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On April 11 2013 00:15 Elairec wrote:Show nested quote +On April 11 2013 00:11 dacimvrl wrote:On April 11 2013 00:10 Plansix wrote:On April 11 2013 00:07 dacimvrl wrote:On April 11 2013 00:03 StarVe wrote:On April 10 2013 23:55 dacimvrl wrote:On April 10 2013 23:52 Plansix wrote:On April 10 2013 23:45 dacimvrl wrote:On April 10 2013 23:39 JustPassingBy wrote:On April 10 2013 23:38 dacimvrl wrote: [quote]
So you are already aware of these tournaments and you asked if there's any? You keep contradicting yourself..... Like someone already mentioned, you simply cannot fill an entire roster of NA players in that 32 man format, I don't think I can even list 10 notable NA players off the top of my head. You might as well just watch CSL. To be fair, I cannot as well, but that is because I am not part of the NA community. I can probably list the names of two dozen european players the average joe on NA has never heard of though. For the record, there's a lot more notable euro players, and I can easily list 10 or 12, but my point still stands in NA. Yeah, but all the EU players I would say I hadn't heard of and were not good enough to justify a slot, just like you would do for the 10-12 NA players I would name off. The point is that both regions have talent, but the Koreans are often given exceptions to make sure they can compete in tournaments. There is room for an NA and EU league that is held off line and that players have to come in person to play. well, I am pretty familiar with the NA scene, so try me, try to even list 32 NA players. It's a challenge! Scarlett, IdrA, HuK, Machine, incontrol, LZgamer, NonY, State, Illusion, Catz Drewbie, Theognis, Vibe, Minigun, qxc, Ddoro, Masa, TT1, Suppy, Caliber Sasquatch, Trimaster, Insur, Axslav, Leiya, Tubbythefat, Major, Maker, Remark, Glon hendralisk, Combat-Ex There you go. Yes, it's fucking hard. Pretty sure a bunch retired or do not play professionally..... Not only that, do you think people would rather watch this over GSL, and that a league filled with these players is a sustainable business model? But we can watch both. They aren't on at the same time. It not one of the other. We can have it all. Though I understand if you refuse to accept that in an attempt to make your point that it should be all Koreans all the time. Let me quote you from earlier - " we only have so much time, the leaves in the backyard aren't gonna rake themselves", so all of a sudden, the leaves in your backyard are gonna rake themselves? Don't be a prick; there will be vods
No, he wants to argue that an NA league will never work, that only Koreans can make SC2 work and that WCS will never be offline. Let him have his argument that defies fact.
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Does no one even care that na isnt going to be represented by any americans anymore? wtf is this shit...how embarassing. Really stupid system imo. If wcg pulled a stunt like this back in the day there would be a huge uproar, now all everyone cares about is "seeing the highest level of play". give me a break!
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On April 11 2013 00:17 dacimvrl wrote:Show nested quote +On April 11 2013 00:15 Elairec wrote:On April 11 2013 00:11 dacimvrl wrote:On April 11 2013 00:10 Plansix wrote:On April 11 2013 00:07 dacimvrl wrote:On April 11 2013 00:03 StarVe wrote:On April 10 2013 23:55 dacimvrl wrote:On April 10 2013 23:52 Plansix wrote:On April 10 2013 23:45 dacimvrl wrote:On April 10 2013 23:39 JustPassingBy wrote: [quote]
To be fair, I cannot as well, but that is because I am not part of the NA community. I can probably list the names of two dozen european players the average joe on NA has never heard of though. For the record, there's a lot more notable euro players, and I can easily list 10 or 12, but my point still stands in NA. Yeah, but all the EU players I would say I hadn't heard of and were not good enough to justify a slot, just like you would do for the 10-12 NA players I would name off. The point is that both regions have talent, but the Koreans are often given exceptions to make sure they can compete in tournaments. There is room for an NA and EU league that is held off line and that players have to come in person to play. well, I am pretty familiar with the NA scene, so try me, try to even list 32 NA players. It's a challenge! Scarlett, IdrA, HuK, Machine, incontrol, LZgamer, NonY, State, Illusion, Catz Drewbie, Theognis, Vibe, Minigun, qxc, Ddoro, Masa, TT1, Suppy, Caliber Sasquatch, Trimaster, Insur, Axslav, Leiya, Tubbythefat, Major, Maker, Remark, Glon hendralisk, Combat-Ex There you go. Yes, it's fucking hard. Pretty sure a bunch retired or do not play professionally..... Not only that, do you think people would rather watch this over GSL, and that a league filled with these players is a sustainable business model? But we can watch both. They aren't on at the same time. It not one of the other. We can have it all. Though I understand if you refuse to accept that in an attempt to make your point that it should be all Koreans all the time. Let me quote you from earlier - " we only have so much time, the leaves in the backyard aren't gonna rake themselves", so all of a sudden, the leaves in your backyard are gonna rake themselves? Don't be a prick; there will be vods Don't be a retard, vods require TIME to watch.. Not really, there is this button that makes them go faster. Its easier to skip the downtime when its not live.
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Reasons for watching each region IMO: KR - Kespa players & Life NA - EG-TL Koreans, Violet, Nestea, Ryung, Stephano, Scarlett, Idra (to see him get crushed) Europe - Mvp, MC, MMA, Naniwa, Lucifron
Basically, I don't give a shit about watching any foreigners except Stephano, Scarlett, Lucifron, and Naniwa. These are the only players that come close to KR mechanics. All this talk of European foreigners vs NA foreigners means nothing to me. I'd gladly watch Stephano & Scarlett play NA over 10 trillion EU foreigners.
Looking forward to all 3 regions. Blizz you did the right thing here. The 3 tournaments a year per region will select the BEST PLAYERS IN THE WORLD (All KR except 1-2 foreigners) & the final tournament at the end of the year will just be insane. Bravo.
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Wait, this is it? This is what everyone was whining about? I see zero Kespa players and only 4 eSF players. The rest are all foreign teams with Koreans on them. Why is it a shock that foreign teams would have their players play in foreign events?
Much ado about nothing.
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Vatican City State582 Posts
On April 11 2013 00:16 Plansix wrote:Show nested quote +On April 11 2013 00:13 dacimvrl wrote:On April 11 2013 00:09 Benjamin99 wrote:On April 11 2013 00:07 dacimvrl wrote:On April 11 2013 00:03 StarVe wrote:On April 10 2013 23:55 dacimvrl wrote:On April 10 2013 23:52 Plansix wrote:On April 10 2013 23:45 dacimvrl wrote:On April 10 2013 23:39 JustPassingBy wrote:On April 10 2013 23:38 dacimvrl wrote: [quote]
So you are already aware of these tournaments and you asked if there's any? You keep contradicting yourself..... Like someone already mentioned, you simply cannot fill an entire roster of NA players in that 32 man format, I don't think I can even list 10 notable NA players off the top of my head. You might as well just watch CSL. To be fair, I cannot as well, but that is because I am not part of the NA community. I can probably list the names of two dozen european players the average joe on NA has never heard of though. For the record, there's a lot more notable euro players, and I can easily list 10 or 12, but my point still stands in NA. Yeah, but all the EU players I would say I hadn't heard of and were not good enough to justify a slot, just like you would do for the 10-12 NA players I would name off. The point is that both regions have talent, but the Koreans are often given exceptions to make sure they can compete in tournaments. There is room for an NA and EU league that is held off line and that players have to come in person to play. well, I am pretty familiar with the NA scene, so try me, try to even list 32 NA players. It's a challenge! Scarlett, IdrA, HuK, Machine, incontrol, LZgamer, NonY, State, Illusion, Catz Drewbie, Theognis, Vibe, Minigun, qxc, Ddoro, Masa, TT1, Suppy, Caliber Sasquatch, Trimaster, Insur, Axslav, Leiya, Tubbythefat, Major, Maker, Remark, Glon hendralisk, Combat-Ex There you go. Yes, it's fucking hard. Pretty sure a bunch retired or do not play professionally..... Not only that, do you think people would rather watch this over GSL, and that a league filled with these players is a sustainable business model? why shouldn't it? I actually enjoyed IPL 1 very much because I wanted to know who the best NA player was. Its all about the stories and there is a lot of good stories there I would defiantly watch Yes, but I honestly don't think it's sustainable or even profitable, and that's why there isn't one yet, and there won't be one in the future. You do know that WCS is going to be offline in 2014, right? Its going to be mostly NA players at that point, unless the Korean players want to live in the US.
I don't know who's right, but the official FAQ Blizzard posted on reddit says there won't be a residency requirement, and they are avoiding that, so will it be offline entirely by next year? No, you can quote me on that. Will it be mostly NA players by next year? No, and you can quote me on that too.
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It seems the Euro WCS is going to be great to watch. Actually the NA one too. The top will likely be mostly korean, but there will be many foreigners in the early rounds. Not too different from the MLG events now I suppose. And now the foreigners will have a bit of an edge because of ping in early rounds. Also these are the Koreans that we all know from the western oriented teams. So they are more interesting then kespa b-teamers for example. There is going to be several EG vs Liquid matches, which is always interesting. GSL is missing a few interesting players, but still has plenty left. I think from a viewers perspective it looks very interesting. Well maybe unless you are an american and were hoping to see american players play against eachother.
What it will do for the players I have no idea, but I'm looking forward to watching
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On April 11 2013 00:11 Plansix wrote:Show nested quote +On April 11 2013 00:10 Doodsmack wrote: Kinda doesn't sit well with me that current Code S players would jump ship to chase easy money. They currently represent the highest level of competition in the world and they're running from that to face easier competition. IMO it's dishonorable. Its not shocking at all. All the players in it for the money, though some die hard fans would like to claim that Koreans are in it for the love of the game. Its a little of both, but the money makes it easier to love the game.
Yeah it's not shocking, but that doesn't make it honorable.
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1001 YEARS KESPAJAIL22272 Posts
Man I was expecting no name Kespa b-teamers so the LR crew can go take their pick of hipster picks and new zerg bonjwas.
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On April 11 2013 00:19 dacimvrl wrote:Show nested quote +On April 11 2013 00:16 Plansix wrote:On April 11 2013 00:13 dacimvrl wrote:On April 11 2013 00:09 Benjamin99 wrote:On April 11 2013 00:07 dacimvrl wrote:On April 11 2013 00:03 StarVe wrote:On April 10 2013 23:55 dacimvrl wrote:On April 10 2013 23:52 Plansix wrote:On April 10 2013 23:45 dacimvrl wrote:On April 10 2013 23:39 JustPassingBy wrote: [quote]
To be fair, I cannot as well, but that is because I am not part of the NA community. I can probably list the names of two dozen european players the average joe on NA has never heard of though. For the record, there's a lot more notable euro players, and I can easily list 10 or 12, but my point still stands in NA. Yeah, but all the EU players I would say I hadn't heard of and were not good enough to justify a slot, just like you would do for the 10-12 NA players I would name off. The point is that both regions have talent, but the Koreans are often given exceptions to make sure they can compete in tournaments. There is room for an NA and EU league that is held off line and that players have to come in person to play. well, I am pretty familiar with the NA scene, so try me, try to even list 32 NA players. It's a challenge! Scarlett, IdrA, HuK, Machine, incontrol, LZgamer, NonY, State, Illusion, Catz Drewbie, Theognis, Vibe, Minigun, qxc, Ddoro, Masa, TT1, Suppy, Caliber Sasquatch, Trimaster, Insur, Axslav, Leiya, Tubbythefat, Major, Maker, Remark, Glon hendralisk, Combat-Ex There you go. Yes, it's fucking hard. Pretty sure a bunch retired or do not play professionally..... Not only that, do you think people would rather watch this over GSL, and that a league filled with these players is a sustainable business model? why shouldn't it? I actually enjoyed IPL 1 very much because I wanted to know who the best NA player was. Its all about the stories and there is a lot of good stories there I would defiantly watch Yes, but I honestly don't think it's sustainable or even profitable, and that's why there isn't one yet, and there won't be one in the future. You do know that WCS is going to be offline in 2014, right? Its going to be mostly NA players at that point, unless the Korean players want to live in the US. I don't know who's right, but the official FAQ Blizzard posted on reddit says there won't be a residency requirement, and they are avoiding that, so will it be offline entirely by next year? No, you can quote me on that. Will it be mostly NA players by next year? No, and you can quote me on that too.
You really think that Korean players are going to get work visas(you need that if you are going to live here for a long period), apartments and live in NA to compete in the NA WCS? I think we will see as many Koreans come over as we see NA players go to Korea.
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On April 11 2013 00:19 TimENT wrote: Reasons for watching each region IMO: KR - Kespa players & Life NA - EG-TL Koreans, Violet, Nestea, Ryung, Stephano, Scarlett, Idra (to see him get crushed) Europe - Mvp, MC, MMA, Naniwa, Lucifron
Basically, I don't give a shit about watching any foreigners except Stephano, Scarlett, Lucifron, and Naniwa. These are the only players that come close to KR mechanics. All this talk of European foreigners vs NA foreigners means nothing to me. I'd gladly watch Stephano & Scarlett play NA over 10 trillion EU foreigners.
Looking forward to all 3 regions. Blizz you did the right thing here. The 3 tournaments a year per region will select the BEST PLAYERS IN THE WORLD (All KR except 1-2 foreigners) & the final tournament at the end of the year will just be insane. Bravo.
I can not agree more !
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On April 11 2013 00:19 Doodsmack wrote:Show nested quote +On April 11 2013 00:11 Plansix wrote:On April 11 2013 00:10 Doodsmack wrote: Kinda doesn't sit well with me that current Code S players would jump ship to chase easy money. They currently represent the highest level of competition in the world and they're running from that to face easier competition. IMO it's dishonorable. Its not shocking at all. All the players in it for the money, though some die hard fans would like to claim that Koreans are in it for the love of the game. Its a little of both, but the money makes it easier to love the game. Yeah it's not shocking, but that doesn't make it honorable.
This was never about honor, it was about making a living. Welcome to the real world of competitive anything. If there were no Korean leagues for these players to qualify for, they wouldn't play SC2 at all.
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At least now I have a reason to watch MLG from the beginning now. Fewer crappy players filling the rosters is a good thing in my book, regardless of origin.
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Another thing to think about is that this is only the first batch of players. Just imagine the batch of Code S/A drop-outs that will join them in the next season.... yikes
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On April 11 2013 00:02 Godwrath wrote:Show nested quote +On April 11 2013 00:00 pms wrote:On April 10 2013 23:50 BeyondCtrL wrote: I think everyone is forgetting some facts here. Blizzard wants for these regional plays to be all offline, however, currently the infrastructure doesn't exist in NA or EU at the same level as KR. To be fair to all parties this year has online qualifiers, since you can't expect for players and entire teams to immediately get a new team house etc. established in NA and EU. Such endeavors take a lot of time, negotiation and money.
The WCS tournaments and qualifiers are intended to eventually become all offline like the GSL, and in 2014 I think we will see ESL and MLG begin to facilitate the much needed static infrastructure to do this. When the regional WCS become all offline the Koreans and Korean teams (only Incredible Miracle has so far dedicated players, all other teams are foreign owned) can consider permanently relocating to another region. Once this begins happening the level of play in regions should start improving further.
I honestly don't know how people can expect immediate results. I'm sure that Blizzard, more than anyone, is scared of alienating and losing the foreign scenes and fan bases. I mean, they practically state this. I'm also sure that this year's format is not their ideal setting but it was the best that could happen considering how many partners are involved, not to mention how some of them strongly disliked each other.
Step One: Introduce regional leagues that should one day be equal. Players and teams are, between regions, too disparate in skill and organization. Diluting is needed. How to achieve this?
Step Two: Woo Korean teams and infrastructure with money that is not completely centralized in Seoul. Get them accustomed to the prospect that relocating is feasible. If the initial region locks are too severe then regions will become too insulated and will actually hurt long term growth.
Thus moderate region locks are implemented with online qualifiers. Korean players and teams aren't so rich that they can buy a team house in some random city in EU or NA. On top of this there is no set location for offline events like GOM in Seoul. What incentive is there when you get a house in Poland and the tournament location is in France or Germany, or elsewhere? The Korean scene is possible because everything is centralized in one city.
Step Three: Build partnerships with MLG and ESL where eventually static studios are formed in set cities. Once this happens each region will have their Seoul, so to speak of. All team houses, players, and tournaments connected with WCS (or only WCS) can be centralized to one location in each region. Once this part forms:
Step Four: Regional WCS events become all offline. Select few Koreans might move (excluding foreign team Koreans) to new regions and transfer team houses. These few Korean teams aren't stupid, they know where their advantages come from and I highly doubt the coaches think that just because their players are Korean they are naturally better. They know that it's their methods, not nationality or race. At this stage it might become more reasonable that Korean (now formerly, in fact) teams would scout for talented players in the region (considering Visa and permanent living, and many other factors). Major's dream was to be able to play in a Kespa team and I think this sort of dream will become much more realistic for future and current players who have the ambition and dedication. Over time the formerly Korean teams will begin to initiate more and more regional players and provide them with the environment that has been lacking so severely. This is not to say the it wouldn't be possible without them but these teams have so many years of experience that it would help to jump start the process.
Another major advantage, already mentioned, is the centralized location. I think as the dust settles teams will start to realize what a boon this is. As EU and NA get those centralized locations it will become much more realistic to form team houses in the city where most of the money is. Right now tournaments outside of KR are all over the place, and if you do have a team house you will still spend a lot on travel expenses. Not to mention the stresses and inconveniences it imposes. Everyone is raging at how the NA scene is dead, but imagine this for a moment:
Late 2013/Early 2014, MLG establishes permanent SC2 WCS studio in LA/San Fran, all games are now offline. Since all of EG and TL have relocated it would mean that all the players would either have to go back to Korea or move to existing houses. This means all these great players and Coach Park would be under the same roof as, presumably, your favorite EG/TL non-Korean players. Imagine for a moment IdrA, Thorzain, HuK, Stephano living with all these great players and coach Park. Since EG and TL are foreign owned and now have a proper team house with a proper coach, they can begin to recruit tons of talent in the region. Though this scenario is imagined and the date overly optimistic, the probability of such a scenario becomes very possible with the transitional year that we have now.
Or what if ROOT creates a house and engages in negotiation with an eSF or Kespa team? The NA team can provide the facilities and the KR team can bring the knowledge and infrastructure. Both parties would benefit immensely where ROOT can learn, recruit and improve dramatically. Sure the Koreans might be leading the pack, but over time the mutual agreement transfers a lot of the knowledge and methods that were previously, for all intents and purposes, completely exclusive. Maybe the partnership lasts a year, or two? How much could the management of a foreign team learn over this time? When they part ways could they apply it later on and could they build stronger rosters and improve the competitiveness of their current ones?
Do these steps happen over night? No. I read CatZ's post and there is much to be agreed about in there, but at the same time I see so many flaws, especially in his argument about long term growth; which I find quite frankly short sighted. Long term is not a year, or two, or three. It's 10 years or more. It's not about ROOT, or TL, or any current team. It's about that future, in 2030, or 2040 where e-sports is (hopefully) a globally recognized form of competition with lots of funding and public support. Blizzard, though I'm not certain about this, might already acknowledge that the gap between Korean teams and full foreign teams might be too large, and that this generation is possibly lost (I'm being overly pessimistic here). But by inviting Korean teams and infrastructure they will build a stage for players in EU and NA many years down the road to join teams that are descended from Korean team houses and all the benefits that entail to these future careers. I think somebody should post in on Reddit to soften up Catz followers and Catz himself. I think this post voices most of us, but we still know 2013 WCS is going to be weird as hell, and most of this post is to reassure what the regions really need, centralized hubs for each one (and teams and players who actually would invest on that), which is not what happening on 2013. I think blizzard is again playing too ultra safe on this.
So you think Blizzard, in less than a year, could have not only orchestrated the current WCS but also funded permanent studios in each region while at the same time having all the relevant regional players and teams pack up, buy a new team house and relocate to play all offline tournaments to a completely new and untested tournament style? Blizzard did not blow my mind with the announcement, but I can appreciate the fact that this was the best that they could do in the time that has passed since WCS 2012. Besides, even though Blizzard heads this endeavor I imagine that there were many financial compromises from their side to even get all these organizations to agree to something of this scope.
The foreign scene can eventually, as I implied, be regrown. Blizzard's money and time, however, cannot. You do not invest millions and millions on a long term plan and not play it ultra safe (unless you're a bank). If this plan adjusted to the popular outcry the scene would actually collapse because, honestly, 99.99% of people do not even begin to understand the effort and process which something like this requires. And if they did play it riskier, and the idea almost works but collapses, what then? You think Morhaim is going to throw more cash at this? I'm pretty sure he answers to a boss, board and tons of investors, so it's highly unlikely that they would greenlight another multi-million dollar endeavor when the last one failed.
In any case the current situation is not going to lift and carry foreigners to cash and glory. I'm sure Blizzard's mind and even the board's and investors minds, are keenly interested in what WCS 2020+ looks like, not WCS 2013. Esports needs to be sustainable and profitable, not just "fair competition". When needed, can we sacrifice a bishop to take the queen in 10 turns, ensued by check mate? It might look like that the current foreign scene is that bishop in this play, but I have hope that there will be more than a handful of foreigners that will surprise us. And in any case, if things do go according to plan WCS 2020 will be a much more international or regional, if you will, environment. SC2, as an esport, cannot grow if it's pigeonholed in a small corner of the world.
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Vatican City State582 Posts
On April 11 2013 00:18 Plansix wrote:Show nested quote +On April 11 2013 00:15 Elairec wrote:On April 11 2013 00:11 dacimvrl wrote:On April 11 2013 00:10 Plansix wrote:On April 11 2013 00:07 dacimvrl wrote:On April 11 2013 00:03 StarVe wrote:On April 10 2013 23:55 dacimvrl wrote:On April 10 2013 23:52 Plansix wrote:On April 10 2013 23:45 dacimvrl wrote:On April 10 2013 23:39 JustPassingBy wrote: [quote]
To be fair, I cannot as well, but that is because I am not part of the NA community. I can probably list the names of two dozen european players the average joe on NA has never heard of though. For the record, there's a lot more notable euro players, and I can easily list 10 or 12, but my point still stands in NA. Yeah, but all the EU players I would say I hadn't heard of and were not good enough to justify a slot, just like you would do for the 10-12 NA players I would name off. The point is that both regions have talent, but the Koreans are often given exceptions to make sure they can compete in tournaments. There is room for an NA and EU league that is held off line and that players have to come in person to play. well, I am pretty familiar with the NA scene, so try me, try to even list 32 NA players. It's a challenge! Scarlett, IdrA, HuK, Machine, incontrol, LZgamer, NonY, State, Illusion, Catz Drewbie, Theognis, Vibe, Minigun, qxc, Ddoro, Masa, TT1, Suppy, Caliber Sasquatch, Trimaster, Insur, Axslav, Leiya, Tubbythefat, Major, Maker, Remark, Glon hendralisk, Combat-Ex There you go. Yes, it's fucking hard. Pretty sure a bunch retired or do not play professionally..... Not only that, do you think people would rather watch this over GSL, and that a league filled with these players is a sustainable business model? But we can watch both. They aren't on at the same time. It not one of the other. We can have it all. Though I understand if you refuse to accept that in an attempt to make your point that it should be all Koreans all the time. Let me quote you from earlier - " we only have so much time, the leaves in the backyard aren't gonna rake themselves", so all of a sudden, the leaves in your backyard are gonna rake themselves? Don't be a prick; there will be vods No, he wants to argue that an NA league will never work, that only Koreans can make SC2 work and that WCS will never be offline. Let him have his argument that defies fact.
You are still not getting the point..... It's obviously not sustainable. A tournament like GSL requires large sponsorships, and a decent number of subscribers to make it work. Hot6, LG, Sony...etc. sponsored GSLs before, who's gonna do that in NA? And how many people would actually subscribe to watch the players you listed play...... wake up....
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If you want to watch "the best of the best" koreans, watch the WCS Korea and/or the finals at the end of each season. Why not let the *regional* championship be regional? As it is now, noone can be happy with it. GSL loses good players while they can play from their comfort of their home in other regions championship (why seed btw? They are apparently so good, they should have no problem to qualify?), reducing the chances of NA/EU players.
Btw I think this announcement was responsible for huge cheers at the Riot office. The SC2 E-Sport scene is again slowly killing itself, while LoL continues to rise by providing a huge base to get into "pro" status.
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On April 11 2013 00:19 TimENT wrote: Reasons for watching each region IMO: KR - Kespa players & Life NA - EG-TL Koreans, Violet, Nestea, Ryung, Stephano, Scarlett, Idra (to see him get crushed) Europe - Mvp, MC, MMA, Naniwa, Lucifron
Basically, I don't give a shit about watching any foreigners except Stephano, Scarlett, Lucifron, and Naniwa. These are the only players that come close to KR mechanics. All this talk of European foreigners vs NA foreigners means nothing to me. I'd gladly watch Stephano & Scarlett play NA over 10 trillion EU foreigners.
Looking forward to all 3 regions. Blizz you did the right thing here. The 3 tournaments a year per region will select the BEST PLAYERS IN THE WORLD (All KR except 1-2 foreigners) & the final tournament at the end of the year will just be insane. Bravo. Has Stephano actually said he will take part in NA WCS? I thought he was going back to France soon.
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