Code A: Ro24 Day Two Recap
By: stuchiu
Results from Live Report Thread by opterown
Bbyong vs. Polt
Bbyong <Whirlwind>
Polt
Bbyong <Cloud Kingdom>
Polt
Bbyong <Entombed Valley>
Polt
Polt wins 2-1!
BaBy vs. Symbol
BaBy <Bel'Shir Vestige>
Symbol
BaBy <Cloud Kingdom>
Symbol
BaBy <Whirlwind>
Symbol
BaBy wins 2-0!
Mvp vs. sHy
Mvp <Entombed Valley>
sHy
Mvp <Daybreak>
sHy
Mvp <Bel'Shir Vestige>
sHy
Mvp wins 2-1!
YongHwa vs. Life
YongHwa <Daybreak>
Life
YongHwa <Whirlwind>
Life
YongHwa <Cloud Kingdom>
Life
Life wins 2-0!
2013 Code S players
'12 Season 5 Top Eight
Creator,
HyuN,
Bogus,
Soulkey,
MarineKing,
Ryung,
Leenock
Sniper
Qualified through Code A (8/12)
Noblesse,
PartinG,
BBoongBBoong
Hack,
Polt,
BaBy,
Mvp,
Life
16 Spots Remaining
Code S Seeds (2), Code A winners (4), Up/Down winners (10)
GomTvT hints a return, Mvp wins his Nestea awardBbyong vs. Polt







BaBy vs. Symbol







Mvp vs. sHy







YongHwa vs. Life







2013 Code S players
'12 Season 5 Top Eight








Qualified through Code A (8/12)








16 Spots Remaining
Code S Seeds (2), Code A winners (4), Up/Down winners (10)
Some days you see young up-and-comers tear down the Code-S upper class and make a name for themselves. On other days, the Code S nobility stomps the rebellion into the ground, wagging their fingers at the notion of class mobility. It was a case of the latter for



After defeating Flying a few days ago,


The third Terran to make it out last night was


LG, Life is Good.
At the beginning of this season,

But his Code A play was still strong as he won a PvP over both Mini and Squirtle, leaving him just one best of 3 away from reaching the promised land, Code S. So one could hardly blame him when he decided to do a proxy 2 gate in game 1 and try to take a fast win. Unfortunately for him, weird early game scenarios in ZvP seem to be Life’s specialty as Life himself was going for a proxy hatch. Life would easily deflect the proxy 2 gate with great defensive micro, taking an early 1 - 0 lead. The second game didn’t go much better for Yonghwa, as he was enticed into cannon rushing Life’s hatch-before-pool build. It killed Life’s hatchery, but with three cannons and two pylons expended, the game still stabilized into a normal PvZ. Yonghwa tried a phoenix into immortal-sentry all-in, but the timing was too late as Life was able to get infestors and roaches in time to kill the push with ease. From there Life would take the game and prove the LG motto true, Life is Good.
Code A: Ro24 Day Three Preview
By: Waxangel


Keen vs Vampire is the second team MVP team-kill in three days, coming on the tail of DRG vs. Noblesse. That match yielded a somewhat unexpected result, with the rising Noblesse taking a Code S spot over DongRaeGu, whose troubles in the GSL continued.
This time around it looks to be a more even match on paper, with both Keen and Vampire finishing Ro32 in Code S last season, and both of them having been regular fixtures on MVP's GSTL runner-up team. In their current form, neither player seems likely to impact the championship picture, but they'd both make solid additions to the Code S roster.
The swing factor here appears to be the TvP match-up. Vampire has largely failed to impress in PvT, having recently gone 1 – 4 to Ryung, while barely defeating Baby and TheBest in some ugly games. In contrast, Keen last few TvP matches have been quite impressive, with a convincing win over Squirtle and PartinG to his name. Even in a fruitless WCG Korea campaign where he lost to Parting and Yonghwa, he looked like a much improved macro player compared to the Keen who was relying on cheeses in the summer.
In the end, I decided to side with Keen. There's already eight Terrans qualified for Code S, and momentum seems to have returned to their side. After spending so much time being dominated by Terrans in 2011, one final installment of GomTvT would be a fitting end for GomTV's Wings of Libery run.
Keen 2 – 1 Vampire


After getting overshadowed by Seed and Yonghwa, it might finally be First's time to shine. The ex-BW pro was one of the surprises of the summer, qualifying for TSL4 and making a surprise second place run at MLG Raleigh. Consecutive first round eliminations in Code A caused him to lose a lot of steam and attention, but in his third try, he's finally knocking at the door of Code S (by the way, that means he beat three Code B qualifier brackets in a row, no mean feat).
First's road has been a mixture of blessings and curses. On one hand, he's managed to avoid PvZ – his Achilles heel match-up – the entire way. However, the Terrans and Protosses he faced happened to be very tough: SuperNoVa and HerO in the first two rounds, and now Gumiho in the final round.
After his breakout semi-final run early this year, nothing has been going right for Gumiho in Code S, but he's been killing it everywhere else. He's 8 – 0 in GSTL finals, all-killing SlayerS and three-killing MVP on his way to winning FXOpen two GSTL championships. He's also been a beast in Code A and Up/Downs with an 18 – 7 record, never falling out of Code S this year. One way or another, Gumiho is going to make it back into Code S – the question is whether he'll go straight through First, or take a detour through the Up/Downs.
First has shown strong PvT in the past, and despite his lesser reputation, should be very close in skill to Gumiho. However, he's shown some problems with consistency, and from what we've seen so far, doesn't seem to really perform that well in pressure situations (a monumental collapse against Leenock at the MLG finals comes to mind). Gumiho might have trouble in Code S, but he rules Code A and Up/downs with an iron fist.
Gumiho 2 – 0 First


There was a lot of initial over-hype for former Brood War champions, but now, at the end of 2012, we've mostly figured out what realistic expectations are. Jaedong is a work in progress, Bisu is a huge work in progress, ForGG's destiny is to mug Europeans and steal their wallets, and Flash is very good player with some TvT issues.
However, there's one player who has still managed to hold on to some of his Brood War mystique, and can whir Brood War elitists into a frenzy: Fantasy. This is largely due to the fact that he hasn't played that many games yet, and thus, people are free imagine whatever they would like about him. To be fair, he has looked rather brilliant in his Code A run, stomping over Sparta and finale in stylish fashion. Though he hasn't played a meaningful TvZ in months, that hasn't stopped people from thinking he can win his next match and go straight into Code S.
Which all bodes very well for Roro, a player whose god-given purpose in pro-gaming is to destroy the expectations of the masses. During his lengthy Brood War career, Roro always found ways to squeeze out wins when he was underrated, and drop the ball miserably when people were actually starting to get on his bandwagon. This has carried over exactly in StarCraft II, with Roro beating out his more famous colleagues to become one of the best KeSPA players in the early SC2 transition. Of course, he followed that by botching his Code S run by forgetting he had six ultralisks in a Nydus canal, handing Hack a free win in their deciding Ro32 game.
Fantasy's hype has gone a little overboard, and it's time for the hype-killer to strike. Don't worry, though, Fantasy fans. Once RorO's built up some hype for himself, he's going to kill that as well.
Roro 2 – 0 Fantasy


Oh, this is a tricky one. Curious, the ultimate gatekeeper into Code S, against Genius, a player who has the weirdest knack for qualifying for Code S. While they're not consecutive, Genius has played in ten Code S tournaments in his career, for which GomTV should give him the 'Diet Nestea' award. Now, if we're going by strict definitions, Genius should be the one to win the match. His shtick is to make it into Code S, while Curious' is to keep the undeserving players out – there's nothing that says Curious himself has to make it into Code S.
Of course, if we ignore the GSL lore, then obviously Curious is the favored player. Genius' last PvZ win came when he all-in'd hyvaa three times in a row, winning more on the back of worse micro from hyvaa, than particularly good micro of his own. Curious' nervousness problems cause him to play horribly once he reaches the Code S Ro16, but he's a confident, cold-blooded killer in other environments. In fact, he hasn't lost a single GSL series in the Code Ro32 or lower since June.
Ignoring GSL lore can be dangerous – how many times has the community scoffed at the GSL runner-up curse only to be burned? But in this case, the actual results are too strongly on Curious' side.
Curious 2 – 0 Genius
Writers: Porcelina and Waxangel.
Graphics and Art: Meko.
Editors: Waxangel.