IGN Announces the IPL Team Arena

July 22nd, 2011

Today IGN announced that in addition to it’s Pro League, it will be hosting a new StarCraft II Team League showmatch series. Dubbed the IPL Team Arena, the new series will feature “the world’s top teams (yes, even Korean teams!)” in a King of the Hill style format. The IPL Team Arena is tentatively scheduled to start on August 2nd, but nothing is set in stone.

Basically, each team will select five players to represent them. The first player will be “chosen in secret so that no counter-picking can occur. The winner of each match will stay on until they are defeated or the opposing team has run out of players.”

To make things even more interesting, we are including a $100 bounty for each victory that a team earns, for new challengers to try and claim. For example, if Team 2 wins 3 weeks in a row, they will have earned themselves $1,500 total, and have $300 worth of bounty on them. If Team 7 defeats them, they will earn the $500 for winning the week, as well as claim the $300 bounty.

 

The map pool includes:

  • Xel’Naga Caverns
  • Metalopolis
  • Shakuras Plateau
  • Crevasse
  • Tal Darim Altar
  • iCCup Testbug
  • Xel’Naga Fortress
  • Terminus
  • Shattered Temple
  • Bel’Shir Beach

Commentary will be provided by the IGN in-house crew (HDStarCraft, CatsPajamas, PainUser, and AskJoshy!)

The inaugural match will feature Evil Geniuses vs. Reign. EG’s roster includes: IdrA, iNcontroL, LzGaMeR, Machine, StrifeCro, Axslav and DeMusliM. Reign’s team consists of Spades, KiWiKaKi, Perfect, Future, SLush, Phoenix and Fayth.

Be sure to check out both the IGN Pro League and the IPL Team Arena at www.ign.com/ipl.

MLG Releases Full Lineup for Anaheim

July 22nd, 2011

With MLG Anaheim just one week away, it’s hard not to get excited. MLG Columbus was a huge success and Major League Gaming is looking to out do itself with its next event. Hoping to spark some discussion and get the fan excited, Major League Gaming has released the full StarCraft II player list for next weekend’s event.

The Pools will include: (Note the GSL Spots will be filled in by SlayerS_BoxeR, DongRaeGu, MMA, and MVP)

On top of the killer lineup in the Pool Play, there’s also the stacked Open Bracket. Notable players in the Open Bracket include:

  • Alicia
  • Ganzi
  • Choya
  • Liquid`Tyler
  • FXO.qxc
  • Fenix
  • SixJax’s Vibe, Major, Skew, and dde
  • EG’s DeMusliM, Axslav, LZGaMeR & StrifeCro
  • HDStarcraft
  • Destiny
  • CompLexity’s FireZerg, Ryze, Catz, CrunCher, RSVP, and Stalife
  • Agh
  • KawaiiRice
  • ThisIsJimmy
  • Pokebunny
  • FnaticTT1

Also be sure to keep an eye on Lizzuma and Gensulitor who will be representing the first batch of players from CompLexity’s Academy.

With big names like that duking it out in the Open Bracket, there’s sure to be some fantastic games. Make sure you tune into MLG Anaheim next weekend (July 29-31) and give the CompLexity crew your support.

The Devil Plays Protoss: Going Pro

July 18th, 2011

The Devil Plays Protoss: Going Pro

by Jacqueline Geller

Any opinions expressed in this article are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of compLexity Gaming or its parent company.

I love reading the blogs on Team Liquid. It’s a bit of a guilty pleasure. I browse the recent topics on a daily basis and reply once in a while when something piques my interest.

A popular thread topic seen time and time again is posted by young SC2 players hoping to go pro and who are unsure how to win the support of their parents.

I am not a professional gamer.

I never will be.

But I am a young woman who has had her own career issues with her parents and who has some solid advice for hopeful pros. This is not tried and true advice or a magical formula, but the following are things to consider and things to get you thinking which can help you decide whether or not you want to start on the epic pro gamer journey.

My dad is in his early sixties and my mother is in her late fifties. My father comes from a generation where you attend university for a said degree and then start a career in said field. In my dad’s case, said degree and said field is finance, and I do think that it has been hard for him to see me not follow a similar career path. I do have a university degree, but it did not come with an automatic job title like a law degree, a medical degree, an engineering degree, etc. Careers paths today are not linear, and it is difficult for older generations to accept this. My mom even admits that is hard for her generation to think outside of the career box. There is a good chance that your parents come from a similar mindset, and it is important to understand their point of view to help them understand your point of view.

To begin with, you need to be realistic about your chances of being a professional gamer. It’s just like any lucrative profession. If you are struggling at biology, there isn’t much of a chance that you’ll make a stellar surgeon. My first “The Devil Plays Protoss” article was on finding your niche within the gaming community. Perhaps being a pro gamer is not for you, and this is something you need to figure out before you start focusing too much valuable time and energy into training. Although there is always room for improvement, if you are a Gold League player who has been struggling on the ladder for months, there isn’t much of a chance of you being able to make it as a professional. It is simply not good enough to be good, you need to be the best. Of course, being a professional gamer sounds much more fun and glamorous than being an eSports journalist, but you need to identify what works for you and what is realistic for your skill set.

Of course, being a professional gamer sounds much more fun and glamorous than being an eSports journalist, but you need to identify what works for you and what is realistic for your skill set.

One thing that worries parents is the lack of transferable skills that being a gamer offers. This is something that you might not recognize in high school while you’re focused on the present. Unlike other roles in the eSports industry, a pro gamer has little to transfer to other jobs or industries. If you are a graphic designer working in eSports and suddenly professional gaming stops existing, you can easily take your skills elsewhere. Being a professional gamer will give you incredible life experiences and hopefully enough of an income to pay the bills, but at the end of the day, it’s not going to be the best job to have on your resume to help with future careers. Having a back up plan and a way to work on other skill sets while being a pro gamer can be helpful in ensuring that even if the pro gamer thing doesn’t work out, you have a fallback plan.

Professional gaming is just like any other professional sport: many try and few will succeed. Think about how many people play video games and how many people can make a living off being a professional gamer. It also gets harder to continue being a pro as you get older which is something that parents think about even if you do not. Although Aleksey “White-Ra” Krupnyk has proven that you can be a pro gamer past the imaginary 30 year old expiry date, you have to remember that White-Ra is the exception, not the rule. Do not focus on the exceptions, focus on the rules because exceptions typically lead to heartbreak. The reason for fewer older players, I would guess, has more to do with lifestyle than skill expiration compared to other sports, though. Athletes wear their bodies down to the point of no longer having the physical fitness to keep up with younger athletes. Gaming is an entirely different beast, but the lifestyle might get tiring as you get older. At a certain point, pro gamers must want to settle down or have families, and I cannot imagine trying to juggle a family, mortgage, etc. while living the pro gamer lifestyle. It can be done, but I’m sure it’s not for everyone.

If after all the facts, you’ve decided that you want to be a professional gamer, what’s the next step? My next recommended step in becoming a professional gamer is to have a plan with goals and deadlines. Manuel “Grubby” Schenkhuizen once wrote a blog post about becoming a professional gamer and how he approached the subject with his parents. One thing that he did was give himself a deadline to see what he could do with professional gaming, but he told himself and his parents that he would go back to school if things didn‘t work out. We all know how that ended up, but again, Grubby is the exception, not the rule.

When you’ve decided that you want to tell your parents about your pro gaming aspirations, start slow. If you drop the bomb on your parents that you want to be a pro gamer suddenly, it will sound a lot like “I WANT TO BE A FIRETRUCK!!” The idea of a professional gamer, as real as it is to us, is a silly concept to older generations. If you introduce the idea of competitive and professional gaming slowly, they will be more included to be enthusiastic about the idea as it grows on them. Tell them you’re passionate about the game. Tell them about your tournament successes. If they know you’re training for competitions, doing well at competitions and winning money from competitions, they might see gaming in a more serious way than just a hobby. Start out slow and let them learn about the gaming community.

Impress your parents by finding a job.

A big way to win parents over is to have a life outside of gaming. A part-time job or part-time studies while you focus on gaming could do wonders for your relationship with your parents. In the time that you’ve given yourself to make a name for yourself in the gaming community, it will be important to train hard and compete as often as possible. That being said, it would also be beneficial for yourself to do something other than gaming if you’re not on a professional team and earning decent money. If you’re living on your own, it is important that you’re making enough to support yourself. If you’re living with your parents, it will help them be more supportive if you’re doing something like working part-time or taking a class or two. It may not seem like oodles of fun to work 16 hours per week at the local coffee shop, but it will give you a bit of spending money, responsibilities and freedom which will impress the parents.

If you do want to be a pro gamer and are having issues winning over the support of your parents, approach them maturely. Of course, you could just say ’screw them,’ but everything is easy with a good support network. Trust me, I know this. Talk to your parents about what your goals and deadlines are for being a professional gamer, and talk to them about what your plan is if pro gaming doesn’t work out. If you’re open about your passion about gaming and teach them a bit about the industry, you’d be surprised at how they respond. I never thought that my parents would be interested in the SC2 community, but they take an interest in what I tell them about it because I’m excited about it. If you’re willing to give your parents something that they want, like you to work a part-time job or to take a university class, it will help make supporting you easier.

The good news is that unsupportive parents in the professional gaming industry is most likely a short term problem. As eSports develops, I see no reason as to why it will not develop like any other sport. Competitive gaming will have its own armies of Starcraft moms and Halo dads not unlike the soccer moms and hockey dads of today. Parents will start their children’s professional gaming careers off early: teaching their children RTS games at a young age, driving them to gaming practice every Tuesday and Thursday and cheering them on at every Under 13, 15, 17 and 20 LAN event possible. Parents will brag to their friends of how their child will be signed by a pro team straight out of high school and how their child will one day win MLG.

As stated previously, I am no professional gamer, but I do have sound advice.

Pro gamers, how does my advice weigh in? Any words of wisdom of your own to pass along?

GL HF,
Jacq

About the Author – Jacqueline Geller

After years of playing World of Warcraft, a friend introduced Jacqueline to Starcraft early last year. Jacqueline’s relationship with Starcraft started out slowly: a handful of casual dates, a little bit of flirting but nothing serious. She took her relationship with the game to the next level after BlizzCon 2010 where she experienced eSports magic first-hand and realized that Starcraft was the one. Despite being a mediocre player, she has been clambering the ladder at a glacial pace and has spent more time watching Starcraft online than she’d like to admit. In March, Jacqueline made the leap from eSports fan to eSports professional when she was hired by the Handsome Nerd as their Art Director, combining her design skills with her love of Starcraft. Since its start in April, Jacqueline has been a contributing writer for the North American Star League, writing coverage for Division 1. Offline, Jacqueline is a bookworm, a runner, a freeride snowboarder and has a Human Ecology degree with a Clothing and Textiles major.

View Jacqueline’s profile here.
Visit @jacquelinesg on Twitter

FXO Acquires the Korean Team fOu

July 18th, 2011

Today, in a surprise announcement, the international StarCraft II team FXO has acquired the Korean team fOu. Donning the new name FXO Korea, the former fOu team will continue to play in Korean tournaments while the current FXO lineup focuses on the ‘foreign’ scene.

According to the announcement, “FXO will provide money to FXOKorea monthly, and will also provide flight/hotel fees for foreign tournaments, and they will also be able to practice in the malaysia practice house. fOU will be wearing FXO’s uniform starting Week 6 of GSTL, and depending on record they will even be able to get a salary.” In addition to wearing FXO uniforms, the former fOu team will change their tag to FXO (FXOsc, FXOChoya, etc.).

In terms of management, “Choya will maintain his job as manager/headcoach of anything in Korea for FXO. Whereas unstable is now the permanent manager and headcoach for FXO abroad.” Also, “Players in all of FXO will be eligible for the team league based on internal rankings, and at the same time, the ex fOu house is made available to the rest of FXO. Thus FXO has 2 team locations available to them in Asia.”

While this is a surprise, it isn’t completely out of left field. Earlier this month, FXO announced that they would be sending ChoyafOu to MLG Anaheim as a way of saying ‘thank you’ for helping FXO while they are in Korea.

SK Gaming acquires NaDa and MC in oGs deal

July 15th, 2011

SK Gaming has recently struck a deal with oGs to have NaDa and MC represent them in foreign events. SK Gaming recently dismissed its current SC2 roster, and it seemingly was to make room for these new players. SK will surely hope to leave a bigger impact on the tournament scene now with two extremely succesful and consistent players on its roster.

Today the players MC and NaDa are joining the partnership with SK Gaming and we are really happy for them and thankful to SK for this big opportunity. I will do all the best I can to ensure that both players are bringing good results for the partnership of SK Gaming and oGs.

 

Alexander “TheSlaSH” Mueller, Managing director of SK Gaming, explained:

 

Adding those two names to the SK roster and entering this partnership with oGs is one of the most exciting steps SK has taken in the past few years. Ever since we signed Korean players for our RTS section, it has been a blast. We are more than happy to present those two to our community and we are hungry for StarCraft II titles!

 

Min-Sik “reis” Ko, player manager of SK Gaming, added:

 

I am very happy to welcome those two big names in SC:BW and SC2 history to SK Gaming. I know both privately and I know that both are really nice guys and very ambitious. It’s an honor for me to work with both from now on and thanks to oGs for the cooperation.

 

Source

NASL Season 2 Adds Heroes of Newerth

July 12th, 2011

This past weekend eSports fans were treated to the North American Star League finals which were held in Ontario, California. During the event, players and casters would take time out of their day to meet with fans and sign autographs. This is standard for these kinds of events, however one thing was out of place. The players and casters were signing autographs at a booth sponsored by S2 Games promoting their title Heroes of Newerth. Many spectators were scratching their heads wondering why S2 Games was promoting their title at a StarCraft II tournament.

Today it was all made clear when S2 Games announced that it has partnered up with the North American Star League to feature the game Heroes of Newerth during NASL Season 2.

Unfortunately there aren’t a lot of details, besides that the game will be featured. Will HoN be a new staple of NASL broadcasts? Will there be similar prize pool for HoN players? Does the NASL plan on bringing in other eSports?

Regardless of the answers to these questions, one thing is for sure; S2 Games wants in on eSports. To get an idea of how serious S2 Games is on the eSports front, check out this interview with Shashi Singh, S2 Games’ eSports manager.

GSL October Finals to be Held at Blizzcon

July 12th, 2011

This morning GOMtv announced that, in an effort to help grow eSports in the foreign community, it will be holding the GSL October Finals in Anaheim at Blizzcon.

In a post made by GOMtv’s Mr.Chae, the manager of the GSL stated: “Lots of people have made requests about it through Twitter and when I went to MLG Columbus, I came to believe that holding GSL final outside of Korea would be an excellent idea.” He went on to say, “I hope GSL becomes a festival for all the e-sports fans around the globe. I don’t want StarCraft 2 to become an e-sports title like SC BW which was excluded to people inside of Korea.”

This is obviously a huge event for western eSports, but it will be a monumental task for GOMtv. As Mr. Chae says in his post, “The decision was not easy to make. This will be our first time and therefore a great challenge for us to send our staff to produce and transmit from overseas. But it is worthy of a challenge for GSL and something that must be done at some point.” Good thing GOMtv is partnered with Blizzard, who will be “providing us assistance with GSL’s first oversea final.”

This is obviously a huge deal for Western eSports. Anybody who followed Brood War would tell you that the idea of a Korean League holding its finals in the U.S. would be preposturous. I guess this shows that with StarCraft II we’ve entered a new era of progaming, an era that focuses on eSports as a global movement.

The Devil Plays Protoss: Every Local Has a Story

July 11th, 2011

The Devil Plays Protoss: Every Local Has a Story

by Jacqueline Geller

Any opinions expressed in this article are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of compLexity Gaming or its parent company.

Edmonton search on TL

The “Devil Plays Protoss” article for last week was on a local LAN event that I refuse to attend. My friend, Mitchell “Gofarman” MacPherson, had a big problem with the article because he is both passionate about and sees the importance in supporting local eSports. He knows as well as I do that I love our local SC2 community, and I’m writing this week’s article to show some love as well as encourage others to get involved in their local community.

How the Edmonton SC2 community was started is beyond me, but when I became a involved, there was already a tight knit group of core members. I found the community in a basic way: by simply searching ‘edmonton’ on TeamLiquid. If I were to guess, I would say that our local community started slowly with people in the area connecting through TL and then at events over the years. There are old forum posts for OSL parties or people mentioning local SC on-goings in Edmonton dating back years.

The GSL January Code S Finals were the weekend before my phone interview for the Art Director position of the Handsome Nerd. The three-month long interview process is its own epic tale, but it did encourage me to reach out to my local community for whatever reason. The first event I attended was a party for the GSL finals hosted by Zack “kCaZ” Banks. If you ever meet me in person, one of the first things you’ll notice is that I’m awkward and can be incredibly shy. I was so nervous about going to the event and dragged my friend, Brett “Brettatron” Wells, along with me as a security blanket. I don’t know if I would have ever had the courage to attend that event without him.

With the help of the local SC2 community, my game has improved greatly as well. The community here genuinely cares about helping each other getting better.

Since that GSL party in January, my involvement with both the local and the North American SC2 community has been ever increasing. kCaZ hosts a party for every Code S finals, and I attend each one to consume unrealistic amounts of sugar, watch SC2 with the boys and drive home at a miserable hour of the morning. Although I’ve never competed in any of them, I’ve done my best to attend the monthly SC2 tournaments hosted by Edmonton Gamers. As mentioned in my “Devil Plays Protoss” article on SC2 coaching, Thomas “tQArchaic” MacPherson started hosting bi-weekly coaching sessions in Edmonton to allow players to network, learn a few new tricks and hang out which were a great tool for bringing the community together. I even hosted my own open house for MLG Columbus which was a surprisingly fun time.

With the help of the local SC2 community, my game has improved greatly as well. The community here genuinely cares about helping each other getting better. As much as SC2 friends from Twitter are great to play with and can help with improvement, there’s something to be said about having someone with you in person to help you overcome barriers in your play. It is also great having friends who want to help you improve. Tomasz “SolidWolf” Lang has put in more hours into helping me get better at this game than I’d like to admit. Travis “Clonze” Miller has the patience of a saint for putting up with my playing sometimes and especially for constantly encouraging me to play more. As much as everyone would like to see me laddering with more regularity, I know they’re proud of the progress in my game and will be there to help me out whenever I need it.

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Connect on Twitter

As much as I am loving getting involved in the NA SC2 community, the experiences I’ve had with the local community are priceless. I cannot encourage you enough to reach out and get involved. Search for your city on TL. Connect with local gamers on Twitter. Start your own LAN tournament, coaching event or tournament watching party. Even if the first event is attended by you, five friends and two people who saw your TL post, with the right encouragement and dedication, your community can grow. Who knows who will be at local events, what kind of friends you’ll make and what kind of experiences you’ll have? A community doesn’t grow overnight, but if you give it the right care, it will grow and great things can happen.

On a final note, the local SC2 community and its members have become a phenomenal source of support. Whether they know it or not, I am incredibly grateful for their constant encouragement of my SC2 endeavors. Sometimes, the community members drive me a bit crazy, but since I started my journey into SC2 community, they have been with me through everything, pushing and encouraging me along the way.

Boys, thank you for your support, and I can’t wait for what the future has in store for Starcraft2 in Edmonton.

GL HF

-Jacq

About the Author – Jacqueline Geller

After years of playing World of Warcraft, a friend introduced Jacqueline to Starcraft early last year. Jacqueline’s relationship with Starcraft started out slowly: a handful of casual dates, a little bit of flirting but nothing serious. She took her relationship with the game to the next level after BlizzCon 2010 where she experienced eSports magic first-hand and realized that Starcraft was the one. Despite being a mediocre player, she has been clambering the ladder at a glacial pace and has spent more time watching Starcraft online than she’d like to admit. In March, Jacqueline made the leap from eSports fan to eSports professional when she was hired by the Handsome Nerd as their Art Director, combining her design skills with her love of Starcraft. Since its start in April, Jacqueline has been a contributing writer for the North American Star League, writing coverage for Division 1. Offline, Jacqueline is a bookworm, a runner, a freeride snowboarder and has a Human Ecology degree with a Clothing and Textiles major.

View Jacqueline’s profile here.
Visit @jacquelinesg on Twitter

Four Events Add New Maps

July 11th, 2011

In what has been years in the making, four notable Counter-Strike 1.6 events, including ESL, Dreamhack, ESWC,  and eStars have all announced their plans to utilize two new maps in addition to the standard 4 or 5 map pool that fans have become acustomed to.

The events have decided to add de_mirage, a remake of the popular de_cpl_strike and de_forge, a remake of the classic, yet one-sided, de_cbble.

This brings the standard map pool to 7 maps:

  • de_dust2
  • de_nuke
  • de_train
  • de_inferno
  • de_tuscan
  • de_mirage
  • de_forge

Source: HLTV

More Koreans Announced for MLG Anaheim

July 11th, 2011

Today MLG and GOMtv revealed the final two Korean players who will be making the trip to California for MLG Anaheim. Joining SlayerS_BoxeR and MMA will be LG Cinama 3D Tournament champion MVPDongRaeGu and two time GSL Champion IMMVP. Both players are absolute monsters in game and will undoubtedly make a big splash with the foreign community.

But that’s not all. GOMtv’s Mr.Chae has also confirmed that the SlayerS team will also be sending both Alicia and Ganzi to fight their ways through the open bracket along side ChoyafOu.

To watch these titans duke it out with the foreign community, check out MLG Anaheim’s live stream on July 29th through the 31st.