PiG Sty Festival #6 - RO16 Group Stage
by WaxPiG is back with another $10,000 PiG Sty Festival event, with the overflow funding from last month's Festival #5 being enough to lock in tournament #6 early. Once again, we'll be joined by the majority of the top players in the scene, including luminaries such as Serral and Reynor who are rather selective about their appearances.
Last time around, Serral came out as the head hog of the sty, taking a narrow 5-4 victory over rival Clem in the grand finals. While it was hardly adequate revenge for losing $250,000 to Clem at the EWC 2024, it was at least a partial rebalancing of a match-up that had started to swing far in the French Terran's favor.
The Serral vs. Clem conflict will once again be central to the championship picture in PiG Sty 6, but there will be a new element of intrigue from the Korean contingent. With the Esports World Cup and several satellite tournaments finally announced, the Korean scene appears to be waking up and locking in for one last ride. While it's unlikely that players will be in their best form just yet, they may have found just enough of a spark to spice up the proceeding in PiG Sty Festival #6.
Schedule and Players
Schedule:- April 28 - May 1: RO16 group stage (GSL-style) - 11:00 GMT (+00:00) start times
- May 2-5: RO8 Playoffs (partial double-elimination)
Streams: Twitch (main English stream)
Players and Initial Groups:
![[image loading]](/staff/Waxangel/misc/pigsty6groups_1.png)
Group Stage Preview
Group A: Serral, MaNa, ByuN, Classic
The tournament begins with a very GSL-esque group A, as the reigning champ lords over three contenders who will be scrapping for the second spot (ironically, the latest changes to Code S mean such a group no longer exists in the GSL itself).Taking Serral's advancement as a given—the last time he was eliminated in the group stages of a major event was back in DHM Last Chance 2022—there should be a very entertaining race to advance alongside the Finnish Phenom. ByuN and Classic played splendidly in the recent Code S Season 1 qualifier, claiming two of the direct RO8 seeds. The changed format made it a far cry from the soft GSL qualifiers of recent years, with ByuN needing to take out Creator, Maru, Zoun, and GuMiho, while Classic earned his seed with wins over Rogue, Reynor, and herO. While one has to be cautious about reading too deeply into results from a single event, optimistically you'd like to think this is a sign that these two are getting back into shape after their so-so performances during the off-season.
MaNa certainly looks like a heavy underdog here, especially since he opens with a match against Serral. Still, if I'm hyping ByuN and Classic up due to their performance in a single qualifier, MaNa deserves the same treatment. The TL.net Protoss earned the very last spot in PiG Sty #6 with a huge 3-0 upset against Spirit in the qualifiers, which included a proxy-cheese that was so disgusting that I'm giving him the "puncher's chance" tag (the "puncher" from the TL.net preview rarely actually lands the knockout blow, but the possibility is always tantalizing).
Prediction: Serral and Classic to advance.
Group B: Clem, SKillous, Rogue, Zoun
PiG Sty #5 runner-up Clem enters the tournament looking slightly less imposing than usual, as he's currently going through one of his worst stretches of online cup play in months. Of course, that's just relative to the hyper-dominant level that Clem previously established for himself, where he was winning nearly every cup event he entered. Still, any amount of vulnerability is liability when the whole scene has begun ramping up for a world championship event.Case in point: Rogue recently 3-0'd Clem in the playoffs of Rex April Madness. Despite having warned myself above about not reading too deeply into a singular result, this is Rogue we're talking about here. Everyone in the SC2 scene should be obliged to wonder if the $700,000 prize pool at EWC 2025 has fully activated agent Rogue for one last mission (given the time of his discharge from the military, he didn't get a fair shot at EWC 2024).
The two Protoss players of the group are also a concern for Clem, as TvP is the match-up that's given him the most trouble lately. While the majority of his losses have come to the top Protoss duo of herO and MaxPax, the specific fall-off in his late-game TvP makes me wonder if SKillous or Zoun could steal an upset. Both Protosses can peak very high—Zoun even took a 2-1 group stage win off of Clem in the last PiG Sty—and either player could very well take down Clem if they force the games to go long.
Prediction: Clem and Zoun to advance
Group C: herO, Creator, Cure, ShoWTimE
It's been a while since we've had a PvP group of chaos in a major tournament—so long that I actually started to miss it. The thing is, PvP was in a weird place during the last couple of years, with MaxPax and herO rising above the rest of the pack to defy the mirror's historic reputation as the most random match-up in StarCraft. However, it feels like the 5.0.14 patch has brought about some degree of destratification, with mortals once again able to fight the gods with the power of chaos.Of course, herO is still the favorite to advance here. Not only has he been consistently great for the entire off-season period, but he's currently hitting a great stretch of form where he's even surpassed Clem as the king of cup competitions. However, I will once again allow myself to be seduced by one specific result, and point out that herO dropped a key PvP series to Classic just this weekend during the Code S qualifier. Creator and ShoWTimE haven't been the most notable Protoss players of the off-season period, but neither was Classic before he brought his A-game to the GSL qualifier.
Lone Terran Cure has the benefit of only having to prepare for one match-up, and what I'd love to see is for him to show up with all sorts of dastardly cheeses and timings. However, Cure hasn't really shown much of his nasty side during this off-season period (unless he has to play a TvT in a weekly cup), which is a disappointment to fans who know he can be a great mix-up artist in longer series. If Cure actually does bring the deep mind games to PiG Sty #6 and somehow eliminates herO with the same double-proxy Rax he used against him at IEM Katowice, I will take that as a sign that the Korean scene is 100% back.
Prediction: herO and Cure to advance.
Group D: Reynor, Bunny, Dark, Astrea
Group D features both welcome returns and what may potentially be a somber goodbye.To start with the positives, Reynor is back for his first major tournament since January's LiuLi Cup. After taking a lengthy League of Legends sabbatical, Reynor stayed true to his word and returned to StarCraft II once EWC clarified what the stakes were going forward. While Reynor might be a bit rusty—he only recorded an 8-6 map score in his recent GSL qualification run that was padded with a couple of soft opponent draws—it's still great to have him back in the scene.
PiG Sty 6 will also be a comeback tournament for Astrea, who has followed a similar timeline as Reynor this year. He also took a break from competitive SC2 play after January (although probably not for League of Legends) before reemerging on the scene last week. Interestingly enough, Astrea has gone 7-0 in matches since his return (although ByuN is the only PiG Sty player among his opponents), which bodes well in a group where no one seems to be at full power.
Alas, while we're welcoming Reynor and Astrea back after brief hiatuses, there's a real possibility that we'll be bidding Dark a final farewell. Dark's continued tournament participation over the last half-year raised hopes that he might be able to delay his military service for a Zest-ian length of time, but after he recently declined to play in the GSL Code S qualifier, it seems like his number may finally have been called. Dark has let his skills slip following the previous EWC, but he has still remained remarkably solid for someone who was ostensibly in 'waiting for the end' mode. He definitely has a chance to advance from this group, and possibly even go out with a bang in the playoffs.
Rounding out the RO16 is Bunny, who remains as puzzling a player as ever. The talented Terran has always had maddeningly inconsistent results, with his best stretch of play somehow coming after he fractured his arm and spent a week locked in a COVID hotel (two independent events that occurred in close succession. You'd think the softened field of the 2024/25 off-season would have given him a chance to thrive again, but instead he's meandered in mediocrity. Still, he's a player with a high floor to his play, and of the players in the group, he's been the most active in 2025. That might be enough to get him over the line and into the playoffs.
Prediction: Reynor and Dark to advance.