• Log InLog In
  • Register
Liquid`
Team Liquid Liquipedia
EDT 08:18
CEST 14:18
KST 21:18
  • 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
Power Rank - Esports World Cup 202568RSL Season 1 - Final Week9[ASL19] Finals Recap: Standing Tall15HomeStory Cup 27 - Info & Preview18Classic wins Code S Season 2 (2025)16
Community News
Google Play ASL (Season 20) Announced3BSL Team Wars - Bonyth, Dewalt, Hawk & Sziky teams10Weekly Cups (July 14-20): Final Check-up0Esports World Cup 2025 - Brackets Revealed19Weekly Cups (July 7-13): Classic continues to roll8
StarCraft 2
General
#1: Maru - Greatest Players of All Time Power Rank - Esports World Cup 2025 The GOAT ranking of GOAT rankings Server Blocker Team TLMC #5 - Submission re-extension
Tourneys
Esports World Cup 2025 FEL Cracov 2025 (July 27) - $8000 live event Sparkling Tuna Cup - Weekly Open Tournament Master Swan Open (Global Bronze-Master 2) Sea Duckling Open (Global, Bronze-Diamond)
Strategy
How did i lose this ZvP, whats the proper response
Custom Maps
External Content
Mutation #239 Bad Weather Mutation # 483 Kill Bot Wars Mutation # 482 Wheel of Misfortune Mutation # 481 Fear and Lava
Brood War
General
Google Play ASL (Season 20) Announced Simple editing of Brood War save files? (.mlx) BGH Auto Balance -> http://bghmmr.eu/ Ginuda's JaeDong Interview Series [Update] ShieldBattery: 2025 Redesign
Tourneys
[Megathread] Daily Proleagues [BSL20] Non-Korean Championship 4x BSL + 4x China CSL Xiamen International Invitational [CSLPRO] It's CSLAN Season! - Last Chance
Strategy
[G] Mineral Boosting Does 1 second matter in StarCraft? Simple Questions, Simple Answers
Other Games
General Games
Stormgate/Frost Giant Megathread Total Annihilation Server - TAForever Nintendo Switch Thread [MMORPG] Tree of Savior (Successor of Ragnarok) Path of Exile
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
Heroes of StarCraft mini-set
TL Mafia
TL Mafia Community Thread Vanilla Mini Mafia
Community
General
US Politics Mega-thread Stop Killing Games - European Citizens Initiative Things Aren’t Peaceful in Palestine Russo-Ukrainian War Thread Post Pic of your Favorite Food!
Fan Clubs
INnoVation Fan Club SKT1 Classic Fan Club!
Media & Entertainment
[\m/] Heavy Metal Thread Anime Discussion Thread Movie Discussion! [Manga] One Piece Korean Music Discussion
Sports
Formula 1 Discussion 2024 - 2025 Football Thread TeamLiquid Health and Fitness Initiative For 2023 NBA General Discussion
World Cup 2022
Tech Support
Installation of Windows 10 suck at "just a moment" Computer Build, Upgrade & Buying Resource Thread
TL Community
TeamLiquid Team Shirt On Sale The Automated Ban List
Blogs
Ping To Win? Pings And Their…
TrAiDoS
momentary artworks from des…
tankgirl
from making sc maps to makin…
Husyelt
StarCraft improvement
iopq
Socialism Anyone?
GreenHorizons
Eight Anniversary as a TL…
Mizenhauer
Customize Sidebar...

Website Feedback

Closed Threads



Active: 682 users

The Alternate History of StarCraft II: Part One

Forum Index > SC2 General
105 CommentsPost a Reply
Normal

The Alternate History of StarCraft II: Part One

Text byWaxangel
Graphics byshiroiusagi
October 18th, 2015 18:25 GMT
[image loading]by Waxangel - Contributing writer
[image loading] @SaintSnorlax


This series of articles is a fictional account of StarCraft 2 history centered on one significant change: all champions and runners-up have been reversed. The inspiration was provided by Fomos user 'Lumos,' whose wrote a Brood War post based on this concept.

In July of 2010, StarCraft 2: Wings of Liberty was released as a sequel to the legendary StarCraft: Brood War. Since the day its development was announced, it was clear that StarCraft 2 would have to live up to a monumental legacy. Not only did it follow in the footsteps of a best-selling game that was considered the pinnacle of its genre, but it was also the heir to the greatest esports tradition of all time: Korean professional StarCraft.

StarCraft creators Blizzard and Korean broadcaster GomTV took on the challenge of embracing this legacy. In August, the GomTV Global StarCraft 2 League was announced. With a $170,000 prize pool, 64 top players competing for the title, and a studio located in Seoul—the heart of esports, GSL Open Season 1 kicked off with ambitions of continuing a decade-long history of excellence.


The Beginning: 2010 Open Season 1


Ironically, the opening of a new era heralded the return of those from ages past. While plenty of young contenders made their mark on the tournament, it was two former Brood War professionals who reached the grand finals: FruitDealer and HopeTorture. The two possessed a peculiar blend of manual dexterity and strategic know-how that could only be gained from years of Brood War experience, and it allowed them to step to the forefront in a game where there was still much to be discovered.

Even though it was the GSL’s debut tournament, four weeks of play were more than enough to solidly establish the roles of hero and villain headed into the finals. The majority of the fan support came to rest behind FruitDealer, known as “Cool” during his time as a benchwarmer in Brood War. Exhibiting markedly creative and flamboyant Zerg play, FruitDealer alone was able to challenge the Terran hegemony that had risen almost immediately after the game's release. For Zerg players of all ranks suffering on the ladder, FruitDealer’s exploits in the GSL were their sole source of joy.

By default, HopeTorture was the antagonist. He had been a well-liked player during his Brood War days, and for a time his ID “IntoTheRainbow” was regularly seen on the weekly Proleague match-up list. Known for his good looks as much as his skillful play, he offered StarCraft 2 some valuable name recognition headed into the finals. Yet, he played the overpowered Terran race in a tediously orthodox manner. For that, there was no excuse.

The table was set for a finale worthy of StarCraft 2’s inaugural Korean tournament: The lone, maverick Zerg looking to topple the oppressive Terran monolith. A classic David versus Goliath tale.


FruitDealer and HopeTorture shake hands at the first GSL grand final.

Unfortunately, reality turned out to be harsher than myth, and the finals ended in disappointment. FruitDealer’s attempts to surprise HopeTorture with rarely used units like infestors and ultralisks were for naught, and the outside-the-box thinking that had served him so well against lesser opponents became his downfall. Scoffing at FruitDealer’s unusual tactics, HopeTorture administered a 4-1 drubbing to become the first GSL champion.

Although the storybook ending had been swapped out for a brutal reality check, GSL Open Season 1 was a cornerstone moment for StarCraft 2 esports. GomTV and Blizzard reaffirmed their commitment to StarCraft 2 esports going forward, with Blizzard even adding an NPC named "Kim Seong Jae" to the World of WarCraft expansion "Mists of Pandaria" as a vendor of mana-restoring fruit smoothies.

HopeTorture and FruitDealer had ushered in a new age, but they would soon be swept aside in the following seasons of the GSL. Having lit the way, the torch was wrested from them by hungrier, more ruthless challengers.


MarineKingPrimacy: Open Season 2 – 2011 World Championship


GSL Open Season 1 was merely the prologue. True StarCraft 2 history began to be written in the second Open Season. It was the season when the StarCraft 2 world was introduced to Clair. A nondescript Protoss player in Brood War, Clair decided to switch more than his game of choice. Not only did he make a risky race swap to Terran, but followed it with an even more audacious ID change to “Boxer”—the name of Brood War’s most hallowed figure. The so-called “Foxer” (a portmanteau of “Faux Boxer”) immediately came under intense scrutiny from StarCraft fans who wondered if his ID choice would amount to anything else than complete blasphemy.

It soon became apparent that there was no hubris in Foxer’s choice of moniker. Wielding micromanagement skills that were in an entirely different class from his opponents, Foxer cruised through his half of the bracket. In particular, his control over Marines could only be described as otherworldly, and the Terran infantrymen quickly became his signature unit.

Foxer would meet his first true challenge only upon reaching the grand finals. At twenty-seven years of age, Nestea (known as “ZergBong” in Brood War) was a veritable Methuselah in esports reckoning. The old Zerg player was almost Foxer’s polar opposite. Though he was lacking in terms of mechanics, he felled his opponents with his veteran guile just as easily as Foxer did with his micro.

The two clashed in a grueling series that ended up going all seven games. After six games that saw Foxer’s fantastic unit-control equally matched by Nestea’s cunning, Foxer channelled the spirit of the original Boxer and put all his chips down on a proxy bunker rush in game seven. Nestea’s old hands—though guided by a sagacious mind—could not physically keep up with Foxer’s flawless micro. Mowing down a last ditch defensive force of Drones and Zerglings with nary a scratch taken, Foxer pried the final GG from Nestea’s fingers.

In his very first tournament, Foxer had become the GSL champion and the undisputed, best player in the world. It was more than a solid enough foundation upon which to shed the name of Boxer and begin his own legacy. He decided there was no more fitting namesake than the unit that won him his crown.

MarineKing ascended to the throne.


MarineKing had turned the Season 2 finals into his personal coronation ceremony, but the celebration was followed by an equally memorable hangover. Having founded his dynasty, MarineKing was forced to wait through one largely forgettable season before he could assert his dominance once more. Whether it was from complacency or overconfidence, MarineKing looked distinctly out of sorts as he suffered shock elimination in GSL Open Season 3 at the hands of the cheesy upstart MC.

To add insult to injury, MarineKing didn’t even get the consolation of the losing to the eventual champion. MC made headlines with his upset over MarineKing, but was unable to take full advantage of the opportunity. Upon reaching the grand finals, he was in turn upset by another upcoming, cheesy player in Rain. With Rain lifting the Open Season 3 trophy, the GSL came to a close for 2010.

2011 brought in a slew of changes, with GomTV setting aside the Open Seasons and introducing the newly created “Code S” as Korea’s flagship competition. With multiple tiers of qualifiers and a complicated points and seeding system, GomTV had built a tournament structure for the long haul.

Thoroughly embarrassed in the previous GSL, MarineKing came roaring back in 2011’s opening season, Code S January. Crushing opponents with renewed vigor, Marine looked eager to wash away the painful memories of his prior elimination with another championship trophy.

Rampaging his way to the grand finals, the King booked his first, fateful encounter with the “Kong” (the nickname of legendary BW player Yellow, known for his numerous second place finishes). If Boxer and Yellow had been brought together by fate in Brood War, then MarineKing and Mvp were similarly bound in StarCraft 2.

Mvp was a few months delayed on making the switch from Brood War to StarCraft, but he was one of the most anticipated converters. As one of the strongest and highest profile BW players to make the switch to StarCraft 2, Mvp was at the center of attention as he entered his first GSL.

Mvp proved that he deserved the hype. His play was defined by an all-around solidness bordering on sheer perfection. He could not be faulted in any area, whether it was macro, micro, multitasking, scouting, or strategy. Most impressive of all, he appeared to never make mistakes.

Advancing through the Code S bracket almost unchallenged, Mvp earned a spot opposite of MarineKing on the grandest stage. A titanic clash was anticipated, but the result was the most one-sided beatdown in StarCraft 2 to that date. The precise, flawless play that had become Mvp’s hallmark was nowhere to be seen, with costly mistakes marring his play at every crucial juncture. On the other hand, MarineKing had no problem bringing all of his considerable skills to bear. Taking a clean, 4-0 sweep, MarineKing ascended to the throne for the second time.

Once more, MarineKing followed up a season of glory with one of disappointment. He was on the sidelines as the Code S March title went to Brood War great July, who achieved his goal of winning an SC2 title before retiring to fulfill his military service. MC was the familiar face in second place, coming up short once again with his all-in style. His second 1-4 loss in as many finals made him the first two-time runner-up, and he started to be become dubbed the “peasant-toss” and “protoss-peon.”

July may have been the player kissing the trophy in the end, but strangely enough, MarineKing ended up being one of the big winners of Code S March as well. Terran supremacy had been slowly eroding away since HopeTorture won the first GSL, and by March of 2011, only the lack of a non-Terran champion was keeping the cries of imbalance alive. With July’s victory, “Terran OP”—one of the most popular arguments cited by MarineKing’s detractors—was left without a leg to stand on.

Reinforcing his reputation as a player who needed the pain of defeat to reach his maximum potential, MarineKing bounced back in the following 2011 GSL World Championship. The competition had an international theme with foreign stars such as HuK, Jinro, and DIMAGA in participation, but the foreigners ended up being little more than background noise as MarineKing won an incredible third GSL title.

MarineKing’s victim was once again Mvp, who looked like a player hell-bent on revenge as he blazed a path to the finals. A thrilling semi-final match versus MC reminded everyone of just how rock-solid Mvp’s play could be, and his Code S January collapse began to seem like a freak occurrence. The first meeting between MarineKing had been a letdown, but fans were convinced: the rematch would be a classic.

Unfortunately, Mvp’s nerves failed him once more when he stepped onto the grand finals stage. He was able to put up a marginally better fight than before, but he was barely able to worry MarineKing. Easily dispatching of a fumbling Mvp by a 4-2 scoreline, MarineKing added a third GSL trophy to his collection.


"Rivals"

StarCraft 2 had been out for less than a year, but fans could not help but whisper the sacred “B” word. Bonjwa: a title given only to the most dominant, era-defining players in professional Brood War. Achievements from the early stages of a game had to be weighed carefully—that much was clear. The skill level in the GSL had risen rapidly, with the demise of HopeTorture and FruitDealer being a testament to that. But even MarineKing’s harshest critics, those who maintained he benefited greatly from playing in a less competitive, Terran-favored age, were forced to give him their respect for being utterly without peer in StarCraft 2.

Meanwhile, many began to doubt whether the immensely talented Mvp would ever win a title. Though he was nigh unstoppable when he was playing up to his best, his mental frailty seemed to doom him to forever be a Kong and never a champion.


Kingfall: Code S May - Code S August (2012)


When MarineKing lifted his third GSL trophy, it appeared as if his reign would last forever. Even if he was disinterested at times, even if his motivation was erratic, there was simply no player on the planet who could match him when he was fully locked in.

MarineKing’s early elimination in Code S May was brushed off by most as business as usual. The eccentric King had merely fallen into another one of his doldrums. He would be back, soon enough, to topple all the pretenders before him. That was the established pattern, and it would surely repeat itself.

Alas, such expectations could not have been more wrong. There was no triumphant return for MarineKing after his exit from Code S May. In the proceeding GSL Super Tournament (a throwback tournament to the GSL Open days), there was only more sub-par play from MarineKing as he suffered another quick elimination. Not even two consecutive poor finishes could snap MarineKing awake—Code S July saw him flop for the third tournament in a row.

The fire was gone. With three titles won and legendary status earned in less than a year, MarineKing had nothing left to prove.

In the wake of MarineKing’s fall, an era of chaos began, one with no clear ruler. New conquerors arrived and laid their claim to the throne, but no sooner had they donned the crown than they were toppled by another usurper.

The only legacies that were furthered were those of Mvp and Nestea—teammates and close friends who had been brutally oppressed during MarineKing’s reign. But far from attaining glory in MarineKing’s absence, the duo only endured the shame of being branded as the true Kongs of StarCraft 2.

Nestea suffered the worst. In the grand finals of Code S May, InCa humiliated Nestea with four consecutive Dark Templar rushes in a clean 4-0 sweep (giving Protoss their first title along the way). In Code S July, Nestea ended an otherwise perfect, lossless tournament run in another 0-4 sweep against his own pupil Losira.

Mvp’s shame deepened as well. Even with MarineKing out of the title picture, Mvp could not get over the finals hump. He returned to the GSL finals in Code S August to face TOP, only to be pelted by nuclear rain in a 1-4 loss. With three losses in three GSL finals, it was clear that there was something tragically wrong with Mvp’s psyche. There was no doubting that he was an incredible, championship caliber player—but only when nothing was on the line. When it mattered most, he was doomed to choke. MarineKing had left the GSL title picture, but the scars he inflicted on Mvp remained.


Nestea and Mvp: Partners in misery.


The Redemption of Mvp: Code S October - November


Mr. Unclutch. FailVP. The King of Throws. These were just a few of the nicknames that had stuck to Mvp as he headed into Code S October. As Mvp progressed his way up the bracket, his fans were filled with equal parts hope and dread. Was it worth seeing Mvp reach another final if it would only end in inevitable tragedy?

Even Mvp’s anti-fans felt uncomfortable when Mvp confirmed his fourth finals appearance after a routine semi-final victory over teammate Happy. After all, only the cruelest hearts can feel glee for an impending public execution.

Mvp couldn’t have wished for a worse finals opponent: the rising Terran superstar MMA. Together with InCa and Losira, MMA had taken advantage of MarineKing’s fall to insert himself into the GSL championship picture. A 4-0 victory over Polt in the Super Tournament finals had won MMA his first championship. But unlike Top and InCa, MMA was no one-hit wonder. In the post MarineKing world, he was poised to become the first player to enjoy a lengthy reign.

In fact, MMA had already defeated Mvp in a grand final three months prior. Not in the GSL, but across the ocean at MLG Anaheim. There, in front of thousands of screaming fans, MMA had exposed just how weak Mvp was to the entire world, laughing off Mvp’s considerable winner’s bracket advantage to become the MLG champion.

In a perversely cruel twist of fate, Mvp was forced to return to that same, traumatizing site. GomTV and Blizzard’s schedules had aligned, allowing the Code S finals to make an overseas trip to BlizzCon. There, at the very same Anaheim Convention Center that hosted the MLG event, he would face MMA once more for an even more prestigious prize.

And somehow, things got even worse. The crowd for BlizzCon would be even larger than the one at MLG. Western fans were already known for being more raucous than the ones in Korea, and the crowd at Blizzcon was set dwarf all StarCraft 2 audiences before it. If Mvp had crumbled under the pressure in previous finals, then it was conceivable that he would collapse into a black hole of insecurity at BlizzCon.

When all the factors were added up, the end-result was a foregone conclusion. Mvp would come in with his most finely honed strategies. Mvp would play with more desire and determination than ever. Mvp would give it his all, and no one would be able to say he could have done more. And then, Mvp would lose.

The series began with Mvp going up 1-0 as he deflected MMA’s attempt to pull a fast one on him with a proxy factory rush. It was a good start, but hardly cause for optimism—Mvp had thrown away early advantages in three previous finals.

But when Mvp extended his lead to 2-0, even his most jaded supporters found hope beginning to trickle into their hearts. A failed tank push from Mvp in game three made them rue their foolishness. How could they have forgotten? For Mvp, hope was only a road to disappointment.

With three games played and the series at a crucial juncture, the broadcast went to an extended commercial break. Coaches on both sides entered the player booths.

On Mvp’s side, Team Incredible Miracle head coach Hirai entered. There was no questioning Hirai’s leadership in team leagues, but his inability to guide Nestea nor Mvp to individual league glory had weighed heavily on his heart. At three prior GSL finals he had tried to find the words that would let Mvp unleash the world-beating skills he showed in practice, and three times he could only look on as his protege withered away.

At BlizzCon, Hirai took a different approach. He had no fiery language or glib encouragement prepared. Just a few quiet words: “It’s fine. Just like practice.” That, and some of his wife’s home cooking. Mrs. Kang had been coming to the IM house for months to cook them meals and give them a reprieve from endless bowls of instant noodles.

As for MMA, he turned to personal coach Ryu Won for advice. Mvp, declared the bookish tactician, already had one foot in the grave. The loss in game three had irreversibly damaged Mvp’s feeble mind, and all MMA needed to do was to apply the coup de grâce.

Those words, spoken outside the game, would make all the difference within.

Mvp crushed MMA in game four. Executing the immaculate macro-mech style that was his specialty, Mvp forced a third GG out of his opponent. A strange aura began to settle in around Mvp, one that had never shown itself in the finals: that of calm confidence. On the other hand, MMA’s play was rushed and careless. Ryu Won’s words had poisoned his mind with overconfidence and disrespect.

The loss gave MMA a jolt, but it was too little, too late. Though game five was more tightly contested, Ryu Won’s arrogance continued to permeate MMA’s play. Meanwhile, Mvp’s composure held firm. After a protracted losing effort, MMA surrendered in disbelief. Mvp had finally won the GSL.

With the final GG, the crowd at the Anaheim Convention Center let out a collective sigh of relief that rapidly turned into a scream of elation. They had witnessed the impossible: the redemption of a man, through a game.


It was not to be the breakthrough moment some had expected. It was not the breaking of the final seal restraining Mvp’s unlimited potential. Instead of asserting his will as the new king of StarCraft 2, Mvp exited Code S in the Ro16 when November rolled around. Leenock—Zerg’s youngest and hungriest rising star—had no mercy for the champ and took him out in a close match.

In spite of the mediocre finish, few could blame Mvp. Mvp himself didn’t seem to mind at all. He had been to hell and back, and a season’s respite wasn’t much to ask for.

In the meanwhile, the GSL kingdom returned to a state of chaos and flux. Mvp was not the only veteran to fall in the group stages, and the quarterfinal bracket was flooded with a new generation of players. The finals featured two of the youngest players to ever vye for the GSL title: Leenock at just sixteen years of age, and his opponent jjakji at seventeen. In the end, Leenock rode his wave of momentum all to the championship, defeating jjakji at the end of an action-packed series.


Finale: 2011 Blizzard Cup


With Code S November in the books, the GSL wrapped up its 2011 tournament circuit. Yet, even with an exciting final series to bring things to a close, it didn’t feel like a proper conclusion to a historic year full of tragedy and triumph. Fortunately, GomTV and Blizzard had been working behind the scenes to give the first full year of StarCraft 2 a proper sendoff. Alongside an award show to celebrate the year’s best players, there would be one last tournament to end the year: The Blizzard Cup.

Invitations went out to the top performers of the GSL, with familiar faces such as MarineKing, Mvp, MMA, and Nestea entering the fray. More than just a celebration of the GSL, The Blizzard Cup gave seeds to many international tournament winners as well. While the dominance of Korean players (see appendix for details) meant that they claimed most of those seeds, Sweden’s NaNiwa and China’s XiGua came through at the last moment to deliver holiday cheer to foreign fans. With shock end-of-year wins at MLG and WCG respectively, the two players showed that there was still some fight left in the foreign scene and booked their tickets to the GomTV studio.

Though neither foreigner was able to make an impact through their gameplay, NaNiwa won international admiration for his sportsmanship. During his match with Nestea, NaNiwa was able to overhear commentary due to GomTV’s insufficient soundproofing. Rather than play with an unfair advantage, NaNiwa opted to forfeit the match, prompting many Korean fans to call him the true winner due to his classy actions.

The biggest surprise of the tournament, even more so than the foreigner duo, was the return of FruitDealer. The first ever runner-up had scarcely been noticed since GSL Open Season 1. Splitting his time between working at his family’s fruit vending business and practicing on the ladder, he had failed to keep up with the massive influx of full-time pros. Outclassed by newcomers, FruitDealer’s career had nose-dived into a repeated cycle of failure at the GSL qualifiers.

Only a miracle run at IEM New York—a secondary tournament almostly entirely eclipsed by the simultaneous MLG Orlando—kept FruitDealer on the radar at all. There, he defeated a rag-tag group of foreigners who failed to make the MLG cut, and followed it with a lucky finals victory against a ladder-legend named DongRaeGu who still lacked seasoning at live events. Given the roster, IEM hardly counted as a ‘major’ tournament. Yet, GomTV and Blizzard had designated IEM New York as a seed-giving tournament far beforehand, allowing FruitDealer to sneak his way into the Blizzard Cup.


FruitDealer wins an unexpected Blizzard Cup seed at IEM New York.

With virtually no one predicting him to win, FruitDealer stepped back into the spotlight. His first match was a clean victory over MarineKing. It was certainly an upset, but many snarked that it was just a match between has-beens. His second match, a loss to IPL winner Lucky—an average GSL player who had hit the jackpot at the Atlantic city tournament—seemed to confirm everyone’s expectations.

However, a convincing victory over DreamHack champion PuMa—a player unproven in the GSL but still widely considered a Terran powerhouse—made fans turn their heads askance. And when FruitDealer defeated Mvp to go 3-1 and clinch first place in his group, everyone had to wonder: What the hell was going on?

The media swarmed FruitDealer after the group stages, and the once runner-up told his story. He had never expected to win IEM New York in the first place, and he could scarcely believe it when it led to an invitation to the Blizzard Cup. For nearly a year since the GSL Open, FruitDealer had been living in limbo. He was unwilling to let go of progaming fully, but the pain of his wasted years in Brood War preventing him from going all-in again. The Blizzard Cup had been the spark he desperately needed. For one last time, he would give it his all.

For months, FruitDealer had practiced day and night in preparation, and it had paid off in the group stages. But the upsets did not stop there. Facing Mvp once more in the semi-finals, FruitDealer put on his best performance yet. Combining the creativity which had been his signature trait since the very beginning of SC2, with a crispness of execution that could only be gained from long hours of practice, FruitDealer took a comprehensive 3-1 victory over the rigid Mvp.

Just one obstacle remained between FruitDealer and his dream of finally winning a major title. MMA, a champion of both GSL and MLG, had only been motivated to become even better after losing to Mvp at Code S October. The title of “best in the world” had been his for the taking, and he had let it slip through his fingers. It infuriated him. As MMA powered his way through the group stage and brackets, it was clear that FruitDealer was not the only player on a mission.

With MMA looking stronger than ever before, it was all the more shocking when FruitDealer started the series by winning three straight games. On a mental level MMA had vowed never to underestimate an opponent ever again, nor did he make such a mistake against FruitDealer. But on a gameplay level, he was simply not prepared to deal with FruitDealer’s bizarre playstyle that had been missing from top-tier competition for over a year.

Even in the face of imminent defeat, MMA did not lose heart. Each loss had provided him with valuable information, allowing him to make pivotal adjustments to his strategy. By game four, MMA was ready to mount his comeback. A shaky win in game four got MMA on the scoreboard. A more convincing victory followed in game five. Game six was a complete and clinical dissection of FruitDealer’s playstyle.

It seemed that FruitDealer had reached the bottom of his bag of tricks, just one map away from realizing his dream. But he still had one last bit of magic left: a standard game. Starting at the furthest possible position from his opponent on Shakuras Plateau, FruitDealer went all-in on powering up his economy. In contrast, MMA opted for a conservative, better-safe-than-sorry opener, fearing what madness FruitDealer might have saved for a game seven. By the time MMA learned there were no shenanigans except the lack of shenanigans, FruitDealer already had what he wanted: an economic advantage big enough to play a macro game on even ground with a juggernaut like MMA.

What ensued was a frenzied, non-stop exchange of blows. With the momentum swinging dizzyingly back and forth, the result was anything but certain until the last few moments of the game. However, one thing was clear to the viewers even before they saw the final GG. They were watching the best game of StarCraft 2 ever played in its short history.

The match came to a head in a sensational closing sequence. After countless battles that failed to tip the scales in favor of either player, FruitDealer finally seized the advantage with a decisive victory in the field. However, MMA’s dedication to relentless drop tactics had taken its toll, and FruitDealer was left without any resources to work with. His tank running on empty, FruitDealer assembled his army and marched on the Terran main. A hellacious game that had covered the entire map in blood would come down to one, final battle.

Entrenched in a defensive position, at first it seemed like MMA could wait out FruitDealer’s siege. But the Zerg magician made a decisive call: there was no time to chip away at the defenses, and his only choice was to commit to a headlong charge into MMA’s entrenched position. The Zerg swarm crashed into the Terran meatgrinder, and absolutely mayhem ensued.

At the end of a devastating battle, only a handful of troops remained on the field. MMA’s army was completely annihilated. For FruitDealer, only a pitifully small fraction of his forces had survived. Small, but still enough to camp MMA’s production.

With his infrastructure paralyzed, MMA lifted his buildings and briefly considered the idea of a base trade. However, the futility of the situation soon became apparent. Shoulders slumped in resignation, MMA tapped out a couple of final inputs. GG.

FruitDealer could not stop tears from flowing down his face as he lifted the trophy. It was the culmination of five years of his life. After allowing FruitDealer to soak up the cheers from the crowd, the tournament hosts went to him for an interview. “I don’t know what to say. I can hardly believe it, even in this moment.”

Given a few moments to collect himself,

“I think… ...I think it was worth it.”







Appendix: In Foreign Lands (2010~2011)


Korea had inherited a proud legacy of competitive Brood War, and through the GSL, it rightfully assumed its place at the center of StarCraft 2 esports.

As for the rest of the world, their previous experience with competitive StarCraft had mostly been limited to getting their ass kicked by Korea at each year’s World Cyber Games. Korea’s dominance in StarCraft 1 had been so severe that the rest of the world had taken to collectively calling themselves the “foreigners,” a deference to Korea that would persist even in sequel.

The advent of StarCraft 2 brought a promise of change, with the game’s popularity exploding around the world and bringing in an enormous player base. A lethargic Western esports industry began stir, and large-scale tournaments sprung up around the world.

As in Korea, the first major championship in the foreign scene was won by a player with professional Brood War experience. America’s IdrA saw his years as a Brood War trainee in Korea finally pay off at IEM Gamescom 2010, as he overcame Sweden’s MorroW and his abuse of the then-overpowered Reapers to win the championship.


IdrA, StarCraft 2's first international champion.

Not long after, MLG made strides toward becoming forerunner in the West, investing considerable capital into holding massive, live events. The 2010 MLG circuit was mostly devoid of GSL players, except for foreigners IdrA and Jinro who had achieved moderate success in the Open Seasons. The skills they had honed in Korea served them well as both managed to take runner-up finishes, but the three MLG trophies on the year went to players trained in North America: KiwiKaKi, SeleCT, and TT1.

Hopes for a competitive foreign scene were further buoyed at the 2010 BlizzCon Invitational when Chinese player Loner vanquished Korea’s Genius in the grand finals. Furthermore, the early elimination of Maka, the other Korean delegate, suggested that the skill pool in Korea was far shallower than it had been in Brood War. International parity no longer seemed like wishful thinking.

In March of 2011, the IEM Season V World Championship arrived to kick such dreams to the curb. Moon, Squirtle, and Ace came in as the Korean invitees. All three were respectable opponents, but they were far from being championship contenders in Korea. They claimed all three spots on the podium: WarCraft 3 legend Moon with the gold medal, flanked by Squirtle and Ace. With the gold medal draped around his neck, Moon made his now-famous declaration: “Koreans own white dudes.”

Moon’s words were reaffirmed shortly after at April’s GSL World Championship. Eight international representatives flew to Korea to challenge eight of the GSL’s best, and seven of them were thoroughly chastised (only DIMAGA returned with an enhanced reputation after winning a series against Nestea). Again, the top finishers were all Korean, this time with MarineKing, Mvp, San, and MC taking the honors.

Foreigners would be given a brief respite to rekindle their hopes, with Korean players leaving the foreign scene largely untouched through June. With players like Jinro and HuK achieving mid-high table finishes in the GSL, it looked like the gap might still be bridged despite the humiliations at IEM and the World Championship.

June’s MLG Columbus crushed those hopes again. MLG opened their wallets and rolled out the red carpet for the GSL’s top tier players and revealed that the gap between Korea and the rest of the world had only grown since the Hannover massacre. Koreans swept the top three spots, with GSL champion Losira defeating the fast-rising MMA (who would go on to take his own GSL title at the Super Tournament in a few weeks time) in the grand finals.

While foreign progamers moaned, fans found themselves greatly enjoying the spectacle (at least, for the time being). They had a taste of truly top-level competition, and they demanded that they be given more. Spots for the top Korean pros became a requirement for all tournaments looking to be taken seriously, and organizations like MLG, NASL, and IPL continued to invite Koreans over to crush the local competition.

A new world had opened itself up to the players forged in the brutal competition of the GSL, and they pounced upon the opportunity. Two-time GSL runner-up MC finally earned himself a championship at the inaugural NASL. Though the tournament did not quite hold the weight of a GSL, $50,000 in first place winnings made it a more than satisfactory consolation prize. Once MC took another first place finish at MLG Orlando, his GSL woes no longer seemed like such a big deal.

It wasn’t just finalists who took advantage of the foreign scene. HerO—a highly-skilled player afflicted by paralyzing stage fright in the GSL—finally overcame his shaky nerves to win the second NASL. Coca—a scintillating rookie bottlenecked by the GSL’s overly difficult qualifying system—was able to demand an immediate spotlight after beating Bomber for the championship at MLG Raleigh.

Even players who were largely unheralded in the GSL found foreign tournaments to be lucrative opportunities. With tournaments taking place over a few days instead of weeks like the GSL, even mid-tier players could be successful if they caught fire at the right time. Lucky was a player who had never touched the hallowed realm of Code S, but nonetheless swept through a fearsome bunch of GSL veterans at IPL3 to take home the $30,000 grand prize. Moon, though far fallen from his storied WarCraft 3 days, showed he still had one more championship run in him at DreamHack Summer.

Only Mvp (until the aforementioned GSL October) and Nestea seemed cursed to remain trophyless, even with the multitude of new competitions. Mvp missed out on a golden chance to win MLG Anaheim, while Nestea somehow found a way to lose to a clearly disinterested MarineKing at Blizzard’s 2011 BlizzCon invitational.


HuK would become known as "Canadian Kong" for his multiple second-place finishes.

As more and more tournaments passed with Korean players standing on the podium, the grumbling from the Western fans started to match that of the pros. Yet, the discontent was tempered by near-victories and bursts of heroism. The GSL-trained HuK came agonizingly close to defeating Koreans in two finals, losing to Moon at DH: Summer and MC at MLG Orlando. The French Zerg Stephano came out of nowhere to reach the grand finals at IPL3, but unfortunately partied too hard the night before the finals and fell 0-4 to Lucky (in retrospect, this would prove to be a valuable experience for Stephano. Success would come later after he swore off drinking and became a model of work ethic). IEM Guangzhou, despite its noticeably weak field of Koreans, was still celebrated for its foreigner vs. foreigner finals (Finnish Protoss elfi defeated IdrA).

Foreign fans would not end their year in darkness. Just before the competitive circuit for 2011 came to a close, two foreigners came through with holiday miracles. NaNiwa, champion of the premier online tournament TSL3, finally rose to the top in live competition as well. Few expected an absolutely stacked MLG Providence to be the site of the foreign scene’s greatest triumph. Providence was MLG’s own grand finale to the year, featuring the most prize money of any MLG event and by far the most stacked line-up of players ever seen outside of Korea. But NaNiwa still beat the odds, running through a gauntlet of top tier players that ended with reigning GSL champion Leenock. The Swede didn’t look like a player who was merely fighting back against the Koreans. Instead, for the first time, a foreigner looked like he might be better.


DongRaeGu congratulates teammate NaNiwa on his MLG championship.

Not long after, the foreign scene struck again, but this time at an unexpected location. Chinese players had hardly achieved anything of note since Loner won BlizzCon 2010, and they had made an especially poor impression at IEM Guangzhou. However, China’s XiGua struck a huge blow for foreigners everywhere at the WCG 2011 grand finals. Defeating Mvp (who else?), XiGua wrested the StarCraft gold medal away from Korean hands for the first time in the tournament’s ten year history.

NaNiwa and XiGua were rewarded with Blizzard Cup spots for their achievements, but neither would make it out of the group stages. However, to foreign fans around the world, that result was of little consequence. A much more important point had already been proven.

This time around, things could be different.


Writer: Waxangel
Graphics:shiroiusagi
Photo Credit: Kevin Chang, R1CH
Facebook Twitter Reddit
AdministratorHey HP can you redo everything youve ever done because i have a small complaint?
Wintex
Profile Blog Joined July 2011
Norway16838 Posts
Last Edited: 2015-10-18 18:51:29
October 18 2015 18:46 GMT
#2
genius, wax

my highlights:

+ Show Spoiler +
The French Zerg Stephano came out of nowhere to reach the grand finals at IPL3, but unfortunately partied too hard the night before the finals and fell 0-4 to Lucky (in retrospect, this would prove to be a valuable experience for Stephano. Success would come later after he swore off drinking and became a model of work ethic).


+ Show Spoiler +
Though neither foreigner was able to make an impact through their gameplay, NaNiwa won international admiration for his sportsmanship. During his match with Nestea, NaNiwa was able to overhear commentary due to GomTV’s insufficient soundproofing. Rather than play with an unfair advantage, NaNiwa opted to forfeit the match, prompting many Korean fans to call him the true winner due to his classy actions.


+ Show Spoiler +
Mr. Unclutch. FailVP. The King of Throws. These were just a few of the nicknames that had stuck to Mvp as he headed into Code S October.


+ Show Spoiler +
With three losses in three GSL finals, it was clear that there was something tragically wrong with Mvp’s psyche. There was no doubting that he was an incredible, championship caliber player—but only when nothing was on the line.


+ Show Spoiler +
The only legacies that were furthered were those of Mvp and Nestea—teammates and close friends who had been brutally oppressed during MarineKing’s reign. But far from attaining glory in MarineKing’s absence, the duo only endured the shame of being branded as the true Kongs of StarCraft 2.


worst part of the text:

+ Show Spoiler +
Coca—a scintillating rookie bottlenecked by the GSL’s overly difficult qualifying system—was able to demand an immediate spotlight after beating Bomber for the championship at MLG Raleigh.
The Bomber boy
KtJ
Profile Joined October 2014
United States3514 Posts
October 18 2015 18:55 GMT
#3
This is Genius, great work!
"I thought I destroyed my CC but it seemed like the only thing I destroyed was Idra's mentality."
Solar424
Profile Blog Joined June 2013
United States4001 Posts
October 18 2015 19:01 GMT
#4
After this, a "Darkest Timeline" version of SC2 would be great: "The year is 2015. In a world ravaged by the dreaded Brood Lord/Infestor/Swarm Host composition, Sniper and Roro meet in their 10th consecutive GSL finals."
Garaman
Profile Blog Joined April 2010
United States556 Posts
October 18 2015 19:02 GMT
#5
Someone should do this for BW
OtherWorld
Profile Blog Joined October 2013
France17333 Posts
October 18 2015 19:03 GMT
#6
Lmao this is pure gold
Used Sigs - New Sigs - Cheap Sigs - Buy the Best Cheap Sig near You at www.cheapsigforsale.com
SplattedOne
Profile Joined May 2013
155 Posts
Last Edited: 2015-10-18 19:37:03
October 18 2015 19:09 GMT
#7
This is incredible.

Is there going to be a follow-up? I want to read about soO's unparalleled domination and Mvp's miraculous victory over Life.

+ Show Spoiler +
Turns out I need to read the preamble - it's a series! Hurray!
Pontius Pirate
Profile Blog Joined August 2013
United States1557 Posts
October 18 2015 19:15 GMT
#8
Excited for 2012 GSL season 2, rise of Wartortle!
"I had to close the door so my parents wouldn't judge me." - ZombieGrub during the ShitfaceTradeTV stream
Muffloe
Profile Joined December 2012
Sweden6061 Posts
Last Edited: 2015-10-18 19:27:07
October 18 2015 19:16 GMT
#9
As always, ez Naniwa gag is ez I guess

Still, thanks for the good read
felisconcolori
Profile Blog Joined October 2011
United States6168 Posts
October 18 2015 19:19 GMT
#10
That picture and that first section really trolls deep to the Prime fans.
Yes, I email sponsors... to thank them. Don't post drunk, kids. My king, what has become of you?
Phredxor
Profile Joined May 2013
New Zealand15076 Posts
October 18 2015 19:22 GMT
#11
Haven't quite finished reading it but this is amazing. Great stuff!

Those feels when Mvp and Fruitdealer finally won.
Boucot
Profile Blog Joined October 2011
France15997 Posts
October 18 2015 19:22 GMT
#12
Brilliant, wonderful !
Former SC2 writer for Millenium - twitter.com/Boucot
3FFA
Profile Blog Joined February 2010
United States3931 Posts
October 18 2015 19:27 GMT
#13
Why not Brood War?

Great job! I enjoyed it.
"As long as it comes from a pure place and from a honest place, you know, you can write whatever you want."
[PkF] Wire
Profile Joined March 2013
France24202 Posts
October 18 2015 19:30 GMT
#14
ha ha ha ha ha ha hilarious !!!
TheOneAboveU
Profile Blog Joined February 2011
Germany3367 Posts
October 18 2015 19:57 GMT
#15
The darkest of timelines. True heresy. :D
Moderatoralias TripleM | @TL_TripleM | Big Dark Energy!
agh39
Profile Joined January 2011
Sweden180 Posts
Last Edited: 2015-10-18 20:09:40
October 18 2015 20:08 GMT
#16

[PkF] Wire
Profile Joined March 2013
France24202 Posts
Last Edited: 2015-10-18 20:17:43
October 18 2015 20:08 GMT
#17
I can't wait for the soOjwa and Tcraft parts.

By the way, in this alternate timeline, Maru and Zest will play a 4h10 game while ZhuGeLiang will spot Lillekannin's proxy rax, resulting in an instant gg.
JokeToss
Profile Joined October 2014
Norway6 Posts
October 18 2015 20:17 GMT
#18
I was going to comment on the fact that MMA shouldnt even be in the Blizzard cup because he got invited because Mvp had been seeded thrice, but considering the fact that Nestea would be seeded twice, I can see how MMA still got in there
It's not the race that is imbalanced, it's the player
Liquid`Nazgul
Profile Blog Joined September 2002
22427 Posts
October 18 2015 20:24 GMT
#19
still got it
Administrator
StarVe
Profile Joined June 2011
Germany13591 Posts
October 18 2015 20:39 GMT
#20
Now I can show more appreciation that the events of SC2 played out the way they did. Thanks for the thought experiment, well played.
Copymizer
Profile Joined November 2010
Denmark2087 Posts
Last Edited: 2015-10-18 20:41:02
October 18 2015 20:40 GMT
#21
Good old times watch GSL Open early morning was fun hype and good coverage with tastosis. Great write up, i joined TL after the release of SC2 as well
~~Yo man ! MBCGame HERO Fighting !! Holy check !
FrostedMiniWheats
Profile Joined August 2010
United States30730 Posts
October 18 2015 20:44 GMT
#22
Brilliant idea. Some of these really are fun to imagine.

Symbol could've gotten the appreciation he deserved to close out WoL, instead he's barely remembered as even a Kong.

Or Mvp, against all odds, wins s4 of 2012 the gsl run of miracles.
NesTea | Mvp | MC | Leenock | Losira | Gumiho | DRG | Taeja | Jinro | Stephano | Thorzain | Sen | Idra |Polt | Bomber | Symbol | Squirtle | Fantasy | Jaedong | Maru | sOs | Seed | ByuN | ByuL | Neeb| Scarlett | Rogue | IM forever
Pursuit_
Profile Blog Joined June 2012
United States1330 Posts
Last Edited: 2015-10-18 20:54:14
October 18 2015 20:53 GMT
#23
On October 19 2015 04:01 Solar424 wrote:
After this, a "Darkest Timeline" version of SC2 would be great: "The year is 2015. In a world ravaged by the dreaded Brood Lord/Infestor/Swarm Host composition, Sniper and Roro meet in their 10th consecutive GSL finals."


Terran and Protoss reach an all-time low, with only 2 representatives of each race remaining... in Code A.

edit: Oh god, I just realized, this is a world where Polt beats HerO in that IEM during the height of protoss domination...
In Somnis Veritas
Boucot
Profile Blog Joined October 2011
France15997 Posts
October 18 2015 21:02 GMT
#24
On October 19 2015 05:08 [PkF] Wire wrote:
I can't wait for the soOjwa and Tcraft parts.

By the way, in this alternate timeline, Maru and Zest will play a 4h10 game while ZhuGeLiang will spot Lillekannin's proxy rax, resulting in an instant gg.

Tcraft ?
Former SC2 writer for Millenium - twitter.com/Boucot
Dodgin
Profile Blog Joined July 2011
Canada39254 Posts
October 18 2015 21:23 GMT
#25
Waxangel is writing for TL again?
Charoisaur
Profile Joined August 2014
Germany15953 Posts
October 18 2015 21:24 GMT
#26
Poor TaeJa. the kong of foreign tournaments. At least JD would be a blizzcon winner... and sOs the kong in 100k tournaments.
And we would have a real bonjwa in sc2.
Many of the coolest moments in sc2 happen due to worker harassment
AWalker9
Profile Blog Joined August 2013
United Kingdom7229 Posts
October 18 2015 21:29 GMT
#27
Great article
Gonna be funny if continued to hear about the dominance of soO and how bad sOs is at 100k tournaments
soOjwa has returned to smite all that stand in his way
ZigguratOfUr
Profile Blog Joined April 2012
Iraq16955 Posts
October 18 2015 21:29 GMT
#28
Broodlord/Infestor will be exactly the same as reality since all the finals ended up being between ZvZs between players with equally interchangeable styles .

Also soO the Bonjwa--winner of 4 consecutive GSLs (not counting the GSL world championship).
[PkF] Wire
Profile Joined March 2013
France24202 Posts
October 18 2015 21:30 GMT
#29
On October 19 2015 06:02 Boucot wrote:
Show nested quote +
On October 19 2015 05:08 [PkF] Wire wrote:
I can't wait for the soOjwa and Tcraft parts.

By the way, in this alternate timeline, Maru and Zest will play a 4h10 game while ZhuGeLiang will spot Lillekannin's proxy rax, resulting in an instant gg.

Tcraft ?

Desperate to see only T players win major/premier tournaments, TheDwf will write a beautiful article about how Starcraft has become Tcraft.
spritzz
Profile Joined November 2009
Canada331 Posts
October 18 2015 21:31 GMT
#30
I can't wait until the part where SoO comes in. OMG!
zugzug
Zealously
Profile Blog Joined October 2011
East Gorteau22261 Posts
October 18 2015 21:36 GMT
#31
On October 19 2015 06:30 [PkF] Wire wrote:
Show nested quote +
On October 19 2015 06:02 Boucot wrote:
On October 19 2015 05:08 [PkF] Wire wrote:
I can't wait for the soOjwa and Tcraft parts.

By the way, in this alternate timeline, Maru and Zest will play a 4h10 game while ZhuGeLiang will spot Lillekannin's proxy rax, resulting in an instant gg.

Tcraft ?

Desperate to see only T players win major/premier tournaments, TheDwf will write a beautiful article about how Starcraft has become Tcraft.


As the only unbiased Terran player, he correctly identifies that Terran is unfairly strong and recommends changes through meticulous analysis of one hundred Terran games, debunking misconceptions about Terran's alleged weaknesses and forcing Blizzard's hand.
AdministratorBreak the chains
[PkF] Wire
Profile Joined March 2013
France24202 Posts
Last Edited: 2015-10-18 21:40:55
October 18 2015 21:40 GMT
#32
On October 19 2015 06:36 Zealously wrote:
Show nested quote +
On October 19 2015 06:30 [PkF] Wire wrote:
On October 19 2015 06:02 Boucot wrote:
On October 19 2015 05:08 [PkF] Wire wrote:
I can't wait for the soOjwa and Tcraft parts.

By the way, in this alternate timeline, Maru and Zest will play a 4h10 game while ZhuGeLiang will spot Lillekannin's proxy rax, resulting in an instant gg.

Tcraft ?

Desperate to see only T players win major/premier tournaments, TheDwf will write a beautiful article about how Starcraft has become Tcraft.


As the only unbiased Terran player, he correctly identifies that Terran is unfairly strong and recommends changes through meticulous analysis of one hundred Terran games, debunking misconceptions about Terran's alleged weaknesses and forcing Blizzard's hand.

In fact, wouldn't an alternate timeline TheDwf on the contrary lie about numbers and use his voluble style to make people think T is fair, resulting in a new BL/infestor era ? I don't think of TheDwf as a particularly biased T.
Jealous
Profile Blog Joined December 2011
10145 Posts
October 18 2015 21:46 GMT
#33
Can we get a link to the BW version by Lumos on Fomos, then? Is it in English? Seems like it'd be more interesting.
"The right to vote is only the oar of the slaveship, I wanna be free." -- бум бум сучка!
EvilsPresley
Profile Joined December 2014
France132 Posts
Last Edited: 2015-10-18 21:50:55
October 18 2015 21:50 GMT
#34
Can't wait for soO winning 4 f*cking GSL tournaments in a row!

EDIT: seems like I was too slow to read, my comment got owned ^^
Rogue | Maru
[PkF] Wire
Profile Joined March 2013
France24202 Posts
October 18 2015 21:51 GMT
#35
On October 19 2015 06:50 EvilsPresley wrote:
Can't wait for soO winning 4 f*cking GSL tournaments in a row!

EDIT: seems like I was too slow to read, my comment got owned ^^

I think that's what everyone is waiting for soO's fate so unfair so far
PockyStix
Profile Joined August 2014
Canada39 Posts
Last Edited: 2015-10-18 21:58:01
October 18 2015 21:56 GMT
#36
is this the one where soO finally wins all those gsls
also sOs will win all those 100k tournaments with strong macro play which inevitably defeats the mindgames and cheesy strategies that JD and herO pulls
KT best team
[PkF] Wire
Profile Joined March 2013
France24202 Posts
October 18 2015 22:02 GMT
#37
On October 19 2015 06:56 PockyStix wrote:
is this the one where soO finally wins all those gsls
also sOs will win all those 100k tournaments with strong macro play which inevitably defeats the mindgames and cheesy strategies that JD and herO pulls

It's hard to know if the alternate timeline is a "negative" of what happened in reality (like NaNiwa being a mannered guy) or just changes at some huge turning points (like MarineKing dominating Mvp in finals). It's fun either way
bduddy
Profile Joined May 2012
United States1326 Posts
October 18 2015 22:16 GMT
#38
On October 19 2015 06:56 PockyStix wrote:
is this the one where soO finally wins all those gsls
also sOs will win all those 100k tournaments with strong macro play which inevitably defeats the mindgames and cheesy strategies that JD and herO pulls
I'm pretty sure he's going to lose all of those tournaments, actually...
>Liquid'Nazgul: Of course you are completely right
Solar424
Profile Blog Joined June 2013
United States4001 Posts
October 18 2015 22:19 GMT
#39
Taeja is gonna get so much silver
bduddy
Profile Joined May 2012
United States1326 Posts
October 18 2015 22:31 GMT
#40
So are you going to recalculate the WCS points too? Sounds like fun...
>Liquid'Nazgul: Of course you are completely right
Boucot
Profile Blog Joined October 2011
France15997 Posts
October 18 2015 22:55 GMT
#41
soO's 4 GSL will be very interesting indeed but 2013 Jaedong will be great too.
Former SC2 writer for Millenium - twitter.com/Boucot
The_Templar
Profile Blog Joined January 2011
your Country52797 Posts
Last Edited: 2015-10-18 23:13:50
October 18 2015 23:13 GMT
#42
Can't wait for wax to talk about how Flash made this godlike run through IEM Toronto only to get crushed 4-1 by Zest.
Moderatorshe/her
TL+ Member
TT1
Profile Blog Joined December 2008
Canada10009 Posts
October 18 2015 23:23 GMT
#43
this wasnt funny at all
ab = tl(i) + tl(pc), the grand answer to every tl.net debate
opterown *
Profile Blog Joined August 2011
Australia54784 Posts
October 18 2015 23:39 GMT
#44
marineking~
ModeratorRetired LR Bonjwa
TL+ Member
jalstar
Profile Blog Joined September 2009
United States8198 Posts
Last Edited: 2015-10-18 23:41:52
October 18 2015 23:41 GMT
#45
Not just soo as a bonjwa, but zerg being considered overpowered in HotS

Also Jaedong and mma winning world championships
MChrome
Profile Joined May 2011
Netherlands201 Posts
October 18 2015 23:59 GMT
#46
I hope this continues. I'd love reading about 2014's Bonjwa named sOo.
If you do things right, people won't be sure you've done anything at all.
TheDougler
Profile Joined April 2010
Canada8304 Posts
Last Edited: 2015-10-19 00:26:07
October 19 2015 00:19 GMT
#47
This was awesome! For an MKP fan it felt good to read, even though it's imaginary. Can't wait till we get to the part where, when all foreigner hope was lost, Grubby rose from the ashes, and defeated sting in game 7 of that IEM in front of Jarrett Cale, restoring his passion, and in front of all of Singapore, ushering a new age of foreign starcraft as the crowd goes absolutely nuts.

I often look on that as one of the greatest "what ifs" in starcraft.

I wonder if her0 will seem better or worse in the alternate timeline.


Oh dear god I just imagined:

What if Slayers hadn't lost that GSTL finals? Would the wounds have healed?
I root for Euro Zergs, NA Protoss* and Korean Terrans. (Any North American who has beat a Korean Pro as Protoss counts as NA Toss)
Boucot
Profile Blog Joined October 2011
France15997 Posts
October 19 2015 00:31 GMT
#48
Hahaha, just realized Adelscott wins WCG vs PartinG
Former SC2 writer for Millenium - twitter.com/Boucot
itsjustatank
Profile Blog Joined November 2010
Hong Kong9154 Posts
October 19 2015 01:12 GMT
#49
im really sorry today had to be the day you posted this wax
Photographer"nosotros estamos backamos" - setsuko
TheDougler
Profile Joined April 2010
Canada8304 Posts
October 19 2015 01:13 GMT
#50
On October 19 2015 09:31 Boucot wrote:
Hahaha, just realized Adelscott wins WCG vs PartinG



OMG, that whole MONTH is going to be fantastic! Adelscott scores a massive victory for foreigners, DRG beats Sniper in Vegas and we all lose our shit. Violet beats Leenock at IPL (eh, still pretty cool), and Parting defeats Life with endless soul trains. (Or wait, who actually won that one?) A year later, (I think? Maybe it was same year, yeah it was... god 2012 was crazy) Parting defeats Rain and is crowned the best protoss in the world.

Wait a sec actually either way Parting won 2 golds and 2 silvers in a matter of like 2 months. I still have no idea how he wasn't higher on the GOAT list.

Overall in premier tournies Parting goes from 5 golds 6 silvers to 6 golds 5 silvers, but in major tournies he goes from 8 golds 1 silver to 1 gold 8 silvers :/

It'll be interesting to see how Wax spins that one.
I root for Euro Zergs, NA Protoss* and Korean Terrans. (Any North American who has beat a Korean Pro as Protoss counts as NA Toss)
Boucot
Profile Blog Joined October 2011
France15997 Posts
Last Edited: 2015-10-19 01:28:56
October 19 2015 01:28 GMT
#51
You mean HyuN beats Sniper, not DRG.

By the way, look at the winrates in grand finals of Mvp/Life/TaeJa. That's incredible.
Former SC2 writer for Millenium - twitter.com/Boucot
Waxangel
Profile Blog Joined September 2002
United States33383 Posts
Last Edited: 2015-10-19 01:29:53
October 19 2015 01:29 GMT
#52
Well I hope nothing horrible gets announced that makes me indefinitely put parts 2, 3, and 4 on hold.

*crosses fingers*
AdministratorHey HP can you redo everything youve ever done because i have a small complaint?
The_Templar
Profile Blog Joined January 2011
your Country52797 Posts
October 19 2015 01:37 GMT
#53
On October 19 2015 09:19 TheDougler wrote:

I wonder if her0 will seem better or worse in the alternate timeline.

Reminds me that sOs will be that guy that lost multiple $100k tournaments, and failed two proxy gates against herO in a row in winner-takes-all.
Moderatorshe/her
TL+ Member
Fanatic-Templar
Profile Joined February 2010
Canada5819 Posts
October 19 2015 01:38 GMT
#54
Some things are constants across realities though, like Fruitdealer being my favourite.
I bear this sig to commemorate the loss of the team icon that commemorated Oversky's 2008-2009 Proleague Round 1 performance.
The_Templar
Profile Blog Joined January 2011
your Country52797 Posts
October 19 2015 01:58 GMT
#55
On October 19 2015 10:38 Fanatic-Templar wrote:
Some things are constants across realities though, like Fruitdealer being my favourite.

And TaeJa mine.

By the way, does TaeJa win that IPL team league against IM in this universe?
Moderatorshe/her
TL+ Member
Solar424
Profile Blog Joined June 2013
United States4001 Posts
October 19 2015 02:07 GMT
#56
On October 19 2015 10:58 The_Templar wrote:
Show nested quote +
On October 19 2015 10:38 Fanatic-Templar wrote:
Some things are constants across realities though, like Fruitdealer being my favourite.

And TaeJa mine.

By the way, does TaeJa win that IPL team league against IM in this universe?

I guess, but the Summers of 2012/2013 become his "Summers of Silver"
bduddy
Profile Joined May 2012
United States1326 Posts
Last Edited: 2015-10-19 02:44:58
October 19 2015 02:44 GMT
#57
EDIT: deleted (like Prime)
>Liquid'Nazgul: Of course you are completely right
Charoisaur
Profile Joined August 2014
Germany15953 Posts
October 19 2015 03:03 GMT
#58
On October 19 2015 08:13 The_Templar wrote:
Can't wait for wax to talk about how Flash made this godlike run through IEM Toronto only to get crushed 4-1 by Zest.


It's okay, he beat life at the first hots gsl and won a hsc against parting.
Many of the coolest moments in sc2 happen due to worker harassment
Danglars
Profile Blog Joined August 2010
United States12133 Posts
Last Edited: 2015-10-19 03:15:45
October 19 2015 03:13 GMT
#59
Oh this is so rich. Well done!

I'm imaging all these SoCal GSL barcrafts that would've gone so incredibly differently. Instead of wearily watching a trounce, I could've seen IncA's surprisingly revolutionary DT strategies emerge triumphant.

Soon: TaeJa, finding summers so brutally devastating, soon discovered cooler weather was his good-luck charm.

If only: SC2Earnings year by year and summation total $$ won if the 1st and 2nd prize pools switched for every major tournament.
Great armies come from happy zealots, and happy zealots come from California!
TL+ Member
Snijjer
Profile Joined September 2011
United States989 Posts
October 19 2015 03:28 GMT
#60
Very fun read. This tickled my funny bone the most:

Nestea suffered the worst. In the grand finals of Code S May, InCa humiliated Nestea with four consecutive Dark Templar rushes in a clean 4-0 sweep (giving Protoss their first title along the way).
lolfail9001
Profile Joined August 2013
Russian Federation40190 Posts
October 19 2015 04:37 GMT
#61
Man, this alternate SC2 history is actually as ridiculous as RL in our universe is.
DeMoN pulls off a Miracle and Flies to the Moon
RaiKageRyu
Profile Joined August 2009
Canada4773 Posts
October 19 2015 04:58 GMT
#62
Felt it was pretty mundane gimmick to read early on as it was just swapped victors of each GSL, but I it really piqued my interest when this consequently put FruitDealer into Blizzard cup and won.

Question though, I know that MarineKing takes MVP's place at Blizzcon 2011 due to seeding but why does Nestea still lose to him? If this reversal of victors applies to this tournament as well, then Nestea should grab his first Championship here.
Someone call down the Thunder?
graNite
Profile Blog Joined December 2010
Germany4434 Posts
October 19 2015 05:23 GMT
#63
I hope there will be a part where there is no match fixed :/
"Oink oink, bitches" - Tasteless on Pigbaby winning a map against Flash
munch
Profile Joined July 2014
Mute City2363 Posts
October 19 2015 05:28 GMT
#64
On October 19 2015 13:58 RaiKageRyu wrote:
Felt it was pretty mundane gimmick to read early on as it was just swapped victors of each GSL, but I it really piqued my interest when this consequently put FruitDealer into Blizzard cup and won.

Question though, I know that MarineKing takes MVP's place at Blizzcon 2011 due to seeding but why does Nestea still lose to him? If this reversal of victors applies to this tournament as well, then Nestea should grab his first Championship here.


NesTea won IRL
http://wiki.teamliquid.net/starcraft2/BlizzCon_2011_StarCraft_II_Invitational
WriterForm is temporary, MMA is permanent || http://www.teamliquid.net/blogs/508630-article-archive
RPR_Tempest
Profile Blog Joined February 2011
Australia7798 Posts
October 19 2015 06:52 GMT
#65
This was cool but really depressing to read until the MOTHERFUCKING RETURN OF FRUITDEALER HOLY SHIT I'M MARKING OUT BRO
Soundwave, Zerg player from Canberra, Australia. @SoundwaveSC
Taf the Ghost
Profile Joined December 2010
United States11751 Posts
Last Edited: 2015-10-19 21:40:00
October 19 2015 07:02 GMT
#66
I look forward to the era of soO's brutal dominance, rising to be the true Lord of the Swarm in Heart of the Swarm.
RaiKageRyu
Profile Joined August 2009
Canada4773 Posts
October 19 2015 07:37 GMT
#67
On October 19 2015 14:28 thecrazymunchkin wrote:
Show nested quote +
On October 19 2015 13:58 RaiKageRyu wrote:
Felt it was pretty mundane gimmick to read early on as it was just swapped victors of each GSL, but I it really piqued my interest when this consequently put FruitDealer into Blizzard cup and won.

Question though, I know that MarineKing takes MVP's place at Blizzcon 2011 due to seeding but why does Nestea still lose to him? If this reversal of victors applies to this tournament as well, then Nestea should grab his first Championship here.


NesTea won IRL
http://wiki.teamliquid.net/starcraft2/BlizzCon_2011_StarCraft_II_Invitational


?

Your link entry just confirms the contradiction I've pointed out. Mvp was the original winner and if you replace him with MKP in the alternate timeline with the same rules for the finals, then Nestea should be the victor.
Someone call down the Thunder?
KingofdaHipHop
Profile Blog Joined October 2013
United States25602 Posts
Last Edited: 2015-10-19 21:49:02
October 19 2015 07:40 GMT
#68
Life vs Mvp, Polt vs HerO, Jaedong vs sOs, MMA vs Life, Scarlett vs Jaedong, soO vs finals.

Holy shit I can't wait to cry
Rain | herO | sOs | Dear | Neeb | ByuN | INnoVation | Dream | ForGG | Maru | ByuL | Golden | Solar | Soulkey | Scarlett!!!
Christelle
Profile Blog Joined September 2013
France77 Posts
October 19 2015 11:49 GMT
#69
jaedoooooong...
Writer
Sorathez
Profile Blog Joined April 2011
Australia209 Posts
October 19 2015 12:06 GMT
#70
Reading about Mvp being awful in 2011 makes me feel sick. It's just... wrong...
There's no sense crying over every mistake. You just keep trying till you run out of cake.
nimdil
Profile Blog Joined January 2011
Poland3748 Posts
October 19 2015 12:48 GMT
#71
Possibly the best SC2 text this year on TL!

Sadly it's about SC2 2010-2011.
nimdil
Profile Blog Joined January 2011
Poland3748 Posts
October 19 2015 12:49 GMT
#72
What fun it will be for 2012-2013. Symbol will be flawless maestro of finals with his 4 golds and 0 silvers.
MrMischelito
Profile Joined February 2014
347 Posts
October 19 2015 17:31 GMT
#73
I also would have loved to read about soO winning his 4 GSL titles in a row...
MrMischelito
Profile Joined February 2014
347 Posts
October 19 2015 17:33 GMT
#74
On October 19 2015 10:37 The_Templar wrote:
Show nested quote +
On October 19 2015 09:19 TheDougler wrote:

I wonder if her0 will seem better or worse in the alternate timeline.

Reminds me that sOs will be that guy that lost multiple $100k tournaments, and failed two proxy gates against herO in a row in winner-takes-all.

true story... :D
Loccstana
Profile Blog Joined November 2012
United States833 Posts
October 19 2015 18:35 GMT
#75
Harry Turtledove would be proud
[url]http://i.imgur.com/lw2yN.jpg[/url]
DSK
Profile Blog Joined February 2015
England1110 Posts
October 19 2015 18:38 GMT
#76
This was a great read, Waxangel, well done
**@ YT: SC2POVs at https://www.youtube.com/c/SC2POVsTV | https://liquipedia.net/starcraft2/SC2POVs @**
Magnifico
Profile Joined March 2013
1958 Posts
October 19 2015 18:43 GMT
#77
what a nice read!
fronkschnonk
Profile Joined November 2011
Germany622 Posts
Last Edited: 2015-10-19 21:44:43
October 19 2015 21:44 GMT
#78
Much better read than the matchfixing alternative reality in the other thread. I don't get why everybody is so hyped about that depressing idea.
Furthermore, I consider that some kind of Code A must be reestablished.
Urth
Profile Blog Joined November 2007
United States1249 Posts
October 19 2015 23:13 GMT
#79
"Nestea suffered the worst. In the grand finals of Code S May, InCa humiliated Nestea with four consecutive Dark Templar rushes in a clean 4-0 sweep (giving Protoss their first title along the way)."

hilarious

does anyone have the bw version?

This was a great read
BY.HERO FIGHTING!!!!
fishjie
Profile Blog Joined September 2010
United States1519 Posts
Last Edited: 2015-10-19 23:53:32
October 19 2015 23:52 GMT
#80
This is a well written article which is in stark contrast to the awful contents inside.I shudder to think of the universe/timeline where things played out in such a way. I mean its cool fruitdealer wins IEM new york in this one, but otherwise awful. Glad things played out the way they did in real life. King of throws lol.

EDIT: hopefully future articles will be better, as i look forward to hearing about SOO is a zerg bonjwa
nimdil
Profile Blog Joined January 2011
Poland3748 Posts
Last Edited: 2015-10-20 04:32:53
October 20 2015 04:25 GMT
#81
Also MC - after loosing two GSL finals - would go on a rampage to win 10 premiers including a GSL. Nice.

Also July the only Starleague winner in both SCs is nice. And the only GSL final Mvp won was played outside Korea.
nimdil
Profile Blog Joined January 2011
Poland3748 Posts
Last Edited: 2015-10-20 04:32:34
October 20 2015 04:32 GMT
#82
to be deleted
Advantageous
Profile Blog Joined May 2012
China1350 Posts
October 20 2015 04:33 GMT
#83
But but but alternative ending to foreigners attempt at GSL.... what if IdrA, HuK, or NaNiWa went above the top 8 spot? What if one of them had come out victorious? I understand that the situations mentioned are only based on 1st and runner-up titles, but just a what-if for those foreigners would be quiet a theorycraft
"Because I am BossToss" -MC ヽ༼ຈل͜ຈ༽ノ raise your dongers ヽ༼ຈل͜ຈ༽ノ I'm sure that all of my fellow class mates viewed me as the Adonis of the Class of 2015 already. -Xenocider, EG, ieF 2013 Champion.
nimdil
Profile Blog Joined January 2011
Poland3748 Posts
October 20 2015 05:38 GMT
#84
On October 20 2015 13:33 Advantageous wrote:
But but but alternative ending to foreigners attempt at GSL.... what if IdrA, HuK, or NaNiWa went above the top 8 spot? What if one of them had come out victorious? I understand that the situations mentioned are only based on 1st and runner-up titles, but just a what-if for those foreigners would be quiet a theorycraft

Well - Jinro was twice one win away from being alternative history GSL champion so...
TheDougler
Profile Joined April 2010
Canada8304 Posts
October 20 2015 08:42 GMT
#85
On October 19 2015 10:28 Boucot wrote:
You mean HyuN beats Sniper, not DRG.

By the way, look at the winrates in grand finals of Mvp/Life/TaeJa. That's incredible.



Even better! Hyunstoppable!!!!
I root for Euro Zergs, NA Protoss* and Korean Terrans. (Any North American who has beat a Korean Pro as Protoss counts as NA Toss)
LennX
Profile Joined October 2010
4549 Posts
October 20 2015 12:52 GMT
#86
Brilliant! All hail the one true kong! MVkong!
Mute user function on TL; http://www.liquiddota.com/blogs/491245-mute-annoying-users-in-lr-threads
Noonius
Profile Joined April 2012
Estonia17413 Posts
October 20 2015 13:37 GMT
#87
wtf did I just read? This is better than sex
Terran forever | Maru hater forever
showBanquo
Profile Joined April 2011
Sweden182 Posts
October 20 2015 18:16 GMT
#88
Can't wait until soO stepss into the scene
Naniwa - king of the north
marvellosity
Profile Joined January 2011
United Kingdom36161 Posts
October 21 2015 09:41 GMT
#89
Great article, really enjoyed it
[15:15] <Palmar> and yes marv, you're a total hottie
fezvez
Profile Blog Joined January 2011
France3021 Posts
October 21 2015 21:50 GMT
#90
That is a gloriously good article!
SigmaoctanusIV
Profile Blog Joined April 2010
United States3313 Posts
October 22 2015 07:28 GMT
#91
SO Jaedong is really good in this Alternate history...
I am Godzilla You are Japan
NiBeX
Profile Joined June 2011
Slovenia2 Posts
Last Edited: 2015-10-22 11:34:45
October 22 2015 11:32 GMT
#92
For 2011 GSL Blizzard Cup shouldn't that be DRG instead of Fruitdealer?
(Wiki)http://wiki.teamliquid.net/starcraft2/2011 GSL Blizzard Cup

edit: nevermind I guess he didn't get the seed cause of the IEM "loss"
Froadac
Profile Blog Joined July 2009
United States6733 Posts
October 22 2015 11:34 GMT
#93
I just don't remember this stuff well enough to find it very amusing XD Still a funny concept.
viasacra89
Profile Joined January 2012
United States134 Posts
October 22 2015 22:41 GMT
#94
MKP is reading this in a corner weeping.
TelecoM
Profile Blog Joined January 2010
United States10673 Posts
October 23 2015 23:03 GMT
#95
Loved it, thanks <3
AKA: TelecoM[WHITE] Protoss fighting
Kyir
Profile Joined June 2011
United States1047 Posts
October 26 2015 12:05 GMT
#96
This is a tale of tragedy greater than anything put to the page before it.
meenamjah
Profile Joined February 2012
Canada51 Posts
November 13 2015 18:07 GMT
#97
awww... I was really looking forward to reading about sOo's incredible run...

brilliant writing though.
Never delay until tomorrow what you can delay until next week.
swissman777
Profile Joined September 2014
1106 Posts
November 13 2015 18:34 GMT
#98
When is the next one?
legofranak
Profile Joined May 2011
United States24 Posts
November 17 2015 13:54 GMT
#99
I'm filled with the feeling of wanting to vomit, like I just went one inception too deep. Awesome job!
Three, oh, it's the magic number.
mariam_kenzo
Profile Joined December 2015
4 Posts
December 01 2015 11:24 GMT
#100
--- Nuked ---
baabaa
Profile Blog Joined October 2011
Canada29 Posts
December 08 2015 04:08 GMT
#101
best article ever... but keep going I want to hear about Soo
DarkPlasmaBall
Profile Blog Joined March 2010
United States44311 Posts
December 08 2015 04:40 GMT
#102
This is so weird, but absolutely great writing
"There is nothing more satisfying than looking at a crowd of people and helping them get what I love." ~Day[9] Daily #100
rewtamus
Profile Blog Joined January 2011
United States327 Posts
January 15 2016 10:01 GMT
#103
this is art, thank you
OtherWorld
Profile Blog Joined October 2013
France17333 Posts
January 15 2016 10:11 GMT
#104
So, when is part II coming our way? d:
Used Sigs - New Sigs - Cheap Sigs - Buy the Best Cheap Sig near You at www.cheapsigforsale.com
Schelim
Profile Blog Joined January 2011
Austria11528 Posts
March 14 2016 13:35 GMT
#105
you have way too much time on your hands

this was awesome, looking forward to more. especially the part where Bomber wins a bunch of tournaments.
TY <3 Cure <3 Inno <3 Special <3
plasma4
Profile Joined March 2016
123 Posts
March 30 2016 13:52 GMT
#106
How long do you guys think it will take to writes this because i'm starting to think Waxangel probaly just forgot about this.
Normal
Please log in or register to reply.
Live Events Refresh
CranKy Ducklings
10:00
Master Swan Open #94
CranKy Ducklings106
Liquipedia
[ Submit Event ]
Live Streams
Refresh
StarCraft 2
ProTech57
BRAT_OK 36
MindelVK 7
StarCraft: Brood War
Britney 39343
Horang2 3550
Barracks 3111
Leta 2568
Shuttle 1913
Bisu 1463
Jaedong 853
Flash 811
BeSt 603
EffOrt 466
[ Show more ]
Larva 356
firebathero 325
ToSsGirL 238
Last 188
Hyun 142
Soulkey 126
Soma 86
ZerO 82
JulyZerg 68
Rush 62
Sea.KH 48
Shinee 36
Free 32
sSak 28
sorry 21
sas.Sziky 21
zelot 20
JYJ12
scan(afreeca) 9
IntoTheRainbow 7
Terrorterran 1
Dota 2
Gorgc2373
XcaliburYe713
qojqva191
XaKoH 83
League of Legends
febbydoto4
Counter-Strike
fl0m1173
sgares140
Heroes of the Storm
Khaldor227
Other Games
singsing2061
B2W.Neo1344
Beastyqt1035
crisheroes363
Fuzer 287
ZerO(Twitch)15
Organizations
StarCraft: Brood War
CasterMuse 25
lovetv 12
StarCraft 2
Blizzard YouTube
StarCraft: Brood War
BSLTrovo
sctven
[ Show 15 non-featured ]
StarCraft 2
• Berry_CruncH301
• StrangeGG 45
• Adnapsc2 30
• AfreecaTV YouTube
• intothetv
• Kozan
• IndyKCrew
• LaughNgamezSOOP
• Migwel
• sooper7s
StarCraft: Brood War
• BSLYoutube
• STPLYoutube
• ZZZeroYoutube
Dota 2
• C_a_k_e 1029
League of Legends
• Jankos1784
Upcoming Events
BSL20 Non-Korean Champi…
1h 42m
CSO Cup
3h 42m
BSL20 Non-Korean Champi…
5h 42m
Bonyth vs Sziky
Dewalt vs Hawk
Hawk vs QiaoGege
Sziky vs Dewalt
Mihu vs Bonyth
Zhanhun vs QiaoGege
QiaoGege vs Fengzi
FEL
20h 42m
BSL20 Non-Korean Champi…
1d 1h
BSL20 Non-Korean Champi…
1d 5h
Bonyth vs Zhanhun
Dewalt vs Mihu
Hawk vs Sziky
Sziky vs QiaoGege
Mihu vs Hawk
Zhanhun vs Dewalt
Fengzi vs Bonyth
Sparkling Tuna Cup
2 days
Online Event
3 days
uThermal 2v2 Circuit
4 days
The PondCast
4 days
[ Show More ]
Replay Cast
5 days
Korean StarCraft League
6 days
CranKy Ducklings
6 days
Liquipedia Results

Completed

CSL Xiamen Invitational
Esports World Cup 2025
Murky Cup #2

Ongoing

Copa Latinoamericana 4
Jiahua Invitational
BSL20 Non-Korean Championship
BSL Team Wars
CSLPRO Last Chance 2025
CC Div. A S7
Underdog Cup #2
IEM Cologne 2025
FISSURE Playground #1
BLAST.tv Austin Major 2025
ESL Impact League Season 7
IEM Dallas 2025
PGL Astana 2025
Asian Champions League '25

Upcoming

ASL Season 20: Qualifier #1
ASL Season 20: Qualifier #2
ASL Season 20
CSLPRO Chat StarLAN 3
BSL Season 21
RSL Revival: Season 2
Maestros of the Game
SEL Season 2 Championship
uThermal 2v2 Main Event
FEL Cracov 2025
HCC Europe
ESL Pro League S22
StarSeries Fall 2025
FISSURE Playground #2
BLAST Open Fall 2025
BLAST Open Fall Qual
Esports World Cup 2025
BLAST Bounty Fall 2025
BLAST Bounty Fall Qual
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 © 2025 TLnet. All Rights Reserved.