Transition to the second pendulum.As the Ouray Ice Festival kicks off today on this side of the pond, tomorrow marks the start of the 2018 UIAA Ice Climbing World Tour on the other, with the first event of the season to be held in Saas-Fee, Switzerland. Dislodged the left side of the second bar.ĭigest. Hit button about 0.21 seconds late.ĭigest. Tried one-foot technique and failed to grip onto the bar.ĭigest. Tripped before hitting button, being 0.1 seconds late. Dislodged the right side of the second bar. Final appearance in any Ninja competition.ĭigest. Failed jump to the first pendulum.Ĭourse Out. The tournament ended with Joe Moravsky failing the Sidewinder, ending NWW6, and what would've been the final tournament of NWW.ĭigest. Tim and Graff failed on the Ultra Ultimate Cliffhanger, and Thực and Matachi failed the Vertical Limi Tri (the latter going the farthest of the entire competition). There were no changes made to the Third Stage, with no modifications whatsoever. Jessie Graff clears the Second Stage for her fifth time (second consecutive), Joe, Thực and Shieff redeem from their Stage Two fails in NWW5, and Matachi Ryo clears Stage Two for his first time. Neither of them included Morimoto Yusuke or Drew Drechsel, both of them failing the Second Stage for the first time in their NWW career. In this tournament, 5 out of the 13 who advanced cleared Stage 2. A new obstacle, Dharkon's Realm replaced the Giant Ring Swing, the Unstable Bridge took the place of the Bar Hop, Water Walls overtook the Wall Lift, and the Reverse Conveyor and Shoulder Walk obstacles were added to the end. This stage was also overhauled, keeping the Pointed Salmon Ladder and Wingnut Alley, but removing the other obstacles. Bryson Klein had the fastest First Stage clear, the first time the fastest First Stage clear of the tournament was held by someone, other than Drew Drechsel. Lee Cossey and Brent Steffensen were the only NWW5 First Stage finalists, that didn't compete this tournament, and only 7 of the 16 who cleared last tournament, advanced to the Second Stage.
The numbering was also spread out, with the higher numbers being the best worldwide, rather than just focusing on NWW's continuity. This is so far, the least successful tournament, as only 13 people cleared, beating NWW5's 18% clear rate. Ring of Fire, Parkour Run and Timbers were replaced with the Double Pendulum, Bouncing Spider and the Fish Bone, respectively, the Wing Slider, Flying Squirrel and Rope Ladder were added back, the Rolling Hill was removed, and the Double Dipper was moved to the first position. The course was redesigned to be similar to pre-SASUKE 35 courses, however, it only featured returning obstacles, with no new brand-new original obstacles. He told the other three if he wanted to revamp the comp, with ChristianPandaYT allowing him to revamp it. On January 3rd, 2019, it was confirmed that ShadicMCGS would be temporarily returning to this wiki, and in the process, will revamp NWW6, putting it back to the original format, to differentiate it from Generation and SPECIAL. However, due to the slow work on NWW6, mid-way through production, he confirmed that Worldwide would be getting a seventh season, as well as the second international competition and a revamped SASUKE Generation. Shadic originally stated that this would be his last project on Ninja Warrior, so he invited KIANMike, realityisawesome and Christian PandaYT to work with him on what could've been Shadic's final goodbye to the wiki. Shadic has also stated that his other show, SASUKE Generation, is getting revamped, but the concept was fused with this upcoming season. Like ANW 10, each course will have an obstacle switched out.
After a 2 month hiatus, ShadicMCGS confirmed that the series will have a soft reboot, with a format taking elements from American Ninja Warrior and its spinoffs (UK, Australia, etc.).