|
I know how to play well, I think I can spend quality time playing offline tournament, I may even win 500 euros or more, it would pay for the trip and time, you know. However, I cant seem to find dedicated website on these events, as far as I know its straight forward, you register either online or at the place, go to the tournament location, play against many people and in turn qualify for the groups. Am I right ?
Where can I find more solid information on the ways to register for circuits and other major events where anybody could try their luck ?
Besides, anyone of you could share experiences from offline tournaments how the whole process of registering and playing went and your overall experience ?
|
|
Mine is anywhere up to ~5000
|
You won't make money below 6.5k MMR. You can still try competing for fun though.
|
I understand very well that I cant win large sums of money or win against professionals who do it for a living, however the whole experience of going somewhere to play for money, competing against individuals who also committed time, funds and effort to do it is good, besides its something to remember, like holiday trip.
|
WCS events have open sign ups that you can fly out to, the next one you can sign up for is WCS Montreal 2018 WCS Montreal I don't have any experience first hand to help you with though, sorry about that.
|
Anyone knows how to sign up for Montreal Starcraft 2 tournament? I can find info on buying the tickets for DreamHack Montreal 2018, but besides that, not much on '' Participate in Starcraft 2 Montreal Tournament Yourself '' kind off sign ups.
|
You buy the player pass when tickets are released.
|
|
The SC2 scene has almost no money in it at all given the very niche playerbase. If you´re not a pro you won´t make money.
|
On July 07 2018 18:20 TheKhyira wrote: The SC2 scene has almost no money in it at all given the very niche playerbase. If you´re not a pro you won´t make money.
From minor tournaments alone you could get 100 thousand dollars in total prize cashout to the players. Could you give me top 5 sports that have more than '' almost no money '' so that non professional could make a lot of money because that sport has '' a lot of money in it '' ?
|
On July 07 2018 18:43 SC2Player000 wrote:Show nested quote +On July 07 2018 18:20 TheKhyira wrote: The SC2 scene has almost no money in it at all given the very niche playerbase. If you´re not a pro you won´t make money. From minor tournaments alone you could get 100 thousand dollars in total prize cashout to the players. Could you give me top 5 sports that have more than '' almost no money '' so that non professional could make a lot of money because that sport has '' a lot of money in it '' ? Where are such tournaments (for sc2)? And if this is true, you get that such money IF you win ALL tournaments. If you always finish top4 at every major tournament, you "only" won ~30k € a year. If you are looking for adventure in your young life, then esports is a very good spot.
|
On July 07 2018 19:09 Dingodile wrote:Show nested quote +On July 07 2018 18:43 SC2Player000 wrote:On July 07 2018 18:20 TheKhyira wrote: The SC2 scene has almost no money in it at all given the very niche playerbase. If you´re not a pro you won´t make money. From minor tournaments alone you could get 100 thousand dollars in total prize cashout to the players. Could you give me top 5 sports that have more than '' almost no money '' so that non professional could make a lot of money because that sport has '' a lot of money in it '' ? Where are such tournaments (for sc2)? And if this is true, you get that such money IF you win ALL tournaments. If you always finish top4 at every major tournament, you "only" won ~30k € a year. If you are looking for adventure in your young life, then esports is a very good spot.
Winning most of those monthly, weekly and minor tournaments would certainly be an adventure. Go to Minor Tournaments use the tabs to go through various types at the top, will see a list of all known cups to liquipedia.net and its a lot to choose from if you know how to register for them.
|
You want to make money playing video games SC2 is not the game. Start streaming one of the top 5 viewed games on Twitch and build a brand around a character. Thats the only way to really make money in gaming.
|
On July 07 2018 18:43 SC2Player000 wrote:Show nested quote +On July 07 2018 18:20 TheKhyira wrote: The SC2 scene has almost no money in it at all given the very niche playerbase. If you´re not a pro you won´t make money. From minor tournaments alone you could get 100 thousand dollars in total prize cashout to the players. Could you give me top 5 sports that have more than '' almost no money '' so that non professional could make a lot of money because that sport has '' a lot of money in it '' ?
All the minor tournaments are played by pros or semi-pros. Making money if you aren't GM is extremely unlikely unless you find some niche LANS that the Pros overlooked.
|
You don't.
Even if you theoretically won every tourney, you won't be able to end up supporting yourself for more than a year or two? Even all current pros if they don't have streams or degrees will have zero to fall back on unless they are getting a good salary from a team, which there are very few of or non-existent for SC2 since SC2 is essentially dead compared to it's prime time days.
So the only way now is to be entertaining on twitch and be really skilled as well at SC2. Even many SC2 korean progamers have realized this, such as Parting who is very smart and building himself up more on twitch, he's prob the best example i can think of that is/was a good pro that's won lots of prize money but looks to me like he's solidifying his future via streaming on twitch.
Unless you plan on literally winning every current tourney and coming in 1st, there is no way to make money from SC2 other than becoming a twitch streamer - and again, unless you are really dedicated, that won't happen for you either because the SC2 viewer base is really low compared to other games.
On July 07 2018 20:10 Syn Harvest wrote: You want to make money playing video games SC2 is not the game. Start streaming one of the top 5 viewed games on Twitch and build a brand around a character. Thats the only way to really make money in gaming.
Basically, take this guy's advice, even known SC2 streamers like myself, and others are branching out into other games because there's no reason not to and it's only beneficial to do so as a streamer to grow one's stream and viewer base.
If SC3 comes out, or another expansion...the scene would probably jump back to life again numbers-wise and there'd be a lot more opportunities again.
Other than all of the above...just get really good at the game and do good at LAN events, that's how you START, but winning prize money is not a guarantee, and you'll most likely lose money just getting to events because of having to pay for travel/hotel type of things.
Btw, in case the community did not notice, most Brood War pros about a year or so ago did exactly as i described - they all now have their own personal streams and took the streaming route regardless of how good or bad they were as pros. Best example? Flash, god of SC1, won many SC1 tournaments in S.Korea and him and players like Larva went full time streaming.
Same thing has happened with SC2, and it's kinda funny that a lot of SC2 "progamers" don't realize how bad it is to not have a streaming presence or no higher education. This is personally why i decided to focus my efforts streaming as in the long run it's something you can grow like a plant or a tree rather than "going pro and winning a tournament" which to me is just a person eating an apple off of the tree and not thinking of growing the tree that grows the apples.
Basically, my advice to you is you definitely can earn some money from SC2 and having passion for the game - but i'd recommend focusing on streaming rather than winning tournaments. If you can do both though, that's good.
|
South Korea2105 Posts
All you have to do is git gud. For some it might be a matter of two-three years of hardcorde grinding day in day out, for me it's been almost 8 years and I've barely made any money at all. Plus, you might get stuck at the top of the ladder for an extended period of time before breaking out onto the scene. You don't come into this with a business plan, rather the intent to improve and the right mindset. If it works out, great, you're making money doing what you love. If it doesn't you're kind of buggered.
Oh, and don't BM ppl on your way to the top, I learned this the hard way :D
|
Just look at the tournaments section of this forum theres always small tournaments going on. The problem is that professional or at least very good players sign up for those as well. For example i signed up for some osc tournament with a $100 total prize pool and had to play losira in the first round. There were also players like parting etc signed up.
As for offline tournaments, even in buttfuck ville manitoba canada, about as far away from the sc scene you can get. You will face gm players 5.5k mmr and possibly even higher. All for a relatively small prize.
The only way youre going to make money at your skill level, without improving signifigantly, would be to find tournaments that the better players havent heard of. Which is going to be impossible since some of them will actually rely on this stuff as part if their income.
|
On July 07 2018 15:30 Charoisaur wrote: You won't make money below 6.5k MMR. You can still try competing for fun though.
6k is enough for online daily NA cups. $10-50 for first second places
|
On July 08 2018 00:25 Obamarauder wrote:Show nested quote +On July 07 2018 15:30 Charoisaur wrote: You won't make money below 6.5k MMR. You can still try competing for fun though. 6k is enough for online daily NA cups. $10-50 for first second places The average MMR on NA is lower though so 6k MMR on NA doesn't equal 6k MMR on EU. 6k MMR on NA would be top 20 and on EU like top 90 so it's obviously harder to get to 6k on NA.
|
|
|
|