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On April 11 2012 00:19 murkk wrote:Show nested quote +On April 10 2012 11:35 Chaggi wrote:On April 10 2012 10:11 murkk wrote:On April 10 2012 10:07 EchoZ wrote: Work harder. People in NA and EUR are kinda wierd. We tend to like getting paid when we work. Generally more than 25 cents an hour. Cool. Stop playing SC then. Why would my playing SC have anything to do with whether or not thousands of Koreans make horrible life decisions in what to do with their time? No need to be defensive. For every Nestea there are tens of thousands of losers who've wasted a decade or more of their life (many started with SC1/BW) for absolutely no reason. It wasn't even fun for them. It's was just a pointless grind - like working in a coal mine 12 hours a day and not getting paid for it. And people are somehow stating that we should be more like them. LOL. Holy crap that's funny.
Isn't that true for everything that is competitive in life? If you are not good enough you don't get any attention. How many people are there that train hard but don't make it to the top? Are you saying nobody should aspire to be the next sports star or singer? If just anyone can be that good, it wouldn't be that interesting anymore, would it?
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On April 11 2012 00:04 Nihilnovi wrote:Show nested quote +On April 10 2012 23:46 RageBot wrote: I find it hilarious, not a single person of the "pro-korean" posters have said anything about the actual points of the "anti-korean" posters.
You just blame us for being "racist", say stuff like "we should work harder" (while you are never part of that "we" since you are just a guy posting in TL without a hint of SC2 skill), you don't realize that we (the "casual" fans) are the majority (check out the voting on HuK vs Heart on the last MLG).
You also seem to be uncapable of realizing that we don't wish to ban Koreans altogether, we just don't want 30+ Koreans in a tournemant. Well, maybe it doesn't make you racist, since that is a bit harsh, but for me, as a fan of the game i want to see the best players play. If half of oGs or FXO turned up at a local tournament near me I would be excited as all hell, while by your logic i should be annoyed that they play there. You can hardly blame the korean players for being the best, you should instead blame your countries players for being so far behind the best players around and try to support your players instead of spreading hate towards other countries(in this case korea) players. Sorry, but it just doesn't make any sense to me and I'm really trying hard to see this as anything other than blind patriotism and hate towards different cultures, or just trolling.
So why don't you watch GSL? or KSL? there enough good games with Koreans in them.
Also, by my logic it's not you who should be annoyed, it is me and the majority of the SC2 viewerbase, get it? I understand that you prefer to watch good games, and it's great for you to have the GSL and the KSL, but you need to understand that us a viewer, people like me are more valuable, since we are the majority of the viewers, we bring the revenue, without us there's no MLG, no IPL, no DH, and without these there won't be enough money in the Korean scene to support the houses, and there's just not enough Korean viewers at home, so the Korean scene will also shrink like hell.
You also need to understand that I don't blame them for being the best, I actually have no problems with Koreans winning everything, however, when it's a Korean only top 4, top 8, top 16 etc, it is boring, there's already a GSL with better games, most people like the Koreans not only for the games, but for stuff like Stephano, Naniwa or HuK making great runs - can the foreigner underdog beat the Korean champion? Did you notice the incredible cheers, during MLG Providence, when it was announced that Haypro have beaten Nestea? Or the cheers when he was about to beat MVP?
And what should I blame the foreigners players for? For not throwing their lives away on a pipe dream? You don't get it, while Koreans don't get money for being in a team house, they don't have to pay for food, they don't have to pay for electricity, they don't have to pay for water and they don't have to pay rent, most foreigners would love an opportunity like this, but there's nothing like this in the west.
Also, spread hate? Againt other countries? Nope, no, only a fool can read what I said as something like that. If anything, I spread hate towards people like you, who are close-minded, incapable of viewing the big picture, incapable of understanding what other people say, not understanding that their selfishness is destroying the thing that they love, and blame other people for being a hater.
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On April 11 2012 00:19 murkk wrote:Show nested quote +On April 10 2012 11:35 Chaggi wrote:On April 10 2012 10:11 murkk wrote:On April 10 2012 10:07 EchoZ wrote: Work harder. People in NA and EUR are kinda wierd. We tend to like getting paid when we work. Generally more than 25 cents an hour. Cool. Stop playing SC then. Why would my playing SC have anything to do with whether or not thousands of Koreans make horrible life decisions in what to do with their time? No need to be defensive. For every Nestea there are tens of thousands of losers who've wasted a decade or more of their life (many started with SC1/BW) for absolutely no reason. It wasn't even fun for them. It's was just a pointless grind - like working in a coal mine 12 hours a day and not getting paid for it. And people are somehow stating that we should be more like them. LOL. Holy crap that's funny. Isn't that how it goes in everything in the world if you want to be best? How many failed tiger woods or jordan's are there? Might as well tell your kids "Don't try, you will fail anyway"
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On April 11 2012 00:32 RageBot wrote:Show nested quote +On April 11 2012 00:04 Nihilnovi wrote:On April 10 2012 23:46 RageBot wrote: I find it hilarious, not a single person of the "pro-korean" posters have said anything about the actual points of the "anti-korean" posters.
You just blame us for being "racist", say stuff like "we should work harder" (while you are never part of that "we" since you are just a guy posting in TL without a hint of SC2 skill), you don't realize that we (the "casual" fans) are the majority (check out the voting on HuK vs Heart on the last MLG).
You also seem to be uncapable of realizing that we don't wish to ban Koreans altogether, we just don't want 30+ Koreans in a tournemant. Well, maybe it doesn't make you racist, since that is a bit harsh, but for me, as a fan of the game i want to see the best players play. If half of oGs or FXO turned up at a local tournament near me I would be excited as all hell, while by your logic i should be annoyed that they play there. You can hardly blame the korean players for being the best, you should instead blame your countries players for being so far behind the best players around and try to support your players instead of spreading hate towards other countries(in this case korea) players. Sorry, but it just doesn't make any sense to me and I'm really trying hard to see this as anything other than blind patriotism and hate towards different cultures, or just trolling. So why don't you watch GSL? or KSL? there enough good games with Koreans in them. Also, by my logic it's not you who should be annoyed, it is me and the majority of the SC2 viewerbase, get it? I understand that you prefer to watch good games, and it's great for you to have the GSL and the KSL, but you need to understand that us a viewer, people like me are more valuable, since we are the majority of the viewers, we bring the revenue, without us there's no MLG, no IPL, no DH, and without these there won't be enough money in the Korean scene to support the houses, and there's just not enough Korean viewers at home, so the Korean scene will also shrink like hell. You also need to understand that I don't blame them for being the best, I actually have no problems with Koreans winning everything, however, when it's a Korean only top 4, top 8, top 16 etc, it is boring, there's already a GSL with better games, most people like the Koreans not only for the games, but for stuff like Stephano, Naniwa or HuK making great runs - can the foreigner underdog beat the Korean champion? Did you notice the incredible cheers, during MLG Providence, when it was announced that Haypro have beaten Nestea? Or the cheers when he was about to beat MVP? And what should I blame the foreigners players for? For not throwing their lives away on a pipe dream? You don't get it, while Koreans don't get money for being in a team house, they don't have to pay for food, they don't have to pay for electricity, they don't have to pay for water and they don't have to pay rent, most foreigners would love an opportunity like this, but there's nothing like this in the west. Also, spread hate? Againt other countries? Nope, no, only a fool can read what I said as something like that. If anything, I spread hate towards people like you, who are close-minded, incapable of viewing the big picture, incapable of understanding what other people say, not understanding that their selfishness is destroying the thing that they love, and blame other people for being a hater.
Wait, did you just write that you are more valuable a fan than anyone that disagrees with you? And that Koreans make for boring games? And that there are no teams in the west that pay players for practicing? On top of that you call the guys that disagree with you fools...
Keep on rocking...
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I don't know why people like to watch "pros" that suck compete.
Me, I always like to watch best of the best, no matter what their nationality happens to be, whether they are Korean, Swedish, Saudi Arabian, Kenyans, w/e.
But it's always so fun to watch foreign pros who have legions of fans just because they are from the same country (i.e. IdrA and his Merican fans) get demolished and toyed with on their own soil.
Btw I am an American I love Korean pros because they are the best.
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On April 10 2012 07:06 yawnoC wrote: Foreigners just need to work harder and stop making excuses. End of story. Most of them can't.
As a westerner... from the moment you turn 18 you simply can't afford to invest the time required to become as good. Our society has no respect and a hell of a lot of prejudices towards progaming and e-sports in general. Hence, there's just no cultural and almost no financial backup. As long as that remains true foreigners will never be as good as Koreans, because this backup is required for skill of such caliber to arise. Therefor when faced with the decision of pursuing progaming or whatever else, there's no choice for 99% of western gamers but to give up on progaming as a serious venture.
Western e-sports has to bring about nothing less that a cultural paradigm shift. To pull that off, a lot more money needs to be pumped into western e-sports in general. In order for a lot more money to be invested, the audience needs to grow and pay more. In order for the audience to grow and spend more money on e-sports, tournaments need to be exciting, competitive and rewarding.
So yeah... if you let Koreans stomp each and every tournament with all the background they have coming from Korea... SC2 will not grow much more as an e-sport. It's not cool but it's just the way it is, IMO.
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On April 11 2012 00:34 Assirra wrote:Show nested quote +On April 11 2012 00:19 murkk wrote:On April 10 2012 11:35 Chaggi wrote:On April 10 2012 10:11 murkk wrote:On April 10 2012 10:07 EchoZ wrote: Work harder. People in NA and EUR are kinda wierd. We tend to like getting paid when we work. Generally more than 25 cents an hour. Cool. Stop playing SC then. Why would my playing SC have anything to do with whether or not thousands of Koreans make horrible life decisions in what to do with their time? No need to be defensive. For every Nestea there are tens of thousands of losers who've wasted a decade or more of their life (many started with SC1/BW) for absolutely no reason. It wasn't even fun for them. It's was just a pointless grind - like working in a coal mine 12 hours a day and not getting paid for it. And people are somehow stating that we should be more like them. LOL. Holy crap that's funny. Isn't that how it goes in everything in the world if you want to be best? How many failed tiger woods or jordan's are there? Might as well tell your kids "Don't try, you will fail anyway" According to him everyone should just get a normal office job and live a normal life and never take any risks in life.
murkk, you know that you only have 1-shot at life, right? So why would you not support those who believe in their passion for something and strive to become the best? It is stupid to never try, studying can always come later on if you really only care about salary. Passion > Money imo.
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On April 11 2012 00:22 DamageControL wrote:Show nested quote +On April 10 2012 23:46 RageBot wrote: I find it hilarious, not a single person of the "pro-korean" posters have said anything about the actual points of the "anti-korean" posters.
You just blame us for being "racist", say stuff like "we should work harder" (while you are never part of that "we" since you are just a guy posting in TL without a hint of SC2 skill), you don't realize that we (the "casual" fans) are the majority (check out the voting on HuK vs Heart on the last MLG).
You also seem to be uncapable of realizing that we don't wish to ban Koreans altogether, we just don't want 30+ Koreans in a tournemant. What're the mysterious "actual points"? The marketability issue has been discussed. You assert casual fans are the majority with no evidence to back it up. Additionally, you never articulate why all casual fans are "anti-Korean." In terms of simply limiting Koreans, I'm confused about what the bright line would be: how many Koreans is too much? edit: @murkk, doubtless there are people who have wasted time. That is true in every competitive activity. Why should we cater to those who haven't made it? People are only saying we should be more like them because their system has produced the best.
Seriously? Just look at the fanclubs Idra still has more viewes on his fanclub than all of the Korean fanclubs, combined. Who are the Koreans with the big fanclubs? MKP and MC, why? Because MC have been making a constant effort to connect to the foreign community (remember GSL march? When he talked english on the stage?) and MKP for being a very emotional player while having a very distinct playing style (at the beginning) and after that kept on being a personality (like while casting on homestory cup). Also, look at the rest of the top foreigners, Stephano, HuK, Naniwa, all have 150+ fans on their fanclubs, foreigners are just liked more by more people, and this is TL, which is the most hardcore SC2 site, more casual people don't even post here. And seriously? The most viewed MLG was Orlando, in which HuK won and Idra made a great run.
http://www.gomtv.net/2012gsls1/vod/?order=2<ype=16&stype=1 The most watched code A games from last season are the ones with Huk, Idra and Sen in them, these are the games people pay to see. http://www.gomtv.net/2012gsls1/vod/?order=2<ype=0&stype=1 Also the most watched code S games/groups were the ones with Idra and Sen.
Who are the most watched streamers? Idra, Huk, Naniwa And Stephano, Stephano can actually get more viewers on his stream then all of the Korean players combined, Idra did more than that in his prime (he got to 20,000 viewers once).
In the last MLG, there was a poll on "who is going to win", when it was between Huk and Heart, when Heart was ahead, who do you think won the poll? Huk did, by a 93%-7% ratio.
It is obvious that the casual fans are the majority, and that they prefer their foreigners over most of the Koreans.
You can also check MLG VODs and so on, the most watched games are almost exclusively the ones in which a foreigner beats a Korean.
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On April 11 2012 00:35 Ghanburighan wrote:Show nested quote +On April 11 2012 00:32 RageBot wrote:On April 11 2012 00:04 Nihilnovi wrote:On April 10 2012 23:46 RageBot wrote: I find it hilarious, not a single person of the "pro-korean" posters have said anything about the actual points of the "anti-korean" posters.
You just blame us for being "racist", say stuff like "we should work harder" (while you are never part of that "we" since you are just a guy posting in TL without a hint of SC2 skill), you don't realize that we (the "casual" fans) are the majority (check out the voting on HuK vs Heart on the last MLG).
You also seem to be uncapable of realizing that we don't wish to ban Koreans altogether, we just don't want 30+ Koreans in a tournemant. Well, maybe it doesn't make you racist, since that is a bit harsh, but for me, as a fan of the game i want to see the best players play. If half of oGs or FXO turned up at a local tournament near me I would be excited as all hell, while by your logic i should be annoyed that they play there. You can hardly blame the korean players for being the best, you should instead blame your countries players for being so far behind the best players around and try to support your players instead of spreading hate towards other countries(in this case korea) players. Sorry, but it just doesn't make any sense to me and I'm really trying hard to see this as anything other than blind patriotism and hate towards different cultures, or just trolling. So why don't you watch GSL? or KSL? there enough good games with Koreans in them. Also, by my logic it's not you who should be annoyed, it is me and the majority of the SC2 viewerbase, get it? I understand that you prefer to watch good games, and it's great for you to have the GSL and the KSL, but you need to understand that us a viewer, people like me are more valuable, since we are the majority of the viewers, we bring the revenue, without us there's no MLG, no IPL, no DH, and without these there won't be enough money in the Korean scene to support the houses, and there's just not enough Korean viewers at home, so the Korean scene will also shrink like hell. You also need to understand that I don't blame them for being the best, I actually have no problems with Koreans winning everything, however, when it's a Korean only top 4, top 8, top 16 etc, it is boring, there's already a GSL with better games, most people like the Koreans not only for the games, but for stuff like Stephano, Naniwa or HuK making great runs - can the foreigner underdog beat the Korean champion? Did you notice the incredible cheers, during MLG Providence, when it was announced that Haypro have beaten Nestea? Or the cheers when he was about to beat MVP? And what should I blame the foreigners players for? For not throwing their lives away on a pipe dream? You don't get it, while Koreans don't get money for being in a team house, they don't have to pay for food, they don't have to pay for electricity, they don't have to pay for water and they don't have to pay rent, most foreigners would love an opportunity like this, but there's nothing like this in the west. Also, spread hate? Againt other countries? Nope, no, only a fool can read what I said as something like that. If anything, I spread hate towards people like you, who are close-minded, incapable of viewing the big picture, incapable of understanding what other people say, not understanding that their selfishness is destroying the thing that they love, and blame other people for being a hater. Wait, did you just write that you are more valuable a fan than anyone that disagrees with you? And that Koreans make for boring games? And that there are no teams in the west that pay players for practicing? On top of that you call the guys that disagree with you fools... Keep on rocking...
I said that the majority of the viewers are a more important demographic, maybe that is the way I should've wrote that.
And I didn't say that a person who disagrees with me is a fool, I said that a person who is incapable of understanding my viewpoint is a fool.
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How many people here watched The Gathering?
exactly.
most of us don't wanna watch foreigners play against each other.
players like white-ra are pretty low skilled and watching stephano stomp him again and again gets tiring.
we need koreans, or else foreign tournaments will consist of huk and stephano stomping awful awful players. i'm ok with restricting the number of koreans, but if you ban them outright, i won't bother watching foreigner only tournaments.
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On April 11 2012 00:36 ref4 wrote: I don't know why people like to watch "pros" that suck compete.
Me, I always like to watch best of the best, no matter what their nationality happens to be, whether they are Korean, Swedish, Saudi Arabian, Kenyans, w/e.
But it's always so fun to watch foreign pros who have legions of fans just because they are from the same country (i.e. IdrA and his Merican fans) get demolished and toyed with on their own soil.
Btw I am an American I love Korean pros because they are the best.
It's probably because you actually understand and enjoy the game while a lot of other people that watch don't really understand anything and only watches for the excitement of the battles and is cheering for whoever they like. If you want to be mainstream you have to captivate the minds of the ignorant.
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Why would my playing SC have anything to do with whether or not thousands of Koreans make horrible life decisions in what to do with their time? No need to be defensive
Its crap like this that will kill the idea of e-sports before it even begins. Racist biggotry only make you like like an ignorant scrub not worth of attention. The very pros who dedicate their lives to something you see as "making horrible life decisions". I'm an ex-pro athlete and I take that as a statement built to discourage people from trying. I would never tell my child that dedicating their LIVES to something they love is a "horrible life decision".
So, no, it is not racist to be happier when a foreigner wins than when a Korean wins
Actually to place certain emphasis on any quality or emotion based solely on race is the VERY definition of racism. I swear its getting harder and harder on these boards to slip by without some racist against Koreans attributing every bit of hard work you do to you "just being Korean". Its really sad for you as people to show this sort of thing to be your true nature. Just ignorant racists.
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On April 10 2012 18:04 naastyOne wrote: Hello everyone,
While I do understand that TL webforum is quite a "certain type of people" community, there is so ridiculous amound of not called upon fail i just wanted to get in.
First of all, sport is about the SHOW, not determining who has the longest dick. While skill is an integral part of the Show, more skill doesn`t necessary means better show. When about half of matches are predictably Korean terran MMM&drops, you might as well not watch half of the tournament. Simple as that, pick the "best"(the highest in position or whatever criterium) don`t waste time on the else. Obviously this is an example, but you get the drill.
Secondly 95% to 99% will not see the difference between the "code A" and "code S" doing same BO and style of play, while they can very vell notice different styles of play and different BOs. What does it means? Basically that there is no need for 90% of tournament to be super mega pro skilled players for it to be entertaining, on contray, such tournament is less predictable, and thurs more interesting.
That is the thing that is widely seen world-wide. The lesser leagues, i mean every friging european country has 2-3 leagues of football. Strangely, they have enough fans and money to live their life, despite the fact that uniting them into one "mega" league would result in overall "higher skill".
Could continue with other sports, but pretty much all sports have their lowest competitions at inter schools or inter-university levels, with kids/students playing in free of study time, so the argument holds perfectly.
Now, Look at SC2 itself. How many of the "skilled" players praise HD/day9/whoever, and dislike Husky(H to the usky husky). Guesswhat, Husky pretty much has larger auditory than all other english casters brought together. Ever thought why? Well, he manages to do the "show" part better, while casting same replays as others.
Ever wondered why the for example Football World Cup is much more noticeable and attended event than European Cup, despite the fact that Europeans dominate football, and a part from Argentina and Brazil, pretty much no national team can stand up? Despite the fact that a lot of European underdogs are probably better than some/most of teams from other than Europe/SA region.
So what does this means? It means in an order to survive and develop any sport needs a balance of local and international events, local and international teams, and most importantly content for broad spectre of dedication, and international events should be international, it should be serving to promote and advertise the sport apon broad community.
The problem may be not the IPL itself, but the fact that there is a lack of the local/non-korean tournaments, (while there are very plenty of korean dominated tournaments) and IPL was looking like the missing part, but it was just pretty much ended up as MLG, so largely failed to provide something different and unique.
Lastly, the ones about "they need to get better" got it upside down. When korea has community, which generates enough revenue to pay large enough number of pro-gamers for a living, In NA/EU, it does not exists, so foreign players can not really dedicate themselves to SC2, because they also have education and work which is not connected to SC2 and takes time from it.
Which again brings down the question of how to build up the international community, and "international tournaments"(coupled with local ones) are a great thing to do, bot only if the "domination of one nation" is impossible, otherwise the entire event serves only as another local competition for that country.
And the words of IPL4 manager pretty much confirms it, IPL4 failed on it`s purpose of an international tournament. Still interesting event, but largely irrelevant.
Thanks for bringing some sense into this thread - so many in here don't seem to be able to think further than their noses stretch
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On April 11 2012 00:45 sCCrooked wrote:Show nested quote +So, no, it is not racist to be happier when a foreigner wins than when a Korean wins Actually to place certain emphasis on any quality or emotion based solely on race is the VERY definition of racism. I swear its getting harder and harder on these boards to slip by without some racist against Koreans attributing every bit of hard work you do to you "just being Korean". Its really sad for you as people to show this sort of thing to be your true nature. Just ignorant racists.
If you had not taken that quote out of context, you would have realized my preference is not a result of any of those things. I do not dismiss the achievements of Koreans as less worthy or admirable in any way. My reasoning is that a display of foregin ability to compete is better for competetive Starcraft than another display of Korean dominance. Quote mining like that is quite malicious.
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On April 10 2012 23:46 RageBot wrote: I find it hilarious, not a single person of the "pro-korean" posters have said anything about the actual points of the "anti-korean" posters.
You just blame us for being "racist", say stuff like "we should work harder" (while you are never part of that "we" since you are just a guy posting in TL without a hint of SC2 skill), you don't realize that we (the "casual" fans) are the majority (check out the voting on HuK vs Heart on the last MLG).
You also seem to be uncapable of realizing that we don't wish to ban Koreans altogether, we just don't want 30+ Koreans in a tournemant.
Ok lets try this.
concern 1 . We can't relate to the koreans ! * Already disproven by multiple people in multiple posts. It is entirely possible to relate to people outside your own culture. NA probably has the largest casual fanbase and the least Pros capable of showing off impressive games. Chances are the last foreigner in a tournament will be european and/ or currently training in korea. Most of the time the primary language of that player will not be english. Even if they speak english it will not always be entirely smooth becuase of different grammar structures etc (ex. naniwa. white-ra, stephano). While not racist saying " I only want to cheer for people who're like me" is certainly predjudiced and false since the average new yorker probably has nothing in common with Mana or Bling or Kas etc. Casual fans like that are creating their own boundaries on who they feel they can relate to. If we suddenly get a slew of foreign pros from idk south america who can win major tournaments but need a translator because they don't speak english I highly doubt they will be embraced by all. The world VS korea nonsense gives an illusion of a united western scene but such a thing does not exist.
Concern 2. We want to see a variety of players ! * So do I, which means not seeing the same few foreign hopes trotted out at every tournament. However that requires the pro scenes of different regions to produce players who can actually qualify for events. . Limiting how many players can come from each region will almost always lead to only the same players coming from each region. Even if you hold qualifiers, NA will almost always end up being HuK, Idra, Select etc. EU would have to split into mini regions but would predictaly be a zerg like ret, morrow or nerchio, a toss like Naniwa, Mana or Sase, and a terran like Thorzain, Tarson or Kas. Korea would actually have the most fluid roster since they have a wider amount of top level pros who can all beat each other on any given day.
Also the scene is currently not set up to have such a system because all our tournaments are run by different leagues. It'd be awkward if one league introduced region limits and others didn't. Then you basically split the fanbase between those who want equal representation and those who want to see the best play out of people who legit earned thier way into a tournament. teams then also have to choose which competitions to send their players too and how that looks to the general public. Plus you know most foreign teams have atleast one korean player now, I'm sure it'd be great if liquid was like " Hey guys we're taking everyone to mlg for open bracket but um Hero and Zenio and Taeja becuase you see we can't have too many koreans."
Concern 3 All koreans is boring to watch! * This is subjective and it depends on the players in question. If you fill a tournament with drg, mc, mma, mkp etc even casual people will like it becuase they like those players and their playstyles.
Concern 4 We can't qualify becuase we can't get through open bracket! * Tough cookies, a qualifier like open bracket weeds out the weak, if foreign players can't get through then they didn't deserve to be there anyways. How many god damned times did people bitch about incontrol going 0-5 in groups at mlg because he could not keep up with what was still mostly just other foreign players and a handful of koreans. Limiting how many koreans can play in qualifers and open brackets would only lead to more awkward situations where someone undeserving makes it to groups and gets facerolled. Huk and Sase almost made it to pool play at IPl4 and they took down several koreans to do so. If we redid that open bracket multiple times there's a good chance some of those times they'd get through becuase they've proven capable of consistent high level play. However this time they failed, it's not the end of the world.
concern 5. There are more casual fans we deserve to be the biggest voice! * Dosen't matter, especially as tournaments move towards more sustainable revenue types. Hardcore watchers are more likely to pay for HD, vods, multiple cameras so they can watch from a pros pov etc. Being the majority does not make you more important and doesn't even garuntee that you contribute the most to the community despite having more people to do so with.
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On April 11 2012 00:39 RRjr wrote:Show nested quote +On April 10 2012 07:06 yawnoC wrote: Foreigners just need to work harder and stop making excuses. End of story. Most of them can't. As a westerner... from the moment you turn 18 you simply can't afford to invest the time required to become as good. Our society has no respect and a hell of a lot of prejudices towards progaming and e-sports in general. Hence, there's just no cultural and almost no financial backup. As long as that remains true foreigners will never be as good as Koreans, because this backup is required for skill of such caliber to arise. Therefor when faced with the decision of pursuing progaming or whatever else, there's no choice for 99% of western gamers but to give up on progaming as a serious venture. Western e-sports has to bring about nothing less that a cultural paradigm shift. To pull that off, a lot more money needs to be pumped into western e-sports in general. In order for a lot more money to be invested, the audience needs to grow and pay more. In order for the audience to grow and spend more money on e-sports, tournaments need to be exciting, competitive and rewarding. So yeah... if you let Koreans stomp each and every tournament with all the background they have coming from Korea... SC2 will not grow much more as an e-sport. It's not cool but it's just the way it is, IMO.
I have to disagree completely. You are talking about players investing time who aren't programers yet while most people say that the foreign programers should practise more. And regarding culture, support for esport: Do you know the Korean situation? Esport may be a bit more established there, but the parents are far more authoritarian. In the west many parents are supporting whatever their children do. I heard a lot of Korean programers in interviews saying their parents didnt like it at first.
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To all the people who say foreigners are lazy etc.
If the only way Progaming can be done is if you play for 14-16 hours a day, well then SORRY BUT IT WONT HAVE A FUTURE IN EU/NA. There are NO circumstances which justify playing a game for 14 hours every day. Everyone who does that is ridiculously stupid or has some seriuos problems in his life...or is Korean.
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The number one spectator sport in Korea (baseball) limits foreigners to 4 and less in Japan i think 2. I don't see a problem if they do it.
basketball they only allow 2 foriengers.
Has nothing to do with racism, it's about fostering home grown talent which kids will not aspire to if none looks like them. It's the same with getting blacks involved with engineering by giving them mentors and slots in engineering departments.
It's opposite of racism but inclusion.
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I disagree with limiting players to enter major tournaments by regional selection because the WCG games tended to be super one-sided when you matched weaker nation players against top players from Korea and Europe. And then Korea won anyways.
I would not disagree with a region-locked tournament that allows for the breeding of better local pros to compete in the major tournaments that include the koreans. An equivalent to I guess the Minor Leagues, or College Basketball, etc.
However - key points to consider:
-Who do we consider in or out? Koreans, sure. What about Europeans? If we had a tournament without Koreans, wouldn't Naniwa, Stephano, and Thorzain just top the charts over and over? So what is the line we draw?
-Who funds and sponsors this? It seems we can't just ask MLG or IPL to kick out the Koreans, so we need another league started like how NASL started. Technically, if NASL kept true to it's name, it'd have been perfect for a lot of people in this thread.
-Are we pandering to the unknowing public who cheer only for the face and the flag? Or is our goal to have people understand the intricacies of the game so they cheer for the better player? I may not know a lot about association football, but I deeply enjoy watching the best players around the world play. I may cheer for England (because I am also a Gerrard fan), but that does not exclude me from watching the rest of the World Cup because I want to see those flip kick goals.
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On April 11 2012 00:41 RageBot wrote:Show nested quote +On April 11 2012 00:22 DamageControL wrote:On April 10 2012 23:46 RageBot wrote: I find it hilarious, not a single person of the "pro-korean" posters have said anything about the actual points of the "anti-korean" posters.
You just blame us for being "racist", say stuff like "we should work harder" (while you are never part of that "we" since you are just a guy posting in TL without a hint of SC2 skill), you don't realize that we (the "casual" fans) are the majority (check out the voting on HuK vs Heart on the last MLG).
You also seem to be uncapable of realizing that we don't wish to ban Koreans altogether, we just don't want 30+ Koreans in a tournemant. What're the mysterious "actual points"? The marketability issue has been discussed. You assert casual fans are the majority with no evidence to back it up. Additionally, you never articulate why all casual fans are "anti-Korean." In terms of simply limiting Koreans, I'm confused about what the bright line would be: how many Koreans is too much? edit: @murkk, doubtless there are people who have wasted time. That is true in every competitive activity. Why should we cater to those who haven't made it? People are only saying we should be more like them because their system has produced the best. Seriously? Just look at the fanclubs Idra still has more viewes on his fanclub than all of the Korean fanclubs, combined. Who are the Koreans with the big fanclubs? MKP and MC, why? Because MC have been making a constant effort to connect to the foreign community (remember GSL march? When he talked english on the stage?) and MKP for being a very emotional player while having a very distinct playing style (at the beginning) and after that kept on being a personality (like while casting on homestory cup). Also, look at the rest of the top foreigners, Stephano, HuK, Naniwa, all have 150+ fans on their fanclubs, foreigners are just liked more by more people, and this is TL, which is the most hardcore SC2 site, more casual people don't even post here. And seriously? The most viewed MLG was Orlando, in which HuK won and Idra made a great run. Who are the most watched streamers? Idra, Huk, Naniwa And Stephano, Stephano can actually get more viewers on his stream then all of the Korean players combined, Idra did more than that in his prime (he got to 20,000 viewers once). In the last MLG, there was a poll on "who is going to win", when it was between Huk and Heart, when Heart was ahead, who do you think won the poll? Huk did, by a 93%-7% ratio. It is obvious that the casual fans are the majority, and that they prefer their foreigners over most of the Koreans. Thank you for providing actual evidence. Now we can have a discussion.
My response to you is that there is no solution. We want to root for foreigners, we want foreign hopes but there is no way to ensure that foreigners have good showings. The solution to simply limit Korean participation seems flawed: we have more interest when the Koreans come. The Gathering and One Nation of Gamers were tournaments with sizable prize pools that have simply gotten less interest in large part because they did not attract the best in the world--the Koreans. I would suggest that it is NOT just the foreigners that people like; it is the Korean VS Foreigner storyline.
Additionally, simply asserting you are in the majority, and should get what you want is asinine. 1) You need to articulate what you want and 2) you only increase viewer count which is proving to be an unsustainable model. We need people who are willing to pay for season passed, and pay to watch VODs. There are no numbers in terms of "Pro-Korean vs Anti-Koreans" buying passes, it's impossible to distinguish.
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