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On August 03 2011 04:57 s4life wrote: err.. they need a couple of koreans in there and a real coach. I don't see this working well tbh. Just being together, living and talking starcraft all day will give them a big edge over people not living in a team house, I think
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On August 02 2011 18:26 Talin wrote:Show nested quote +On August 02 2011 18:24 CellTech wrote: World leader in esports.
Hahahahahahahahahahaha I read this post, then I had to go back and check OP to see if they really wrote that. And they did. Oh god. -_-
Hey guys, you know that theres more to ESPORTS then sc2 right? Their Street Fighter lineup is pretty beastly, cant tell you about their quake and cs teams as I do not follow those but I hope my point still comes across
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I do believe that in an interview Sir Scoots did say that Puma will be staying in Korea because it would be easier for him to practice and he would not have to adapt to a new social environment.
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On August 03 2011 05:26 Doof wrote:Show nested quote +On August 03 2011 04:57 s4life wrote: err.. they need a couple of koreans in there and a real coach. I don't see this working well tbh. Just being together, living and talking starcraft all day will give them a big edge over people not living in a team house, I think Yeah but every player that has a true shot at the first place in every major tournament today is most likely playing in a teamhouse in Korea. So is their goal to be the best team around and being capable of winning or finish ~top 5 in a big event like MLG, or is their goal to smash NA players and being able to call themself the best team in America and maybe outside of Korea to please their sponsors?
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I wonder what the differences are between a korean pro house and an american one. Probably a lot of jack daniels and puking in the pool. I guess we'll find out in Raleigh.
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complexity did it first ... OOOH I went there. No but seriously. It's definitely going to improve the team _alot_. I think it was when the coL counter-strike had their team house is when they became the #1 team in the world. So hopefully the same happens to EG. Best of luck.
gogo Machine
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And I guess actually playing 10 hours a day and having a real coach, it's kinda hard to have a pool in the area of seoul, as well I think :D
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On August 03 2011 03:13 SafeAsCheese wrote:Show nested quote +On August 03 2011 03:07 AsnSensation wrote:On August 03 2011 03:03 SafeAsCheese wrote:On August 03 2011 02:36 chokke wrote:On August 03 2011 01:18 Achaia wrote:On August 03 2011 00:36 chokke wrote:Maybe next MLG they can make it out of pool play . Bahaha truth! I think IdrA was the only EG player to really do anything last MLG. Either way, kickass house! I must say that I'm jealous of living with a bunch of buddies and playing SC2 all day. Sounds like an ideal lifestyle to me. Well, it's been poor results over, and over and over and over again. Time to either stop talking like "the dominant" team or "strong players" when results are nowhere to be seen. Sure, it will be fun for the players, question is if it will actually be helpful outside. If there is anything EG need, it's some public acknowledge. Maybe kick out a couple of members that are dragging them down. I would however hope to see some Machine dominance with IdrA be the LosirA of EG . Every other team did shitty as well, even FXO. yeah but FXO didn't have anyone in the pools, let's have inc, machine, lz in the open brackets and let's see how far they make it... Being in the pools means they faced harder opponents. Out of White-Ra's runs, only his last 3 or so opponents were actually known names, and he eventually lost to one. Just another reason for them to not be in pool..
It's basically be in pool - stay in pool. Look at Incontrol.... sigh Thank god it has american production, just another reason not to watch that tournament while I enjoy european and korean dominance both playwise and productionvalue.
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On August 03 2011 05:44 lol wrote:Show nested quote +On August 03 2011 05:26 Doof wrote:On August 03 2011 04:57 s4life wrote: err.. they need a couple of koreans in there and a real coach. I don't see this working well tbh. Just being together, living and talking starcraft all day will give them a big edge over people not living in a team house, I think Yeah but every player that has a true shot at the first place in every major tournament today is most likely playing in a teamhouse in Korea. So is their goal to be the best team around and being capable of winning or finish ~top 5 in a big event like MLG, or is their goal to smash NA players and being able to call themself the best team in America and maybe outside of Korea to please their sponsors?
So what exactly are you saying? That to have a chance, they need to be in Korea? Because of the Korean ladder? Or are you just saying the only teams capable of developing the best talent are the Korean teams?
Regardless, I think we can all agree that this is going to make EG better. It is also a good sign for western e-sports as a whole.
This all reminds me, just how important IS it to be on the Korean Battle.net? Liquid-Tyler talked about it on a state of the game (if I remember right) and it sounded like there were much fewer easy games and that build orders were much more refined. He also said that before the tsunami that hit Japan, that the connection was playable.
It seems that it would make sense for EG to set up their team with korean accounts (I assume they already have), and set up their team house with a good connection to Korea. I have no clue how much they cost, but I believe you can get a SLA through Verizon from the US to Korea which promises sub-200ms ping times and 1% or less packet loss.
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On August 03 2011 04:13 ZestyPickle wrote:Show nested quote +On August 03 2011 02:10 resilve wrote:How you train, and what benefit you gain from it, comes from your mentality - not your locality. I feel EG would have been better off replacing the deadweight roster they have than buying a house to hang around in. Idra was good when he was in Korea because he was playing 12 hours a day, not because he was living alone and teamless. Demuslim was special in Beta because he was playing 8+ hours a day. They are both evidently playing significantly less recently, and it shows - regardless of them both living with and near other pro players. Having said that, I look forward to the excuses when team house has been used up Idra was good? Im pretty sure he still is one of the beat foreigners. do you still think he's capable of playing against top level code s koreans? he's not, why? because the koreans have gotten way better due to their training while he did not
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On August 03 2011 06:14 chokke wrote: Just another reason for them to not be in pool..
It's basically be in pool - stay in pool. Look at Incontrol.... sigh Thank god it has american production, just another reason not to watch that tournament while I enjoy european and korean dominance both playwise and productionvalue.
Uhhh I really don't like that comment as it a. derogatorily generalizes a large population as being inferior, and b. is based off intensely skewed biases.
If you watched the recent MLG, you would realize that the production of MLG is quite good now, and if you have seen IPL, it has one of the better productions out there. Furthermore, NA's best frequently bests European players. I don't really know why you are being inflammatory, but my careful and honest recommendation is that you stop using such aggressive diction.
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On August 03 2011 05:26 Doof wrote:Show nested quote +On August 03 2011 04:57 s4life wrote: err.. they need a couple of koreans in there and a real coach. I don't see this working well tbh. Just being together, living and talking starcraft all day will give them a big edge over people not living in a team house, I think
True enough, but those aren't the people they are competing with. Any big tournament is going to have a strong Korean representation, and those are the ones they are competing with. Maybe for the sake of being a top NA player, its enough, but not to actually win MLG/DH/TSL/etc. Koreans are playing and practicing in team houses with a coach and a strict training schedule. Many Koreans in interviews say that their coach plays a huge role in their progression as a player, so we can only assume they are useful. The only way NA players are going to catch up to the Korean scene is by not allowing Koreans to have an advantage in practicing.
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On August 03 2011 06:37 darlhet wrote:Show nested quote +On August 03 2011 04:13 ZestyPickle wrote:On August 03 2011 02:10 resilve wrote:How you train, and what benefit you gain from it, comes from your mentality - not your locality. I feel EG would have been better off replacing the deadweight roster they have than buying a house to hang around in. Idra was good when he was in Korea because he was playing 12 hours a day, not because he was living alone and teamless. Demuslim was special in Beta because he was playing 8+ hours a day. They are both evidently playing significantly less recently, and it shows - regardless of them both living with and near other pro players. Having said that, I look forward to the excuses when team house has been used up Idra was good? Im pretty sure he still is one of the beat foreigners. do you still think he's capable of playing against top level code s koreans? he's not, why? because the koreans have gotten way better due to their training while he did not
Waht does that have to do with what he said?
If IdrA cannot compete with the top koreans, neither can Huk, Jinro, Sen, Naniwa, or Thorzain.
They might take a series or two, but eh.... MC is much easier to knock out of tourneys because of his race (PvP), but these super solid terrans cannot be easily knocked out and will continue to dominate.
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On August 03 2011 05:34 mrRoflpwn wrote: I do believe that in an interview Sir Scoots did say that Puma will be staying in Korea because it would be easier for him to practice and he would not have to adapt to a new social environment.
Who will he be training with then? Will he just sit home alone?
Training with people online without teammates being around you irl doesn't seem to be nearly as effective as training in a teamhouse. I have a feeling that would diminish his improvement.
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On August 03 2011 04:41 Chill wrote:Show nested quote +On August 02 2011 08:09 Soulish wrote:On August 02 2011 03:43 JLew wrote:On August 02 2011 03:16 Soulish wrote: godamn this thread is making me jealous. My house is like 2,600 sq feet and it's ~900k
Freaking calgary, Dude, there is people in Calgary who make $60k a year managing at McDonalds. It's all relative, there is people with masters and professional degrees in Arizona who have had to move elsewhere for employment or simply cannot find work. It's not like you could move to Arizona and still making $100k a year without any education working on an oil rig like you can in Calgary. Back on topic, this is good and I hope it can help the members of EG start winning ( I don't even mean winning tournaments..just winning games in general would be a good start ) oh please, people who manage mcdonalds don't earn $60k a year. They earn as much as their american counterparts. True. Show nested quote +And don't think that you can even hope to compete in calgary's oil and gas market without finishing uni unless your dream is to drive trucks. It's insanely competitive. Super false in my experience. The oil and gas industry is actually one of the least competitive fields at entry level. There are a lot of jobs to go around, the majority pay reasonably well, and there is reasonably high turnover. But yes, you absolutely need a degree to play.
I have a cousin who makes roughly that managing a mcdonalds in denver, he works about 55-60 hours a week because of turnover but the money is still there.
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On August 03 2011 06:44 SafeAsCheese wrote:Show nested quote +On August 03 2011 06:37 darlhet wrote:On August 03 2011 04:13 ZestyPickle wrote:On August 03 2011 02:10 resilve wrote:How you train, and what benefit you gain from it, comes from your mentality - not your locality. I feel EG would have been better off replacing the deadweight roster they have than buying a house to hang around in. Idra was good when he was in Korea because he was playing 12 hours a day, not because he was living alone and teamless. Demuslim was special in Beta because he was playing 8+ hours a day. They are both evidently playing significantly less recently, and it shows - regardless of them both living with and near other pro players. Having said that, I look forward to the excuses when team house has been used up Idra was good? Im pretty sure he still is one of the beat foreigners. do you still think he's capable of playing against top level code s koreans? he's not, why? because the koreans have gotten way better due to their training while he did not Waht does that have to do with what he said? If IdrA cannot compete with the top koreans, neither can Huk, Jinro, Sen, Naniwa, or Thorzain. They might take a series or two, but eh.... MC is much easier to knock out of tourneys because of his race (PvP), but these super solid terrans cannot be easily knocked out and will continue to dominate.
That isn't true at all. It depends how you train.
Yes, a lot of top foreigners can take a series or two for various reasons.
The title of the thread is a bit misleading. Several of them already lived together in Arizona and like I said before, it comes down to how they train, who they train with (at least they're all around the same skill level) and the culture in the house. The latter being the most important. What EG could use is another set of eyes so to speak. All these players are well acquainted with one another. They could use some opposing views/ideas certainly as it would give them a different look. From what I've heard and read, Puma is only coming down 2 weeks prior to certain events. That really only benefits him as he gets to adjust to the time zone and prepare.
The title should be "Team EG get a new pad."
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So Puma won't even be able to practice with team mates? He's just going to practice alone on KR ladder or what? Seems like Puma made a bad decision joining EG.
So Puma's basically just on a team in the sense that he'll be wearing an EG logo at tournaments, but not talking or interacting or playing with his team.
Makes me feel bad for Idra too, was hoping he'd finally get a practice partner who is up to par with him.
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I would kill to live in that house too :/
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Congrats to EG, and the members that will be benefiting from this. Can't wait for the tour.
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