read the (*) on the picture please
WCS 2014: Partial Region Lock, GSL returns, and more - Pag…
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Yhamm
France7248 Posts
read the (*) on the picture please | ||
Nebuchad
Switzerland11369 Posts
Count the number of spots listed under "season 1 exception" please. Also who would be the "first 12" from challenger league? That's 8 spots from the brackets, and... 4 spots from the groups? That makes no sense. | ||
titan55
United States227 Posts
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Ansinjunger
United States2451 Posts
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Yhamm
France7248 Posts
On November 21 2013 13:47 Nebuchad wrote: Count the number of spots listed under "season 1 exception" please. Also who would be the "first 12" from challenger league? That's 8 spots from the brackets, and... 4 spots from the groups? That makes no sense. (*)Season 1 exception will have 36 players coming up from the qualifiers and a total of 48 players in code A (36 old, 12 new... how doest that make 72? the 12 old are certainly the 12 players that won the 12 brackets in WCS KR Challenger league season 3 | ||
Nebuchad
Switzerland11369 Posts
On November 21 2013 13:55 Yhamm wrote: (*)Season 1 exception will have 36 players coming up from the qualifiers and a total of 48 players in code A (36 old, 12 new... how doest that make 72? the 12 old are certainly the 12 players that won the 12 brackets in WCS KR Challenger league season 3 No I just wasn't in Korea for some reason. Sorry about that. | ||
gobbledydook
Australia2590 Posts
On November 21 2013 13:54 Ansinjunger wrote: Well I had no idea South Korea was that close to Japan. I always thought it was bunched up with Laos and Vietnam. facepalm World geography sure is a skill that needs to be better taught in school t.t | ||
TaishiCi
Korea (South)211 Posts
Here comes a flood of retirees... Korea will hold, but no more growth and slow decay will happen through the seasons. Prepare to say goodbye to many of the long time favorites and rising talent. More to Korea and less to AM/EU is needed. | ||
SCST
Mexico1609 Posts
On November 21 2013 14:06 TaishiCi wrote: This isn't enough for Korea still... Here comes a flood of retirees... Korea will hold, but no more growth and slow decay will happen through the seasons. Prepare to say goodbye to many of the long time favorites and rising talent. More to Korea and less to AM/EU is needed. Lol get real man . . . anyone who retires from Korea because of this is already at the bottom of the barrel. X3 grand prize pool relative to foreign regions is more than enough difference. *Edited to reflect "grand" prize pool not total prize pool. | ||
ForLethr
80 Posts
The existing non-resident players in WCS America and WCS Europe Premier and Challenger leagues can stay in the region for 2014. Their status is guaranteed so long as they remain at the Premier/Challenger level. Once any players drop out, they must re-qualify through through the designated WCS 2014 Qualifier slots. This means we will still see many Korean players in WCS EU and WCS AM. Things won't change a lot. | ||
TeslasPigeon
464 Posts
On November 21 2013 14:06 TaishiCi wrote: This isn't enough for Korea still... Here comes a flood of retirees... Korea will hold, but no more growth and slow decay will happen through the seasons. Prepare to say goodbye to many of the long time favorites and rising talent. More to Korea and less to AM/EU is needed. If the Korean SC2 is that weak and desperate for money Blizzard should stop wasting money on a dying scene. Why haven't any organizations in Korea (GOM or OGN or whomever) made any weekend tournaments with open brackets like DH, MLG, IEM, NASL, IPL, etc? There is nothing stopping someone like GOM to run a weekend event with open brackets (or limited to pro-players/invitees) and offering a prize pool of $10,000 or $25,000 USD. Start crying to companies like GOM and OGN to run more events. You can't depend on Blizzard for everything. Even this past year we had events from MLG, DH, Asus ROG, and IEM that weren't Blizzard controlled and still coincided with WCS. There is nothing stopping GOM or OGN, take it up with them stop blaming Blizzard for a scene that can barely support what they have already. | ||
Pokebunny
United States10654 Posts
On November 21 2013 12:51 Scarecrow wrote: Why do part-time americans deserve spots over players from countries with no WCS (Australia/China)? I mean you can put it that way but the reality is that there is no way for an American to make enough money to play fulltime unless they already are popular or well known. You can be idealistic and say that the hardest workers always deserve the spots but then we will end up with a similar scene to BW where all the foreigners are just amateurs because there is not enough money for them to play full time. Is that ideal? Probably not. For example if Suppy wasn't able to play in major tournaments due to school, he probably wouldn't have had enough success that he would have taken a year off of college. These are the things that promote competition and escalate the level of play and make it possible for Americans to go full time. We don't have a LoL-esque system where players are paid to live in houses and play full time at the site of WCS. We have dozens of Americans who are good enough to take games off of B tier Koreans / A tier foreigners that need to be able to compete if we expect the scene to survive long-term. | ||
MCXD
Australia2738 Posts
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mongmong
Korea (South)1389 Posts
On November 21 2013 12:01 bourne117 wrote: Yeah no they won't be. The only Koreans there that can compete in Code S are JD Taeja and Maybe Hero. That is the misconception everyone has about the Koreans coming over. It was never the best of the best. It was Code B and B teamers. Taeja and JD MIGHT go back but doubtful since they are still more likely to make more money in WCS NA. not maybe, definitely. | ||
Zenbrez
Canada5973 Posts
On November 21 2013 14:00 gobbledydook wrote: facepalm World geography sure is a skill that needs to be better taught in school t.t Not really. | ||
Zenbrez
Canada5973 Posts
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argonautdice
Canada2677 Posts
On November 21 2013 14:16 ForLethr wrote: Q. In light of the partial region lock for America and Europe, what happens to the existing Korean and European players in Premier and Challenger? The existing non-resident players in WCS America and WCS Europe Premier and Challenger leagues can stay in the region for 2014. Their status is guaranteed so long as they remain at the Premier/Challenger level. Once any players drop out, they must re-qualify through through the designated WCS 2014 Qualifier slots. This means we will still see many Korean players in WCS EU and WCS AM. Things won't change a lot. Pretty much the only change is playing a BO5 instead of 3-5 sets of BO3's. And once you're out you can't come back (unless you can win ladder wildcard). So by the volatility of winning a BO5 and the directional permeability of the WCS AM/EU, the number of Koreans will go down. | ||
argonautdice
Canada2677 Posts
On November 21 2013 14:31 Zenbrez wrote: Blizz didn't do a very good job increasing the prizepool considering the removal of season finals. It's actually quite a lot less. They didn't increase the prize pool, they kept the same total prize pool as 2013: $1.6 million. They redistributed the season final money into the regionals. | ||
Gorlin
United States2753 Posts
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RuiBarbO
United States1340 Posts
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