• Log InLog In
  • Register
Liquid`
Team Liquid Liquipedia
EST 13:04
CET 19:04
KST 03:04
  • Home
  • Forum
  • Calendar
  • Streams
  • Liquipedia
  • Features
  • Store
  • EPT
  • TL+
  • StarCraft 2
  • Brood War
  • Smash
  • Heroes
  • Counter-Strike
  • Overwatch
  • Liquibet
  • Fantasy StarCraft
  • TLPD
  • StarCraft 2
  • Brood War
  • Blogs
Forum Sidebar
Events/Features
News
Featured News
HomeStory Cup 28 - Info & Preview12Rongyi Cup S3 - Preview & Info3herO wins SC2 All-Star Invitational14SC2 All-Star Invitational: Tournament Preview5RSL Revival - 2025 Season Finals Preview8
Community News
Weekly Cups (Jan 26-Feb 1): herO, Clem, ByuN, Classic win1RSL Season 4 announced for March-April6Weekly Cups (Jan 19-25): Bunny, Trigger, MaxPax win3Weekly Cups (Jan 12-18): herO, MaxPax, Solar win0BSL Season 2025 - Full Overview and Conclusion8
StarCraft 2
General
StarCraft 2 Not at the Esports World Cup 2026 HomeStory Cup 28 - Info & Preview Weekly Cups (Jan 26-Feb 1): herO, Clem, ByuN, Classic win Weekly Cups (Jan 19-25): Bunny, Trigger, MaxPax win Oliveira Would Have Returned If EWC Continued
Tourneys
RSL Season 4 announced for March-April HomeStory Cup 28 $21,000 Rongyi Cup Season 3 announced (Jan 22-Feb 7) KSL Week 85 OSC Season 13 World Championship
Strategy
Simple Questions Simple Answers
Custom Maps
[A] Starcraft Sound Mod
External Content
Mutation # 511 Temple of Rebirth The PondCast: SC2 News & Results Mutation # 510 Safety Violation Mutation # 509 Doomsday Report
Brood War
General
Can someone share very abbreviated BW cliffnotes? [ASL21] Potential Map Candidates Liquipedia.net NEEDS editors for Brood War BGH Auto Balance -> http://bghmmr.eu/ BW General Discussion
Tourneys
[Megathread] Daily Proleagues Small VOD Thread 2.0 Azhi's Colosseum - Season 2 [BSL21] Non-Korean Championship - Starts Jan 10
Strategy
Zealot bombing is no longer popular? Simple Questions, Simple Answers Current Meta Soma's 9 hatch build from ASL Game 2
Other Games
General Games
Battle Aces/David Kim RTS Megathread Nintendo Switch Thread Path of Exile Mobile Legends: Bang Bang Beyond All Reason
Dota 2
Official 'what is Dota anymore' discussion
League of Legends
Heroes of the Storm
Simple Questions, Simple Answers Heroes of the Storm 2.0
Hearthstone
Deck construction bug Heroes of StarCraft mini-set
TL Mafia
Mafia Game Mode Feedback/Ideas Vanilla Mini Mafia
Community
General
US Politics Mega-thread Things Aren’t Peaceful in Palestine European Politico-economics QA Mega-thread The Games Industry And ATVI Canadian Politics Mega-thread
Fan Clubs
The herO Fan Club! The IdrA Fan Club
Media & Entertainment
[Manga] One Piece Anime Discussion Thread
Sports
2024 - 2026 Football Thread
World Cup 2022
Tech Support
Computer Build, Upgrade & Buying Resource Thread
TL Community
The Automated Ban List
Blogs
Play, Watch, Drink: Esports …
TrAiDoS
My 2025 Magic: The Gathering…
DARKING
Life Update and thoughts.
FuDDx
How do archons sleep?
8882
Customize Sidebar...

Website Feedback

Closed Threads



Active: 2301 users

Making Kimchi

Blogs > caradoc
Post a Reply
Normal
caradoc
Profile Blog Joined January 2011
Canada3022 Posts
Last Edited: 2013-08-22 03:16:00
June 01 2011 19:17 GMT
#1
Since we both love kimchi, my wife and I decided to embark on an epic kimchi making journey. It was so successful, I wanted to share it here and hopefully inspire someone else to try.


[image loading]
We emerged victorious (I don't know why the image keeps skewing and rotating. It looks fine on imgur)


It was a pretty epic endeavour, but I was actually amazed at how simple it was. The ingredients turned out to be about 1/8th the price that you would pay at a store, and was actually really fun to make. It was/is really really good too-- on par with good korean kimchi you'd get at a specialty store, better than most-- and that's saying a lot because I'm damn picky when it comes to kimchi.


Since EVERYONE here loves Kimchi, I decided to make my first blog post on how to make it. Most of what you need can be found at any grocery store, but you'll possibly need to get to an Asian grocery store for a few things.


You will need

1 Napa Cabbage + Show Spoiler +
[image loading]

Heres a pic. They often come wrapped in plastic wrap.

1 to 1 1/2 cups of hot pepper flakes (maewon gochu) + Show Spoiler +
[image loading][image loading]

Basically if its a package of red pepper flakes and there is korean writing on it then its the right stuff. If you want it more spicy, use 1 and a half cups, if you want it less, use just 1 cup

1/4 cup of fish sauce + Show Spoiler +
[image loading]
This one will be the trickest to procure. You also have to be careful. Thai fish sauce is usually a lot stronger so you will need less than 1/4 cup.

1/4 to 1/2 a bulb of garlic + Show Spoiler +
[image loading]
a quarter to half of this here

a chunk of ginger + Show Spoiler +
[image loading]
(about half of this much, the size of your thumb or so)

a few chives or green onions + Show Spoiler +
[image loading]

1/2 of a medium sized onion + Show Spoiler +
C'mon, its an onion. You know what they look like. Half of one of them

1/2 cup (or so) salt, if you're salting them, otherwise, 3tbsp of salt.
1/8 cup flour (any kind, traditionally its rice flour)
3 Tablespoons of sugar + Show Spoiler +
EDIT: intoyourrainbow suggests using apple or asian pear rather than sugar-- I think this is an incredible idea. If so, make sure to cut them fairly small.




First of all, you want to wash off the surface of the cabbage. Easy peasy.

Next you need to render the cabbage floppy. You have two choices. 1) Salting, or 2) Freezing. (Dont do both) Freezing is easier by far. Salting is the 'traditional' way to do it. They end up tasting the same.


Salting
+ Show Spoiler +

Then, cut the cabbage in half lengthwise, from the stem to the leaves, giving two half-cabbages.
+ Show Spoiler +
[image loading]
like this!

Make another half-cut of the cabbage, through the stem. + Show Spoiler +
[image loading]


Now you're going to have to salt the cabbages. Salting them transforms them from the crunchy things they normally are, to the soft cabbage like in kimchi.

Get your half-cup of salt, and sprinkle salt on each leaf and stem-- you'll have to open them up individually, to get salt on every surface, but try to preserve the overall shape of the cabbage for now. Since the stems are much thicker than the leaves, try to put more salt on the stems.

Once they're all salted, put them in an empty pot or bowl, and let them sit for two hours.

After two hours, flip them upside down-- this just helps any areas that are less salted to get exposed to salt. Let them sit for another two hours.

Once this is done, soak and rinse them in cold water to get the excess salt off. Make sure you do this thoroughly since you don't want salty kimchi-- they should be floppy and have a similar texture to normal kimchi cabbage. + Show Spoiler +
[image loading]
The floppy cabbage in the foreground is what mine looked like after salting.



Freezing

+ Show Spoiler +

Put the whole cabbage in the freezer. Keep it in there until it's solid. (When I buy a cabbage for kimchi, I just store it in the freezer until it's time to make it). Freezing causes the water in the cabbage to expand, bursting cell walls and causing the cabbage to lose its structure. This is what we want.

When it's frozen, take it out, let it thaw out in a large bowl. At this point, I like to take scissors and cut it up into small kimchi sized pieces.

Once thawed, drain all the water away, and gently squeeze any excess water out too. You want it to be soggy but not dripping wet.


Now its time to make the red paste that is the soul of the kimchi.

Put the 1/8 cup of flour and 3/4 to 1 cup of water in the pot (1 cup if you want to use more pepper flakes, 3/4 cup if you want to use less pepper flakes)-- cook at medium-high, keep stirring it. When it starts to boil, add the sugar, and stir for another 30 seconds or so. Then turn off the heat, and let it cool off. After its cool, put it in a bowl, and add the fish sauce and pepper flakes, (and the salt if you FROZE the cabbage rather than salted it) and stir till its even. Chop all the vegetables finely (or use a blender or food processor, I like to chop by hand) and add them to the mix, again, stirring it all until its even.


Now for the fun part-- spreading the paste on the cabbage.

+ Show Spoiler +
[image loading]


First, get a tub that is relatively air-tight sealable and will be big enough to hold all the cabbage when you're done.

You're going to be doing this by hand-- apparently some people have more sensitive skin-- if you are one of those people, I'd definitely recommend you wear gloves. Also, WARNING-- DO NOT RUB YOUR EYES WITH YOUR HANDS WHEN YOU HAVE CHILI ON THEM. This should be common sense, but I know people that have done this before. it hurts for hours.

What you want to do when you spread the paste is get paste on every surface of the cabbage. I just did it leave by leaf, and really smeared it on. You'll use up all the paste doing this for all the cabbage. When you're done each chunk, put it into the tub.

When everything is done, you can throw the excess paste on top of the cabbage in the tub--- you shouldn't have very much, if any, left though.

Seal the tub, and put it in a room-temperature spot. You have to let it sit for 2-4 days now.

EDIT: You can leave it for longer if you like it more sour. It won't get much softer though-- most of the softness comes from the salting phase. Thanks Zeal and Cow.

2-4 days later....


[image loading]

you can now keep it in the fridge. Enjoy!


Some recipes using kimchi

Kimchi pork belly

Kimchi Peach Topping



Tips
+ Show Spoiler +

-you can use radish too-- if you are going to add radish, then just increase the amount of paste you make. You'll have to sprinkle salt on the radish as well, and toss it around after 2 hours. Otherwise make as normal.

-Another tip, if you feel like making more, just double or triple etc. the quantities of everything. This is a relatively small batch, but it depends how much you like to eat.



****
Salvation a la mode and a cup of tea...
XXGeneration
Profile Blog Joined November 2010
United States625 Posts
June 01 2011 19:18 GMT
#2
Kimchi is probably one of my favorite rice accompaniments
"I was so surprised when I first played StarCraft 2. I couldn't believe that such an easy game exists... I guess the best way to attract people these days is to make things easy and simple." -Midas
Disregard
Profile Blog Joined March 2007
China10252 Posts
June 01 2011 19:26 GMT
#3
I have kimchi thats well over 6 months old sitting in my fridge. But the fresh stuff, especially homemade is by far my preference.
"If I had to take a drug in order to be free, I'm screwed. Freedom exists in the mind, otherwise it doesn't exist."
ZeaL.
Profile Blog Joined April 2009
United States5955 Posts
June 01 2011 19:28 GMT
#4
I make kimchi all the time simply because its so fucking expensive at the store. One thing I do though is chop up the kimchi first before even salting it because its such a pain to pull the napa out of the jar while its all goopy and wet and then have to chop it before cooking/serving or w/e. I never understood the reason why you're supposed to leave them intact. Also, if you love it super sour you can leave it in for longer, I usually do it for 6 or so.
storm44
Profile Blog Joined July 2010
1293 Posts
June 01 2011 19:31 GMT
#5
On June 02 2011 04:26 Disregard wrote:
I have kimchi thats well over 6 months old sitting in my fridge. But the fresh stuff, especially homemade is by far my preference.


I'm actually the opposite I hate fresh kimchi, its a lot better when you let it chill for a couple weeks or so
shinjin
Profile Joined January 2010
United States398 Posts
June 01 2011 19:33 GMT
#6
kimchi flavored ramyun :D
i am very americanized aw yea.
give it one more try because the best things in life dont come free.
koreasilver
Profile Blog Joined June 2008
9109 Posts
June 01 2011 19:34 GMT
#7
On June 02 2011 04:31 storm44 wrote:
Show nested quote +
On June 02 2011 04:26 Disregard wrote:
I have kimchi thats well over 6 months old sitting in my fridge. But the fresh stuff, especially homemade is by far my preference.


I'm actually the opposite I hate fresh kimchi, its a lot better when you let it chill for a couple weeks or so

I kinda like both. Fresh kimchi is great to eat on its own with plain rice and stuff like steamed pork, but when it comes to making jjigae or eating with ramen, aged kimchi is the king.
Cow
Profile Joined May 2010
Canada1104 Posts
June 01 2011 19:35 GMT
#8
Oh wow, this looks (thanks for the pictures!) a lot easier than I thought it would be. I think this blog might be that little push I need to give it a shot, good stuff! (And if it's only 1/8th of the instore price, that's even better)

I thought Kimchi was left for longer than 2-4 days, and some comments say they like to leave it for longer...I'm tempted to make two batches, one to leave for 2-4 days, and one for a week or two.
R.I.P. Nujabes ♫
Disregard
Profile Blog Joined March 2007
China10252 Posts
Last Edited: 2011-06-01 20:02:11
June 01 2011 19:35 GMT
#9
Kimchi that old is better for soup or stew. I tried eating it, the intensity is a Falcon punch to my taste buds.

edit: I meant over 6 months, few weeks is fine for me.
"If I had to take a drug in order to be free, I'm screwed. Freedom exists in the mind, otherwise it doesn't exist."
RouaF
Profile Joined October 2010
France4120 Posts
June 01 2011 19:58 GMT
#10
Ahh~~yumy~~ My girl is chinese and she always wanted to do that but she can't find the time to learn. She asked me to bookmark this page for her so I hope she will get into it ^^a As for me... i'm not good at this kind of things :D
heroyi
Profile Blog Joined March 2009
United States1064 Posts
June 01 2011 20:00 GMT
#11
On June 02 2011 04:35 Disregard wrote:
Kimchi that old is better for soup or stew. I tried eating it, the intensity is a Falcon punch to my taste buds.

seriously?

I absolutely abhor "fresh" kimchi. Most goddamn disgusting thing in the world in my book (since I hate raw cabbage I suppose).

Old kimchi is so damn good and will go peasant mode on that shit (rice and kimchi only XD )
wat wat in my pants
DJEtterStyle
Profile Blog Joined October 2003
United States2766 Posts
June 01 2011 20:13 GMT
#12
Nice blog. Thanks for posting this.
paper
Profile Blog Joined September 2004
13196 Posts
June 01 2011 20:20 GMT
#13
Nice ;o

Here are some additional easy-to-do kimchi recipes.
Hates Fun🤔
Disregard
Profile Blog Joined March 2007
China10252 Posts
June 01 2011 20:22 GMT
#14
Kimchi raddish is also good. Ive tried lettuce and cucumber, the lettuce kimchi is awful. D:
"If I had to take a drug in order to be free, I'm screwed. Freedom exists in the mind, otherwise it doesn't exist."
caradoc
Profile Blog Joined January 2011
Canada3022 Posts
Last Edited: 2011-06-01 20:55:30
June 01 2011 20:54 GMT
#15
@ Zeal and Cow : I edited in that you could leave it for longer than 2-4 if you like it more sour. It will also age slowly in the fridge.

@Disregard -- you can use raddish too-- if you are going to add raddish, then just increase the amount of paste you make. You'll have to sprinkle salt on the raddish as well, and toss it around after 2 hours. Lettuce kimchi sounds scary.
Salvation a la mode and a cup of tea...
LuMiX
Profile Blog Joined October 2006
China5757 Posts
June 01 2011 21:05 GMT
#16
kimchi + rice so good! i'll remember this post for future reference.
igotmyown
Profile Blog Joined April 2009
United States4291 Posts
June 01 2011 21:26 GMT
#17
Damnit, kimchi has flour in it?

So much for including it in a no sugar/flour diet...
zZygote
Profile Blog Joined January 2007
Canada898 Posts
June 01 2011 21:30 GMT
#18
Awesome guide, do you leave it in the freezer or the fridge when fermentation is done or when you're not eating it?
caradoc
Profile Blog Joined January 2011
Canada3022 Posts
June 01 2011 21:44 GMT
#19
@igotmyown, it just helps thicken the paste, its possible to just not add it, in that case, just use a bit less water.

@zZygote-- I keep it in the fridge. freezer works too.
Salvation a la mode and a cup of tea...
Chill
Profile Blog Joined January 2005
Calgary25991 Posts
June 01 2011 21:45 GMT
#20
Cool It looks like it could be fun, but it's something I'd never do by myself. Crappy store bought it is!
Moderator
garlicface
Profile Joined April 2010
Canada4196 Posts
June 01 2011 23:01 GMT
#21
Ohhhh so this is kimchi. I've always avoided it just because I've heard so many mixed reactions - either people love it or hate it. Nice recipe + layout.

5 stars!
#TeamBuLba
NuKedUFirst
Profile Blog Joined March 2010
Canada3139 Posts
June 01 2011 23:22 GMT
#22
So, what does the fish sauce do for it? I don't think i'd be able to buy it at my local grocery store, could I substitute something for it?

5star, well done
FrostedMiniWeet wrote: I like winning because it validates all the bloody time I waste playing SC2.
intoyourrainbOW
Profile Blog Joined May 2008
United States168 Posts
Last Edited: 2011-06-01 23:41:42
June 01 2011 23:40 GMT
#23
This recipe is mostly legit except for a few small things. This is going off of what I learned from my mom.

The garlic: try crushing them into a paste with a mortar and pestle instead of chopping them up in a food processor. My mom would never use the processor even if it meant saving a lot of time and energy. She explained to me it wouldn't taste as good and she was right. I guess the garlic oils are released differently when they are crushed as opposed to chopped, or something of that nature.

Radish: adding radish definitely adds a level of freshness to your kimchi. Use a japanese mandoline slicer + Show Spoiler +
[image loading]
to slice the radish into long, thin threads. Then, mix the radish with your seasoning paste and smear it over the cabbage leaves. I don't know exactly how much radish you're supposed to use, but I remember using 1 daikon radish for every 2-3 heads of napa cabbage.

Fruit: adding fruits like apple or asian pear also adds freshness to your kimchi, and can be used to replace sugar.

The paste: usually Koreans use sweet rice flour instead of western flour, but if you can't get sweet rice flour, I guess western flour is ok.
vlaric
Profile Blog Joined July 2007
United States412 Posts
June 02 2011 02:10 GMT
#24
thanks for this guide. now i can impress my korean friends when they come over!
Wannabe zerg player
caradoc
Profile Blog Joined January 2011
Canada3022 Posts
Last Edited: 2011-06-02 15:16:52
June 02 2011 15:16 GMT
#25
@intoyourrainbow, good call with the pear-- that's definitely possible, I'll put it in the OP. I mentioned about the flour already though, it might have been in a spoiler though. About the garlic-- there definitely is something good about crushing it-- normally I'll crush it with the side of a broad flat knife before cutting it really finely. I never thought of using a mortar/pestle cuz I always had this thought that too much of the juice would get left in the bowl.
Salvation a la mode and a cup of tea...
caradoc
Profile Blog Joined January 2011
Canada3022 Posts
August 19 2013 00:01 GMT
#26
UPDATE: here's a dish you can use this with: http://www.teamliquid.net/blogs/viewblog.php?id=426051
Salvation a la mode and a cup of tea...
QuanticHawk
Profile Blog Joined May 2007
United States32116 Posts
August 21 2013 03:57 GMT
#27
ive seen a couple korean stews i can use this in, but what's a good dish to serve kimchi as a side to? ive only had once, but it was leftovers and kinda old and dried out and sad. this looks good though. the only korean food ive had was bulgolgi i made. pretty good, but i wanna try something else!
PROFESSIONAL GAMER - SEND ME OFFERS TO JOIN YOUR TEAM - USA USA USA
mizU
Profile Blog Joined April 2010
United States12125 Posts
August 21 2013 05:24 GMT
#28
I love kimchi :3 I watched some videos but never got the ingredient breakdown, cool!
if happy ever afters did exist <3 @watamizu_
Tobberoth
Profile Joined August 2010
Sweden6375 Posts
August 21 2013 07:35 GMT
#29
On August 21 2013 12:57 QuanticHawk wrote:
ive seen a couple korean stews i can use this in, but what's a good dish to serve kimchi as a side to? ive only had once, but it was leftovers and kinda old and dried out and sad. this looks good though. the only korean food ive had was bulgolgi i made. pretty good, but i wanna try something else!

Just do like the koreans and serve it with everything. As long as it's like the food they eat in korea (rice).
QuanticHawk
Profile Blog Joined May 2007
United States32116 Posts
August 21 2013 15:51 GMT
#30
i hit up two ethnic stores today and couldnt find any of the goddamned red pepper flakes. googling substitutes... any idea on what would work??
PROFESSIONAL GAMER - SEND ME OFFERS TO JOIN YOUR TEAM - USA USA USA
caradoc
Profile Blog Joined January 2011
Canada3022 Posts
Last Edited: 2013-08-21 16:13:40
August 21 2013 16:10 GMT
#31
Hey QuanticHawk---

You can use crushed chilis or cayenne pepper-- they're both similar, but you may lose out a bit on the slightly astringent quality of the korean flakes. It'll still taste good though. I don't *think* it'll affect your water ratios etc. very much. Try it and let me know!

I would avoid anything that is like 'chili powder' -- they often use a blend of all sorts of stuff, some of which might mess with the kimchi.


mizU -- report back if you try to make some! It's kind of addictive!


Also, about Quantic's question of what to serve it with-- I'm gonna make another blog post about another kimchi dish today or tomorrow. (kimchi with pork belly, with rice). Tobberoth is right though-- it goes with almost anything.

Salvation a la mode and a cup of tea...
QuanticHawk
Profile Blog Joined May 2007
United States32116 Posts
August 21 2013 16:46 GMT
#32
Yeah I figured store chili powder would be shitty because it is bland and typically spiced for mexican stuff. I was leaning towards cayenne and seeing what dried ones I have that I can crush up.

I remember seeing this recently as a way to use up some tuna and figured id give it a shot: http://www.maangchi.com/recipe/kimchi-jjigae


Def looking forward to another post!
PROFESSIONAL GAMER - SEND ME OFFERS TO JOIN YOUR TEAM - USA USA USA
caradoc
Profile Blog Joined January 2011
Canada3022 Posts
August 21 2013 16:54 GMT
#33
On August 22 2013 01:46 QuanticHawk wrote:
Yeah I figured store chili powder would be shitty because it is bland and typically spiced for mexican stuff. I was leaning towards cayenne and seeing what dried ones I have that I can crush up.

I remember seeing this recently as a way to use up some tuna and figured id give it a shot: http://www.maangchi.com/recipe/kimchi-jjigae


Def looking forward to another post!


oh god, that reminds me, I gotta get some tofu for the jigae. :D Haven't made that in ages.
Salvation a la mode and a cup of tea...
QuanticHawk
Profile Blog Joined May 2007
United States32116 Posts
August 21 2013 17:07 GMT
#34
I know jack about Korean food so I am excited to try haha
PROFESSIONAL GAMER - SEND ME OFFERS TO JOIN YOUR TEAM - USA USA USA
sam!zdat
Profile Blog Joined October 2010
United States5559 Posts
August 21 2013 18:39 GMT
#35
oh awesome thanks I'm going to have to try this. the korean place in my neighborhood closed when the family went to korea for vacation and stayed because of an illness of something. they were supposed to come back but it's been months and months and long story short I'm having some serious kimchi withdrawal
shikata ga nai
caradoc
Profile Blog Joined January 2011
Canada3022 Posts
Last Edited: 2013-08-22 00:56:30
August 21 2013 18:47 GMT
#36
I wanted to edit a tip in on making kimchi (but apparently you can't edit old blog posts?)

Instead of salting the cabbage (this takes the longest) you can actually freeze it in advance, and take it out of the freezer when you're ready to make it-- this has the same effect as salting (makes it floppy) but is actually a lot easier. If you do this, you'll need to add a little salt to the paste.

EDIT: Edited in. Thanks mods.
Salvation a la mode and a cup of tea...
Normal
Please log in or register to reply.
Live Events Refresh
Next event in 6h 56m
[ Submit Event ]
Live Streams
Refresh
StarCraft 2
Harstem 193
BRAT_OK 93
JuggernautJason81
UpATreeSC 78
SC2Nice 68
MindelVK 15
StarCraft: Brood War
Calm 3102
Bisu 1026
Horang2 992
Shuttle 732
Mini 717
Soulkey 244
BeSt 219
Hyuk 179
firebathero 170
actioN 160
[ Show more ]
Dewaltoss 117
Hyun 102
Mong 62
Killer 34
yabsab 33
Free 30
Yoon 24
Shinee 22
Hm[arnc] 21
scan(afreeca) 19
Dota 2
qojqva2276
Dendi578
Fuzer 290
febbydoto9
League of Legends
C9.Mang098
Counter-Strike
fl0m3587
Other Games
Grubby3065
hiko658
Beastyqt559
ceh9413
DeMusliM229
crisheroes174
KnowMe163
mouzStarbuck126
ArmadaUGS89
Mew2King63
Organizations
StarCraft 2
Blizzard YouTube
StarCraft: Brood War
BSLTrovo
sctven
[ Show 17 non-featured ]
StarCraft 2
• StrangeGG 127
• Kozan
• LaughNgamezSOOP
• AfreecaTV YouTube
• sooper7s
• intothetv
• Migwel
• IndyKCrew
StarCraft: Brood War
• FirePhoenix12
• STPLYoutube
• ZZZeroYoutube
• BSLYoutube
League of Legends
• Nemesis12204
• TFBlade1242
• Shiphtur466
• imaqtpie44
Other Games
• tFFMrPink 10
Upcoming Events
PiGosaur Cup
6h 56m
WardiTV Invitational
17h 56m
Replay Cast
1d 5h
The PondCast
1d 15h
WardiTV Invitational
1d 17h
Replay Cast
2 days
RongYI Cup
3 days
herO vs Maru
uThermal 2v2 Circuit
4 days
Replay Cast
5 days
Wardi Open
5 days
[ Show More ]
Monday Night Weeklies
5 days
Sparkling Tuna Cup
6 days
Liquipedia Results

Completed

Proleague 2026-02-02
HSC XXVIII
Underdog Cup #3

Ongoing

CSL 2025 WINTER (S19)
KCM Race Survival 2026 Season 1
Acropolis #4 - TS4
Rongyi Cup S3
Nations Cup 2026
IEM Kraków 2026
BLAST Bounty Winter 2026
BLAST Bounty Winter Qual
eXTREMESLAND 2025
SL Budapest Major 2025
ESL Impact League Season 8

Upcoming

Escore Tournament S1: W7
Escore Tournament S1: W8
Acropolis #4
IPSL Spring 2026
HSC XXIX
uThermal 2v2 2026 Main Event
Bellum Gens Elite Stara Zagora 2026
RSL Revival: Season 4
LiuLi Cup: 2025 Grand Finals
IEM Rio 2026
PGL Bucharest 2026
Stake Ranked Episode 1
BLAST Open Spring 2026
ESL Pro League Season 23
ESL Pro League Season 23
PGL Cluj-Napoca 2026
TLPD

1. ByuN
2. TY
3. Dark
4. Solar
5. Stats
6. Nerchio
7. sOs
8. soO
9. INnoVation
10. Elazer
1. Rain
2. Flash
3. EffOrt
4. Last
5. Bisu
6. Soulkey
7. Mini
8. Sharp
Sidebar Settings...

Advertising | Privacy Policy | Terms Of Use | Contact Us

Original banner artwork: Jim Warren
The contents of this webpage are copyright © 2026 TLnet. All Rights Reserved.