World Series of Video Games

The World Series of Video Games (WSVG) was an international professional electronic sports competition. It held its first season in 2006, with competitions in six different games and six events held around the world including the finals of the event. The total prize purse of the season was US$750,000 which includes the $240,000 prize purse that was winnable at the finals. The WSVG was operated by Games Media Properties, an American gaming company founded in 2002 with the BYOC (Bring Your Own Computer) Lan section subcontracted out to Lanwar Inc.

The series was partially regarded as the continuation of the one million dollar 2005 CPL World Tour, as one of the founders of the WSVG as well as the major sponsor (Intel) of the tour left the Cyberathlete Professional League to help fund these series.[1]

Contents

Events

2006

The six events took place at the following times and places during the first season:

2007

The second season included events at the following times and places throughout 2007:

2006 Season

The 2006 Season was the WSVG's first season. International competitions were held for the PC games Counter-Strike, Quake 4, and Warcraft III. Xbox tournaments were also held for Project Gotham Racing 3, Ghost Recon: Advanced Warfighter, and Halo 2, but these were open to American participants only.

Participants included Johnathan 'Fatal1ty' Wendel (four-time CPL world champion and runner-up of the WSVG Quake 4 competition), Dae Hui 'FoV' Cho (veteran professional gamer, one time Electronic Sports World Cup champion and third place of the WarCraft III competition), Li 'Sky' Xiaofeng (twice World Cyber Games champion, considered strongest WarCraft III player of 2006 in a worldwide poll of gaming journalists[10]) and Team 3D (twice World Cyber Games champion team and runner-up of the WSVG Counter-Strike competition), as well as eventual champions Johan 'Toxic' Quick and eSport Player of 2006[11] Manuel 'Grubby' Schenkhuizen.

2007 season

WSVG's second season featured Fight Night Round 3, Guitar Hero II, Quake 4, Warcraft III and World of Warcraft as main circuit games. Counter-Strike, Call of Duty 2 and Gears of War were planned to also make appearances at a number of events.

The circuit's total prize purse was planned to be US$574,000, and travel funds were made available to a number of high-finishing participants.

Cancellation

In a surprise move on September 12, 2007, the WSVG main page announced that "Games Media Properties will no longer produce the World Series of Video Games"[12], and that the remaining three events (Los Angeles, London, and Sweden) were all cancelled. The reasons given were that revenue from the previous events were not enough to sustain the league, especially because of its extensive televising campaign and enormous event sizes.

The WSVG has stated that it wishes to continue expansion in online advertising and their network of websites.

World Champions

Game 4th
Counter-Strike[13] aTTaX

David "CHEF-KOCH" Nagel
Peter "Chucky" Schlosser
Navid "Kapio" Javadi
Jordan "Nanou" Champion
Roman "roman" Ausserdorfer

Team 3D

Josh "Dominator" Sievers
Mikey "Method" So
Griffin "shaGuar" Benger
Ron "Rambo" Kim
Salvatore "Volcano" Garozzo

fnatic

Oscar "Archi" Torgersen
Patrik "cArn" Sättermon
Harley "dsn" Orwall
Patrik "f0rest" Lindberg
Kristoffer "Tentpole" Nordlund

Pandemic

Chad "Daffsta" White
Garett "grt" Bambrough
Jonny "Ph33R" Schwan
Hoang "s0nNy" Tran
Mark "mastern00k" Torrez

Quake 4 Johan "Toxic" Quick Johnathan "Fatal1ty" Wendel Jason "Socrates_" Sylka Anton "Cooller" Singov
Warcraft III: The Frozen Throne Manuel "Grubby" Schenkhuizen Jung Hee "Sweet" Chun Dae Hui "FoV" Cho Dennis “Shortround" Chan

American Champions

References

  1. ^ "After the collapse of the 2006 CPL World Tour, the WSVG was announced and took over basically every prior scheduled World Tour stop. They strived to not repeat any mistakes the CPL had made in prior years, and also have a better plan to bring gaming to television." l- [1]
  2. ^ SK Gaming | Lanwar 2006, Team 3D Wins!
  3. ^ SK Gaming | u5.NilknarfLP wins Lanwar 2006
  4. ^ SK Gaming | DreamHack, NiP wins
  5. ^ SK Gaming | DreamHack, SK.Deadman wins!
  6. ^ SK Gaming | SK.tox wins Quake 4 tournament!
  7. ^ SK Gaming | WSVG China finished
  8. ^ GotFrag eSports - All Games News Story - Steve-o at WSVG London
  9. ^ SK Gaming | WSVG Finals Details
  10. ^ GGL - Sky, Lucifer, Toxic, av3k, archi, f0rest Players of 2006
  11. ^ eSport Awards 2006 Results
  12. ^ Gameriot | Home
  13. ^ "WSVG 2006 Finals Winners" - Amped e-Sports

External links