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After two successful titles, DotA 2 and CS Global Offensive, in the Fragbite Masters powered by Com Hem 2014 Spring Season, the time has come for the season's only 1vs1 game to be played out. The title is of course StarCraft II.
This is the second time around we´re hosting Fragbite Masters StarCraft II. Last year was a big success for us.
This season will kick off with its group stage this Sunday, May 4th, and will go on for two weeks straight. Though, you could say that the tournament begins earlier than that as the first qualifier will be played on Thursday, with the second one played out on Saturday.
There is going to be one group per day, Group A starts on sunday, 4/5 at 18:00 CEST.
In due time, we'll present the twelve invitees for the tournament, who will play together with four qualified players for a sum of 160 000 SEK, which translates into approximately 25 500 dollars. The winner of the 16 players will go home with half of it!
Casters:
DeMusliM & Nathanias + Semmler
Invited Players: + Show Spoiler +
Qualified players: Reality San
Prize distribution 80 000 SEK (approximately $12,200) 45 000 SEK (approximately $6,900) 25 000 SEK (approximately $3,800) 10 000 SEK (approximately $1,500) Total: 160 000 SEK (approximately $25 500)
Qualifiers: We´re having two qualifiers this time around and the first one will be played on thursday, second one on saturday. Both are up on Binarybeast: #1 http://binarybeast.com/xHotS1404292 #2 http://binarybeast.com/xSC21404294
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France7248 Posts
first qualifier starts in few hours and...
Maximum Players 1024 Registered Players 55
:/
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On May 01 2014 20:04 Yhamm wrote: first qualifier starts in few hours and...
Maximum Players 1024 Registered Players 55
:/
Well there was absolutely no attention drawn to this qualifier . I bet most people don´t even know about it, which is a shame since the prizepool is so high
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France7248 Posts
well, I'm not surprised. Topic here was created only 2 days ago, and I don't think a lot of players check the official website at all
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Yepp. I basically stumbled upon this thread and signed up.
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France7248 Posts
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On May 01 2014 20:04 Yhamm wrote: first qualifier starts in few hours and...
Maximum Players 1024 Registered Players 55
:/
They had a reddit thread announcing the tournament a week ago but when they did it they didnt have the information about the qualifier which was quite silly really. Glad I was able to see the 2nd qualifier :D!
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Good luck Desrow! Here we go!
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Yet another tournament where Koreans got shafted because opponents refused to play on NA. The rulebook states that if "both players cannot agree" it will default to EU, meaning that any European who wants an advantage needs only to not agree to play NA and they can get it. As a result some of our players forfeited due to not wanting to waste their time, they were receiving 25+ lag spikes a minute as a result of having to play on EU. They were apparently not the only ones, I have heard that a bunch of Korean players trying to qualify encountered EU-based players who refused to move to a fairer server for their match. This is why that decision should not be in the hands of players, since they will always take the option which gives them the most advantage (which is fine in and of itself, they should not be expected to have to make the call between what is best for them and what is fair, that should be the admins).
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On May 04 2014 00:05 TotalBiscuit wrote: Yet another tournament where Koreans got shafted because opponents refused to play on NA. The rulebook states that if "both players cannot agree" it will default to EU, meaning that any European who wants an advantage needs only to not agree to play NA and they can get it. As a result some of our players forfeited due to not wanting to waste their time, they were receiving 25+ lag spikes a minute as a result of having to play on EU. They were apparently not the only ones, I have heard that a bunch of Korean players trying to qualify encountered EU-based players who refused to move to a fairer server for their match. This is why that decision should not be in the hands of players, since they will always take the option which gives them the most advantage (which is fine).
I cant really say that Im sorry for that happening. Since our first season last year we´ve had this rule and we´ve always pointed out that this is a european tournament and this season we went even further.
The invitees are all living in Europe for simplicity and the only reason for having open qualifiers for every player around the world is to reach out for players that might want to try their luck even though it is bad latency. Theres been some players who currently live in EU but are visiting Korea or NA and wanted to see if they could qualify so they could play groups when they got home.
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On May 04 2014 00:33 RBreaker wrote:Show nested quote +On May 04 2014 00:05 TotalBiscuit wrote: Yet another tournament where Koreans got shafted because opponents refused to play on NA. The rulebook states that if "both players cannot agree" it will default to EU, meaning that any European who wants an advantage needs only to not agree to play NA and they can get it. As a result some of our players forfeited due to not wanting to waste their time, they were receiving 25+ lag spikes a minute as a result of having to play on EU. They were apparently not the only ones, I have heard that a bunch of Korean players trying to qualify encountered EU-based players who refused to move to a fairer server for their match. This is why that decision should not be in the hands of players, since they will always take the option which gives them the most advantage (which is fine). I cant really say that Im sorry for that happening. Since our first season last year we´ve had this rule and we´ve always pointed out that this is a european tournament and this season we went even further. The invitees are all living in Europe for simplicity and the only reason for having open qualifiers for every player around the world is to reach out for players that might want to try their luck even though it is bad latency. Theres been some players who currently live in EU but are visiting Korea or NA and wanted to see if they could qualify so they could play groups when they got home.
If it is a European tournament then don't have open qualifiers. Simple as that really. Put residency requirements in place. NA barely has any tournaments anymore, EU is pretty much the only place Koreans have to go outside of WCS, since there are no open tournaments in Korea. EU tournaments should either adapt to that changing landscape and understand that they are a more important part of the international scene than they used to be, or just region-lock and not waste peoples time.
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On May 04 2014 01:16 TotalBiscuit wrote:Show nested quote +On May 04 2014 00:33 RBreaker wrote:On May 04 2014 00:05 TotalBiscuit wrote: Yet another tournament where Koreans got shafted because opponents refused to play on NA. The rulebook states that if "both players cannot agree" it will default to EU, meaning that any European who wants an advantage needs only to not agree to play NA and they can get it. As a result some of our players forfeited due to not wanting to waste their time, they were receiving 25+ lag spikes a minute as a result of having to play on EU. They were apparently not the only ones, I have heard that a bunch of Korean players trying to qualify encountered EU-based players who refused to move to a fairer server for their match. This is why that decision should not be in the hands of players, since they will always take the option which gives them the most advantage (which is fine). I cant really say that Im sorry for that happening. Since our first season last year we´ve had this rule and we´ve always pointed out that this is a european tournament and this season we went even further. The invitees are all living in Europe for simplicity and the only reason for having open qualifiers for every player around the world is to reach out for players that might want to try their luck even though it is bad latency. Theres been some players who currently live in EU but are visiting Korea or NA and wanted to see if they could qualify so they could play groups when they got home. If it is a European tournament then don't have open qualifiers. Simple as that really. Put residency requirements in place. NA barely has any tournaments anymore, EU is pretty much the only place Koreans have to go outside of WCS, since there are no open tournaments in Korea. EU tournaments should either adapt to that changing landscape and understand that they are a more important part of the international scene than they used to be, or just region-lock and not waste peoples time.
We´re not forcing any players to participate.. Last qualifier had two koreans advancing and the current one still have a few remaining. Cant really see the issue here.
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On May 04 2014 01:21 RBreaker wrote:Show nested quote +On May 04 2014 01:16 TotalBiscuit wrote:On May 04 2014 00:33 RBreaker wrote:On May 04 2014 00:05 TotalBiscuit wrote: Yet another tournament where Koreans got shafted because opponents refused to play on NA. The rulebook states that if "both players cannot agree" it will default to EU, meaning that any European who wants an advantage needs only to not agree to play NA and they can get it. As a result some of our players forfeited due to not wanting to waste their time, they were receiving 25+ lag spikes a minute as a result of having to play on EU. They were apparently not the only ones, I have heard that a bunch of Korean players trying to qualify encountered EU-based players who refused to move to a fairer server for their match. This is why that decision should not be in the hands of players, since they will always take the option which gives them the most advantage (which is fine). I cant really say that Im sorry for that happening. Since our first season last year we´ve had this rule and we´ve always pointed out that this is a european tournament and this season we went even further. The invitees are all living in Europe for simplicity and the only reason for having open qualifiers for every player around the world is to reach out for players that might want to try their luck even though it is bad latency. Theres been some players who currently live in EU but are visiting Korea or NA and wanted to see if they could qualify so they could play groups when they got home. If it is a European tournament then don't have open qualifiers. Simple as that really. Put residency requirements in place. NA barely has any tournaments anymore, EU is pretty much the only place Koreans have to go outside of WCS, since there are no open tournaments in Korea. EU tournaments should either adapt to that changing landscape and understand that they are a more important part of the international scene than they used to be, or just region-lock and not waste peoples time. We´re not forcing any players to participate.. Last qualifier had two koreans advancing and the current one still have a few remaining. Cant really see the issue here.
Doesn't matter. If you are having open qualifiers then you should be ensuring both for the viewers and competitors that the best possible match environment is being used. It is extremely common knowledge that the EU-KR connection is terrible and that NA is the best possible middle ground for both sides with minimal latency. If you refuse to do this then you essentially stack the deck against one player and provide a sub-par experience for viewers who are watching players incapable of playing to their full potential. You can say "Oh they don't have to play in it" all you please but the reality is there are ZERO online Korean events for them to play in and the NA tournament scene has effectively collapsed. EU is one of the only places these players can play and EU events need to realise that and adapt accordingly, rather than deliberately handicapping players for no good reason. Either region-lock or be equitable, don't have this protectionist half-way house that only serves to frustrate players and viewers by handicapping one of them with 400+ ping and frequent lag spikes, resulting in sub-par games.
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France7248 Posts
what viewers? there are no streams
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I've been watching Desrow and Mana so far. Wish there were more streams!
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On May 04 2014 01:26 TotalBiscuit wrote:Show nested quote +On May 04 2014 01:21 RBreaker wrote:On May 04 2014 01:16 TotalBiscuit wrote:On May 04 2014 00:33 RBreaker wrote:On May 04 2014 00:05 TotalBiscuit wrote: Yet another tournament where Koreans got shafted because opponents refused to play on NA. The rulebook states that if "both players cannot agree" it will default to EU, meaning that any European who wants an advantage needs only to not agree to play NA and they can get it. As a result some of our players forfeited due to not wanting to waste their time, they were receiving 25+ lag spikes a minute as a result of having to play on EU. They were apparently not the only ones, I have heard that a bunch of Korean players trying to qualify encountered EU-based players who refused to move to a fairer server for their match. This is why that decision should not be in the hands of players, since they will always take the option which gives them the most advantage (which is fine). I cant really say that Im sorry for that happening. Since our first season last year we´ve had this rule and we´ve always pointed out that this is a european tournament and this season we went even further. The invitees are all living in Europe for simplicity and the only reason for having open qualifiers for every player around the world is to reach out for players that might want to try their luck even though it is bad latency. Theres been some players who currently live in EU but are visiting Korea or NA and wanted to see if they could qualify so they could play groups when they got home. If it is a European tournament then don't have open qualifiers. Simple as that really. Put residency requirements in place. NA barely has any tournaments anymore, EU is pretty much the only place Koreans have to go outside of WCS, since there are no open tournaments in Korea. EU tournaments should either adapt to that changing landscape and understand that they are a more important part of the international scene than they used to be, or just region-lock and not waste peoples time. We´re not forcing any players to participate.. Last qualifier had two koreans advancing and the current one still have a few remaining. Cant really see the issue here. Doesn't matter. If you are having open qualifiers then you should be ensuring both for the viewers and competitors that the best possible match environment is being used. It is extremely common knowledge that the EU-KR connection is terrible and that NA is the best possible middle ground for both sides with minimal latency. If you refuse to do this then you essentially stack the deck against one player and provide a sub-par experience for viewers who are watching players incapable of playing to their full potential. You can say "Oh they don't have to play in it" all you please but the reality is there are ZERO online Korean events for them to play in and the NA tournament scene has effectively collapsed. EU is one of the only places these players can play and EU events need to realise that and adapt accordingly, rather than deliberately handicapping players for no good reason. Either region-lock or be equitable, don't have this protectionist half-way house that only serves to frustrate players and viewers by handicapping one of them with 400+ ping and frequent lag spikes, resulting in sub-par games.
What you say is true, but we still dont want to limit the qualifiers to be EU residents only, what if theres some players just outside of the borders who wants in? Should we kick them out? Let them play? Its not our fault there isnt enough online tournaments but we´re trying the best we can to provide good games.
The rules clearly states what server is to be played if 2 players cant agree, if this bothers some, maybe they shouldnt have signed up? I havent heard too many complaints regarding this since many of the participants knows about this rule.
If korean players want to play in our tournament even though having bad latency, I feel that we should allow them to participate. Its not like we´re going to change this rule after two successful tournaments.
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