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On July 05 2011 14:00 Engore wrote:Show nested quote +On July 05 2011 13:57 Kuror wrote: What was Days big announcement? I missed it A league called "After Hours Gaming" its a team league involving some major corporations like Google, Facebook and amazon (and more). Its employees from these companies playing so the level of play will be interesting. http://afterhoursgaming.tv/ is the site but its down from traffic. Finals are going to be on Facebook's page i guess. Seems interesting no doubt.
Really? wow, that sounds amazing. Great for esports as well
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I don't understand why you all miss incontrol so much. As long as they have a funny person like Naniwa on every episode we'll be golden.
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On July 05 2011 14:00 last.resistance wrote: So Tyler will be the number one seed in the open bracket.
If he makes it out, he would get put into group A.
Damn.
Wow. At least that would almost guarantee some of TL's players to do well T_T
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On July 05 2011 14:02 Blitzkrieg0 wrote: I don't understand why you all miss incontrol so much. As long as they have a funny person like Naniwa on every episode we'll be golden.
ic wat u did ther
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page 1337 <3
lol @ awkward JP "no? nobody?... ok..."
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I think everyone gets a better chance to shine when inControl isn't in it. He kinda stole the show every week.
Would love to se him as a guest though <3
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On July 05 2011 14:02 Kurr wrote:Show nested quote +On July 05 2011 13:57 dapanman wrote:On July 05 2011 13:56 mikyaJ wrote:On July 05 2011 13:55 dapanman wrote:On July 05 2011 13:54 c0ldfusion wrote: I don't want to sound negative, but I'm a bit confused as to why a corporate league would constitute good viewing experience for fans of e-sports.
There are corporate leagues for everything from basketball to bowling. These are meant to be fun for the participants - that's pretty much it.
Sean's argument about college sports isn't quite apt here. The top college athletes go directly into professional sports - so even if the skill level is a bit off from pro-level, the competition is no less serious. Corporate leagues are casual in nature and meant to encourage team bonding and relaxing. Uniden wasn't grandmaster and he made for one of the funniest moments in esports. It wasn't a moment in ESPORTS, it was just a sc2 game. You're right SC2 isn't an esport. Is that what you want me to say? Jesus people are so over-sensitive. eSports = professional gaming IE : GSL, NASL, etc and the players that participate make up eSports. Random newbies like uniden aren't a part of it. It's like saying a little league baseball game is part of professional baseball.
It's part of the sport called Baseball.
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anyone have a link to the MLG brackets? Never caught who was in group A
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It's been a decent episode, but no incontrol will take getting used to.
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poor jp. on to the next topic then! hahaha. no one's responding to him for a good minute.
also, yay. i got on the uberelite page. <3 congrats, sotg.
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On July 05 2011 14:03 Torte de Lini wrote:Show nested quote +On July 05 2011 14:02 Kurr wrote:On July 05 2011 13:57 dapanman wrote:On July 05 2011 13:56 mikyaJ wrote:On July 05 2011 13:55 dapanman wrote:On July 05 2011 13:54 c0ldfusion wrote: I don't want to sound negative, but I'm a bit confused as to why a corporate league would constitute good viewing experience for fans of e-sports.
There are corporate leagues for everything from basketball to bowling. These are meant to be fun for the participants - that's pretty much it.
Sean's argument about college sports isn't quite apt here. The top college athletes go directly into professional sports - so even if the skill level is a bit off from pro-level, the competition is no less serious. Corporate leagues are casual in nature and meant to encourage team bonding and relaxing. Uniden wasn't grandmaster and he made for one of the funniest moments in esports. It wasn't a moment in ESPORTS, it was just a sc2 game. You're right SC2 isn't an esport. Is that what you want me to say? Jesus people are so over-sensitive. eSports = professional gaming IE : GSL, NASL, etc and the players that participate make up eSports. Random newbies like uniden aren't a part of it. It's like saying a little league baseball game is part of professional baseball. It's part of the sport called Baseball.
Yes, and games people like uniden play are part of the game called Starcraft 2. Glad we agree it's not related to eSports.
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On July 05 2011 14:03 MonsieurGrimm wrote: page 1337 <3
lol @ awkward JP "no? nobody?... ok..." I lol for awhile on this one if only Day9 was there when it happened
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On July 05 2011 14:03 Torte de Lini wrote:Show nested quote +On July 05 2011 14:02 Kurr wrote:On July 05 2011 13:57 dapanman wrote:On July 05 2011 13:56 mikyaJ wrote:On July 05 2011 13:55 dapanman wrote:On July 05 2011 13:54 c0ldfusion wrote: I don't want to sound negative, but I'm a bit confused as to why a corporate league would constitute good viewing experience for fans of e-sports.
There are corporate leagues for everything from basketball to bowling. These are meant to be fun for the participants - that's pretty much it.
Sean's argument about college sports isn't quite apt here. The top college athletes go directly into professional sports - so even if the skill level is a bit off from pro-level, the competition is no less serious. Corporate leagues are casual in nature and meant to encourage team bonding and relaxing. Uniden wasn't grandmaster and he made for one of the funniest moments in esports. It wasn't a moment in ESPORTS, it was just a sc2 game. You're right SC2 isn't an esport. Is that what you want me to say? Jesus people are so over-sensitive. eSports = professional gaming IE : GSL, NASL, etc and the players that participate make up eSports. Random newbies like uniden aren't a part of it. It's like saying a little league baseball game is part of professional baseball. It's part of the sport called Baseball. oshit
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Still has the original feel to it.. chea. Geoff not being there definitely has a tad different feel to it.
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Boxer went 8-1 in NASL tyler went 3-6
:[
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If theres any korean protoss they will beat MMA.
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