 5]] Round of 4. The Moist Talkers won the game 3-2.
  
 
===Game 99===
 
===Game 99===

Revision as of 19:56, 5 September 2020

Spillover is a game condition outlined by Article 1.c. in The Book.

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 ██████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████.

History

In the known blaseball era, only one game not involving a siesta[1] has met the criteria for spillover.

Currently, no game has ever come close to approaching two hours.

The longest playoff game by innings and time was a 23-inning, 54 minute game between the Canada Moist Talkers and Breckenridge Jazz Hands in the Season 5 Round of 4. The Moist Talkers won the game 3-2.

Game 99

See the main article on this topic: Season 4#Game 99

On Season 4 Day 99, the Boston Flowers and the Unlimited Tacos played a 24-inning, 65-minute game. However, as it was the last game on the last day of the season, no effects of spillover had occurred. This game holds the record for longest game both by number of innings and length of time.



  1. Both The Grand Unslam and The Waveback Event saw multiple games crossing the hour-mark threshold after the siesta was lifted, but they did not trigger spillover.