Electronic Sports World Cup

The Electronic Sports World Cup is an international professional gaming championship. Every year winners of national qualifier event around the world earn the right to represent their country in the ESWC Finals. The event has won a lot of praise for its organisation and ability to put on a good show for spectators.

The ESWC was originally created by a French company called Ligarena who previously hosted smaller LAN events in France under the name of LAN Arena. In 2003 Ligarena decided to do something on a larger scale and the ESWC was born. In 2005, Ligarena became Games-Services. In 2009, ESWC is bought by another French company called Games-Solution who became the owner of the brand.

The grand finals and masters of ESWC have had a total prize purse of 1,721,000 € from 2003 till 2010.[1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9]

Contents

ESWC 2003

The 2003 ESWC saw around 150,000 players narrowed down to just 358 players from 37 different countries who would attend the finals at the Futuroscope near Poitiers in France. The total prize fund for the event was € 156,000.

2003 4th
Counter-Strike[10] [9] zEx SK Gaming* GoodGame
Warcraft III: Reign of Chaos[11] Alborz "HeMaN" Haidarian Fredrik "MaDFroG" Johansson Antoine "FaTC" Zadri Yoan "ToD" Merlo
Unreal Tournament 2003[12] Christian "GitzZz" Hoeck Björn "zulg" Sunesson Jonathan "Fatal1ty" Wendell Aaron "Lotus" Everitt
Quake 3[11] Anton "Cooller" Singov John "ZeRo4" Hill Alexey "LeXeR" Nesterov Pelle "fazz" Söderman
Counter-Strike Female[13] SK Gaming Femina Bellica Denmark Girls To Hell Angels

ESWC 2004

The 2004 finals were once again held at the Futuroscope, roughly 400 finalists from 41 countries attended to compete for a €210,000 prize purse.[14]

2004 4th
Counter-Strike[15] Titans spiXel Virtus.pro The Stomping Grounds
Warcraft III: The Frozen Throne[16] Dae Hui "FoV" Cho Fredrik "MaDFroG" Johansson Alborz "HeMaN" Haidarian Jung Hee "Sweet" Chun
Unreal Tournament 2004[17] Maurice "BurningDeath" Engelhardt Christian "GitzZz" Hoeck Laurens "Lauke" Pluijmakers Nicola "Forrest" Geretti
Quake 3[18] Sweden United States Russia Belarus
Counter-Strike Female[19] Team all 4 one Ladies.AMD New4|eibo Les Seules
Pro Evolution Soccer 3[20] Samad "Samsam" Baism Marcel "Xside" Waulke Chen Zhiliang Wang Zaoxing
Painkiller[21] Sander "Vo0" Kaasjager Alessandro "Stermy" Avallone Michael "Dr.Moerser" Froese Jonathan "Fatal1ty" Wendell

ESWC 2005

In 2005 the venue was moved to a larger place: The Carrousel du Louvre in Paris. The total prize payout was again raised this time to 300,000 euros.

2005 4th
Counter-Strike[22] compLexity SK Gaming* Mousesports Lunatic-hai
Warcraft III: The Frozen Throne[23] Manuel "Grubby" Schenkhuizen Andrey "Deadman" Sobolev Seo Woo "ReiGn" Kang Li "Sky" Xiaofeng
Unreal Tournament 2004[24] Michael "winz" Bignet Markus "Falcon" Holzer Laurens "Lauke" Pluijmakers Michele "DevilMC" Esposito
Quake 3[25] Anton "Cooller" Singov Paul "czm" Nelson Magnus "fojji" Olsson Jason "socrates" Sylka
Counter-Strike Female[26] Girls Got Game Ladies.AMD x6tence.AMD Beat off The Best
Pro Evolution Soccer 4[20] Badr "ArabianJoker" Hakeem Mike "Mike" Moreton Raúl "Legre" Alegre "Zhao_Hang"
Gran Turismo 4[27] Pierre "Snake" Lenoire Thibault "Carter" Lacombe Arnaud "Lucky" Lacombe Jean-Philippe "Phenicks" Lacombe

ESWC 2006

The event took place at Palais omnisports de Paris-Bercy and the total payout this time was around 300,000 euros.

2006 4th
Counter-Strike[28] Made in Brazil fnatic ALTERNATE aTTaX Team 3D
Warcraft III: The Frozen Throne[29] Jae Wook "Lucifer" Noh Ivica "Zeus[19]" Markovic Xiaofeng "Sky" Li Zdravko "Insomnia" Georgiev
Quake 4[30] Michael "winz" Bignet Alexey "Cypher" Yanushevsky Ivo "Forever" Lindhout Anton "Cooller" Singov
Counter-Strike Female[31] Beat off the Best Les Seules Hacker Victory SK Gaming*
Pro Evolution Soccer 5[32] Bruce "Spank" Grannec Moustafa "Myto" Menadi Yasin "Jinxy" Koroglu Song "Song" Xianzhi
Gran Turismo 4[33] Pierre "Snake" Lenoire Thibault "Carter" Lacombe Arnaud "Lucky" Lacombe Daniel "Holl01" Holland
Trackmania Nations[34] Dorian "Carl" Vallet Manuel "Baiy000r" Baier Pascal "gaLLo" Jäger Adrien "Dridrione" Auxent

ESWC 2007

The ESWC 2007 took place at Paris Expo Porte de Versailles, Paris, from July 5 to July 8. There was a complete expo for this event, called "Mondial du Gaming".

Games featured were Counter-Strike, Warcraft III: The Frozen Throne, Quake 4, Counter-Strike Female, Pro Evolution Soccer 6 and Trackmania Nations.

750 finalists attended from 51 countries which competed for a prize purse of USD 180,000$.[5]

2007 4th
Counter-Strike[28] PGS.PokerStrategy.com Team NoA fnatic * Made in Brazil
Warcraft III: The Frozen Throne[29] Lee Sung "SoJu" Duk Olav "Creolophus" Undheim Manuel "Grubby" Schenkhuizen Jun "Lyn" Park
Quake 4[30] Maciej "av3k" Krzykowski Anton "Cooller" Singov Michael "winz" Bignet Mikael "PURRI" Tarvainen
Counter-Strike Female[31] SK Gaming ** EHONOR Be The Best Unfinished
Pro Evolution Soccer 6[32] Sven "S-Butcher" Wehmeier Bruce "Spank" Grannec Mike "El Matador" Linden Almeida "Bubaloo" Jorge
Trackmania Nations[34] Freek "XenoGear" Molema Dorian "Carl" Vallet Simon "Lign" Ferreira Charles "selrahc37" Devillard

ESWC 2008

The 2008 Electronic Sports World Cup took place in San Jose, California, USA,[35] from August 25 to August 27 during the bigger NVISION 08 event, moving the tournament away from France for the first time. The disciplines announced were Counter-Strike (open and female), Warcraft III: The Frozen Throne, Trackmania Nations Forever, Defense of the Ancients and Quake 3.[36] Pro Evolution Soccer was not included because the global Konami authority hasn't given its support to the competition.[37] The prize purse was around 200,000 USD.

2008[38] 4th
Counter-Strike PGS.MYM [39] eSTRO fnatic Mousesports
Warcraft III: The Frozen Throne Du-Seop "WhO" Chang Li "Sky" Xiaofeng Zhuo "TeD" Zeng Seo Woo "ReiGn" Kang
Quake 3 Alexey "Cypher" Yanushevsky Marcel 'K1llsen' Paul Shane "Rapha" Hendrixson Fan "Jibo" Zhibo
Counter-Strike Female SK Gaming emuLate EHonor MeetYourMakers
Trackmania Nations Kalle "Frostbeule" Moertlund Videkull Freek "XenoGear" Molema Simon "Lign" Ferreira Dorian "Carl" Vallet
Defense of the Ancients Zenith KingSurf MeetYourMakers Evil Geniuses

Masters of Paris

Paris wasn't abandoned for the ESWC. In place of the ESWC, there was the Masters of Paris, during the Mondial du Gaming from July 4 to July 6 and took place at the Palais omnisports de Paris-Bercy. The same disciplines took place during this Masters offered additional qualificative slots for ESWC Grand Final in San Jose. All winners won a slot to participate in the ESWC Grand Final and hotel accommodation for San Jose, free of charge.

2008 Masters of Paris[40] 4th
Counter-Strike Mortal Teamwork fnatic Mousesports Roccat
Warcraft III: The Frozen Throne Jae Ho "Moon" Jang Li "Sky" Xiaofeng Yoan "ToD" Merlo Du-Seop "WhO" Chang
Quake 3 Alexey "Cypher" Yanushevsky Magnus "fox" Olsson Maciej "av3k" Krzykowski Fan "Jibo" Zhibo
Counter-Strike Female Les Seules SK Gaming Emulate forZe
Trackmania Nations Simon "Lign" Ferreira Freek "XenoGear" Molema Kalle "Frostbeule" Mörtlund Videkull Pedro "Moriah" Barbosa
Defense of the Ancients SK Gaming The Elder Gods MeetYourMakers Evil Geniuses

Masters of Athens

Masters of Athens have been announced as well from October 17 to October 18 during the Athens Digital Week. Disciplines featured will be Quake III and Warcraft III: The Frozen Throne, the tournament will have a $30.000 prize purse and the champions will qualify for ESWC 2009.

2008 Masters of Athens 4th
Warcraft III: The Frozen Throne June "Lyn" Park Jae Ho "Moon" Jang Yoan "ToD" Merlo Du-Seop "WhO" Chang
Quake 3 Shane "Rapha" Hendrixson Sebastian "Spart1e" Siira Maciej "av3k" Krzykowski Alexey "Cypher" Yanushevsky

ESWC 2009

Masters of Cheonan

2009 Masters of Cheonan[41] 4th
Counter-Strike fnatic SK-Gaming Mousesports Alchemists
Warcraft III: The Frozen Throne Pedro "LucifroN" Moreno Durán June "Lyn" Park Weiliang "Fly100%" Lu Dmitriy "Happy" Kostin
StarCraft: Brood War Gregory "IdrA" Fields Oleksii "White-Ra" Krupnik Ji-Soo "ToSsGirL" Seo Minglu "Super" Zhang
Special Force ITBANK Razer eSTRO ITBANK teenager Razer END
FIFA Online 2 Kim Jung-Min Lee Woo-Young Yang Jin-Mo

ESWC 2010

The results of the 2010 Electronic Sports World Cup which took place at Disneyland Paris featuring a €213,500 prize purse {Game Solution(or DIP-Organisation) took over the ESWC At 2010}.[42]

2010 4th
Counter-Strike Natus Vincere SK Gaming Dadi Frag eXecutors
Warcraft III: The Frozen Throne June "Lyn" Park Jae Ho "Moon" Jang Sung sik "ReMinD" Kim Happy
Quake Live Rapha av3k Anton "Cooller" Singov Dahang
Counter-Strike Female SK Gaming fnatic Millenium Mousesports
TrackMania Bergie Moria YoYo Carl
Defense of the Ancients EHOME DTS MeetYourMakers Nirvana
FIFA 2010 Astank Pires Andrei Quinzas
Need for Speed: Shift Steffan Husky Sliver lecho
Super Street Fighter IV Jwong Marn Luffy Sun Woo "Infiltration" Lee
Guitar Hero 5 Banobi CNB.Luckysonic vVv Smokyprogg kyu hwan "TeamTest" Han

ESWC 2011

The finals for the 2011 season took place in Paris, France from October 21 to October 25.[43] The event marked the transitional replacement and additions of several cornerstone tournament titles. This included the replacement of Warcraft III: The Frozen Throne with StarCraft II: Wings of Liberty,[44] as well as the replacement of Defense of the Ancients with Dota 2.[45] Additionally, this marked the first year in which Counter-Strike: Source was present.[46]

2011 4th
StarCraft II: Wings of Liberty Ilyes "Stephano" Satouri Grzegorz "MaNa" Komincz Jung-Hoon "MarineKing" Lee Manuel "Grubby" Schenkhuizen
Counter-Strike SK-Gaming Natus Vincere mousesports AGAiN
Counter-Strike Female UBINITED Millenium Moscow Five Gamerhouse
Counter-Strike: Source Team VeryGames CKRAS Gaming CheckSix Gaming Team Dynamic
TrackMania Forever Erik 'hakkiJunior' Leštach Marek 'tween' Pacher Yoann 'YoYo' Cook Tim 'Spam' Lunenburg
Dota 2 Natus Vincere EHOME GamersLeague monkeybusiness
FIFA 11 Kiki "King_KiKi" Cigojener Rafael "Ralfitita" Riobó Sánchez Francisco "Quinzas" Cruz Koen "k0entj92" Weijland

Medal Tally

Throughout the ESWC finals the medal tally looks as followed (as of ESWC 2010):

# Countries Total
1 France 13 8 13 34
2  United States 9 6 6 21
3  South Korea 9 6 3 18
4  Sweden 8 13 6 27
5  Germany 4 4 8 16
6  Netherlands 4 1 4 9
7  Poland 4 2 2 8
8  Denmark 3 3 5 11
9  Russia 2 3 5 10
10  Ukraine 2 2 0 4
11  Belarus 2 1 0 3
12  Brazil 1 4 0 5
13  China 1 4 7 12
14  Spain 1 1 2 4
15  Norway 1 1 0 2
16  Slovakia 1 1 0 2
17  Singapore 1 0 0 1
18  Saudi Arabia 1 0 0 1
19  Austria 0 2 0 2
20  Portugal 0 1 1 2
21  Italy 0 1 0 1
22  Croatia 0 1 0 1
23  Malaysia 0 1 0 1
24  Romania 0 1 0 1
25  Belgium 0 0 1 1
26  Mexico 0 0 1 1
27  Serbia 0 0 1 1

External links

Official Media Partners

Notes

  1. ^ Electronic Sports World Cup
  2. ^ [ESWC] Electronic Sports World Cup
  3. ^ Electronic Sports World Cup (ESWC 2005) Official Website
  4. ^ Electronic Sports World Cup (ESWC 2006) Official Website
  5. ^ a b Eswc.Com
  6. ^ MYM - Moon 'revival' in ESWC Masters - Beta
  7. ^ http://www.eswc.com/document/23.html
  8. ^ http://www.esreality.com/?a=post&id=1611222
  9. ^ http://www.eswc.com/grand-final/
  10. ^ Electronic Sports World Cup
  11. ^ a b Electronic Sports World Cup
  12. ^ Electronic Sports World Cup
  13. ^ Portail d'informations Ce site est en vente!
  14. ^ [ESWC] Electronic Sports World Cup
  15. ^ [ESWC] Electronic Sports World Cup
  16. ^ [ESWC] Electronic Sports World Cup
  17. ^ [ESWC] Electronic Sports World Cup
  18. ^ [ESWC] Electronic Sports World Cup
  19. ^ [ESWC] Electronic Sports World Cup
  20. ^ a b [ESWC] Electronic Sports World Cup
  21. ^ [ESWC] Electronic Sports World Cup
  22. ^ Electronic Sports World Cup (ESWC 2005) Official Website
  23. ^ Electronic Sports World Cup (ESWC 2005) Official Website
  24. ^ Electronic Sports World Cup (ESWC 2005) Official Website
  25. ^ Electronic Sports World Cup (ESWC 2005) Official Website
  26. ^ Electronic Sports World Cup (ESWC 2005) Official Website
  27. ^ Electronic Sports World Cup (ESWC 2005) Official Website
  28. ^ a b Electronic Sports World Cup (ESWC.COM)
  29. ^ a b Electronic Sports World Cup (ESWC.COM)
  30. ^ a b Electronic Sports World Cup (ESWC.COM)
  31. ^ a b Electronic Sports World Cup (ESWC.COM)
  32. ^ a b Electronic Sports World Cup (ESWC.COM)
  33. ^ Electronic Sports World Cup (ESWC 2006) Official Website
  34. ^ a b Electronic Sports World Cup (ESWC.COM)
  35. ^ Electronic Sports World Cup (ESWC.COM)
  36. ^ Electronic Sports World Cup (ESWC.COM)
  37. ^ Eswc.Com
  38. ^ SK Gaming - Esport, Counter-Strike, Warcraft III, World of Warcraft, FIFA, DotA, Call of Duty, Starcraft
  39. ^ http://www.sk-gaming.com/content/18271-ESWC_trophy_belongs_to_PGS_not_MYM
  40. ^ SK Gaming - Esport, Counter-Strike, Warcraft III, World of Warcraft, FIFA, DotA, Call of Duty, Starcraft
  41. ^ SK Gaming - Esport, Counter-Strike, Warcraft III, World of Warcraft, FIFA, DotA, Call of Duty, Starcraft
  42. ^ http://www.eswc.com/news/89/eswc-2010-results
  43. ^ Ruiz, Brent (2011-04-07). "ESWC 2011 at Paris Games Week Oct. 21-25". ESFI World. http://esfiworld.com/news/eswc-2011-paris-games-week-oct-21-25. Retrieved 2011-10-24. 
  44. ^ Wong, Terrence (2011-08-31). "ESWC cancels WC3 event, opens registration". GosuGamers. http://www.gosugamers.net/warcraft/news.php?id=16654. Retrieved 2011-10-24. 
  45. ^ Mcghee, Mick (2011-09-23). "DotA 2 At ESWC". Cadred. http://www.cadred.org/News/Article/158206/. Retrieved 2011-10-24. 
  46. ^ Sheffield, Brett (2011-02-24). "ESWC 2011 with CS, adds CS:S". ESEA. http://eseanews.com/index.php?s=news&d=comments&id=9234. Retrieved 2011-10-24.