The Electronic Sports World Cup (ESWC) is an international professional gaming championship. Every year, winners of national qualifier events around the world earn the right to represent their country in the ESWC Finals. The event has been praised for its organisation and ability to put on a good show for spectators.
The ESWC was originally created by a French company, Ligarena, that had previously hosted smaller Local Area Network (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 was bought by another French company, Games-Solution, which became the owner of the brand.
In 2012, Oxent, an agency specialising in electronic sports, acquired the ESWC.[1]
The grand finals and masters of ESWC have had a total prize purse of €1,721,000 between 2003 and 2010.[2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10]
Overview
The first Electronic Sports World Cup was held in 2003 with a total of 358 participants from 37 countries and a prize purse of €150.000.[11] To participate in the tournament, competitors had to place in their country's national qualifier.[12] By 2006, the event had grown to 547 qualified participants from 53 countries and had a prize purse of $400,000 US.[13] The event also featured the first competition with a game specifically made for it: TrackMania Nations.
2003
The 2003 ESWC saw around 150,000 players narrowed down to just 358 players, from 37 different countries, who attended the finals at the Futuroscope near Poitiers in France. The total prize fund for the event was €156,000.
- SK Gaming representing Sweden in the Counter-Strike competition
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.[18]
2005
In 2005, the venue was moved to a larger facility: The Carrousel du Louvre in Paris. The total prize payout was again raised - this time to €300,000.
*SK-Gaming's, secondary, Danish squad
2006
The 2006 event took place at the Palais omnisports de Paris-Bercy and the total prize payout was approximately €300,000.
2006 |
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4th |
Counter-Strike[32] |
Made in Brazil |
fnatic |
aTTaX |
Team3D |
Warcraft III: The Frozen Throne[33] |
Jae Wook "Lucifer" Noh |
Ivica "Zeus[19]" Markovic |
Li "Sky" Xiaofeng |
Zdravko "Insomnia" Georgiev |
Quake 4[34] |
Michael "winz" Bignet |
Alexey "Cypher" Yanushevsky |
Ivo "Forever" Lindhout |
Anton "Cooller" Singov |
Counter-Strike Female[35] |
Beat off the Best |
Les Seules |
Hacker Victory |
SK Gaming* |
Pro Evolution Soccer 5[36] |
Bruce "Spank" Grannec |
Moustafa "Myto" Menadi |
Yasin "Jinxy" Koroglu |
Song "Song" Xianzhi |
Gran Turismo 4[37] |
Pierre "Snake" Lenoire |
Thibault "Carter" Lacombe |
Arnaud "Lucky" Lacombe |
Daniel "Holl01" Holland |
Trackmania Nations[38] |
Dorian "Carl" Vallet |
Manuel "Baiy000r" Baier |
Pascal "gaLLo" Jäger |
Adrien "Dridrione" Auxent |
- SK Gaming representing USA in Counter-Strike female
2007
The 2007 ESWC took place at the Paris expo Porte de Versailles, Paris, from July 5 to July 8. There was a complete expo for this event, called "Mondial du Gaming" (World of Gaming).
The games featured were: Counter-Strike, Warcraft III: The Frozen Throne, Quake 4, Counter-Strike female, Pro Evolution Soccer 6 and Trackmania Nations.
750 finalists, from 51 countries, competed for a prize purse of $180,000 US.[6]
2008
Leaving France for the first time, the 2008 Electronic Sports World Cup took place in San Jose, California, USA,[39] from August 25 to August 27 during the bigger "NVISION 08" event. The disciplines announced were: Counter-Strike (open and female), Warcraft III: The Frozen Throne, Trackmania Nations Forever, Defense of the Ancients and, Quake 3.[40] Pro Evolution Soccer was not included because the global Konami authority had not given its support to the competition.[41] The prize purse was approximately $200,000 US.
Masters of Paris
In place of the ESWC, the "Masters of Paris" was held from July 4 to July 6, during the "Mondial du Gaming", taking place at the Palais omnisports de Paris-Bercy. The same disciplines took place during this Masters and offered additional qualifying slots for ESWC Grand Final in San Jose. All winners won a slot to participate in the ESWC Grand Final, and hotel accommodation in San Jose, free of charge.
Masters of Athens
"Masters of Athens" was held from October 17 to October 18, 2008, during the Athens Digital Week. Disciplines featured were Quake III and Warcraft III: The Frozen Throne. The tournament had a $30.000 prize purse, and the champion qualified for ESWC 2009.
2009
Masters of Cheonan
2010
The 2010 "Electronic Sports World Cup", which took place at Disneyland Paris, featured a €213,500 prize purse. Games Solution (or DIP-Organisation) took over the ESWC in 2010.[46]
2011
This 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,[47] as well as the replacement of Defense of the Ancients with Dota 2.[48] Additionally, this event marked the first and only year in which Counter-Strike: Source was present. It was also the last year that would include Counter-Strike 1.6, which was the main attraction of the tournament for many years, and the last remaining game that had been featured in the inaugural ESWC event.[49]
2011 |
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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 (Ex6TenZ, NBK, RpK, shox, SmithZz) |
CKRAS Gaming (3k2, cajun, FeTiSh, h0lm, wantz) |
CheckSix Gaming (DaZeD, frozt, neiL, Steel, tck) |
Team Dynamic (adreN, ANGER, AZK, Legend, PEX) |
TrackMania Forever |
Erik "hakkiJunior" Leštach |
Marek "tween" Pacher |
Yoann "YoYo" Cook |
Tim "Spam" Lunenburg |
Dota 2 |
Natus Vincere |
EHOME |
GamersLeague |
monkeybusiness |
FIFA 11 |
Adrien "Aquino" Viaud |
Rafael "Ralfitita" Riobó Sánchez |
Francisco "Quinzas" Cruz |
Koen "k0entj92" Weijland |
2012
2012 |
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4th |
StarCraft II: Wings of Liberty |
Grzegorz "MaNa" Komincz |
Park "fOrGG" Ji Soo |
Ilyes "Stephano" Satouri |
Grégory "NeOAnGeL" Ferte |
Dota 2 |
Natus Vincere |
Team Dignitas |
Shiba Gaming |
Imaginary Gaming |
ShootManiaStorm |
Colwn |
Eclypsia |
GamersLeague |
287 |
TrackMania Nations Forever |
Tim "Spam" Lunenburg |
Marek "Tween" Pacher |
Carl-Antoni "CarlJr" Cloutier |
Adrien "Ned" Le Berre |
FIFA 13 |
Bruce "Spank" Grannec |
Ovidiu "Ovvy" Patrascu |
Julien "Juliianooo" Dassonville |
Abdulaziz "Alshehri" Alshehri |
Tekken Tag Tournament 2 |
Bae "Knee" Jae Min |
Park "Nin" Hyun Kyu |
Leonard "lion art" Y.H |
Eze "StarScream" Izundu |
Counter-Strike: Global Offensive |
Ninjas in Pyjamas (Get_Right, f0rest, Xizt, friberg, Fiflaren) |
Team VeryGames (Ex6TenZ, NBK, RpK, SmithZz, kennyS) |
Area 51 (DaZeD, sgares, semphis, PineKone, tck) |
n!faculty (asmo, kirby, smn, disruptor, qk-mantis) |
Counter-Strike: Global Offensive Girls |
UBINITED (Ali, jso, potter, missharvey, sapphiRe) |
Team ALTERNATE (beyoNd, n i c i, kathi, iReNe, zAAz) |
Reason Gaming (Abiii, Kaat, aNi-, Sephi, Salah) |
Imaginary Gaming (AmandiiNe, Cla, Kly, PrincesS, TuEuSee'e) |
TrackMania 2: Canyon |
Kasperi "klovni" Aaltonen |
Florian "oNio" Roschu |
Ludovic "Ludo" Marquet |
Côme "Cocow" Marquet |
2013
- Date : From October 30 to November 3, 2013
- Venue : Paris Games Week, Porte de Versailles, Paris, France
- Official disciplines : Counter-Strike: Global Offensive on PC (5v5), ShootMania Storm on PC (3v3), Call of Duty: Black Ops 2 on Xbox 360 (4v4), Dota 2 on PC (5v5), FIFA 14 on Xbox 360 (1v1), Trackmania Stadium on PC (1v4)
- Production : Archives | Photos | Videos
2014
2015
ESWC 2015 COD
ESWC 2015 CSGO
- Date : From July 9 to July 12, 2015
- Venue : Mondial des Jeux Loto Québec, Montreal, Quebec[50]
2015 PGW
Medal Tally
Throughout the ESWC finals the medal tally is as follows (as of ESWC 2014):
External links
Official Media Partners
References
- ↑ http://www.eswc.com/en/info/oxent-acquires-the-eswc/12
- ↑ Electronic Sports World Cup
- ↑ [ESWC] Electronic Sports World Cup
- ↑ Electronic Sports World Cup (ESWC 2005) Official Website
- ↑ Electronic Sports World Cup (ESWC 2006) Official Website
- 1 2 Eswc.Com
- ↑ MYM - Moon 'revival' in ESWC Masters - Beta
- ↑ http://www.eswc.com/document/23.html
- ↑ http://www.esreality.com/?a=post&id=1611222
- ↑ http://www.eswc.com/grand-final/
- ↑ "ES World Cup 2003". cyberfight.org. 7 September 2003. Retrieved 8 Jul 2013.
- ↑ "Electronic Sports World Cup". Eswc.Com. Retrieved 2012-06-04.
- ↑ Phil Elliott (5 Jul 2006). "Electronic Sports World Cup hands out $400,000". GameSpot. Retrieved 8 Jul 2013.
- ↑ Electronic Sports World Cup
- 1 2 Electronic Sports World Cup
- ↑ Electronic Sports World Cup
- ↑ Portail d'informations Ce site est en vente!
- ↑ [ESWC] Electronic Sports World Cup
- ↑ [ESWC] Electronic Sports World Cup
- ↑ [ESWC] Electronic Sports World Cup
- ↑ [ESWC] Electronic Sports World Cup
- ↑ [ESWC] Electronic Sports World Cup
- ↑ [ESWC] Electronic Sports World Cup
- 1 2 [ESWC] Electronic Sports World Cup
- ↑ [ESWC] Electronic Sports World Cup
- ↑ Electronic Sports World Cup (ESWC 2005) Official Website
- ↑ Electronic Sports World Cup (ESWC 2005) Official Website
- ↑ Electronic Sports World Cup (ESWC 2005) Official Website
- ↑ Electronic Sports World Cup (ESWC 2005) Official Website
- ↑ Electronic Sports World Cup (ESWC 2005) Official Website
- ↑ Electronic Sports World Cup (ESWC 2005) Official Website
- 1 2 Electronic Sports World Cup (ESWC.COM)
- 1 2 Electronic Sports World Cup (ESWC.COM)
- 1 2 Electronic Sports World Cup (ESWC.COM)
- 1 2 Electronic Sports World Cup (ESWC.COM)
- 1 2 Electronic Sports World Cup (ESWC.COM)
- ↑ Electronic Sports World Cup (ESWC 2006) Official Website
- 1 2 Electronic Sports World Cup (ESWC.COM)
- ↑ Electronic Sports World Cup (ESWC.COM)
- ↑ Electronic Sports World Cup (ESWC.COM)
- ↑ Eswc.Com
- ↑ SK Gaming - Esport, Counter-Strike, Warcraft III, World of Warcraft, FIFA, DotA, Call of Duty, Starcraft
- ↑ http://www.sk-gaming.com/content/18271-ESWC_trophy_belongs_to_PGS_not_MYM
- ↑ SK Gaming - Esport, Counter-Strike, Warcraft III, World of Warcraft, FIFA, DotA, Call of Duty, Starcraft
- ↑ SK Gaming - Esport, Counter-Strike, Warcraft III, World of Warcraft, FIFA, DotA, Call of Duty, Starcraft
- ↑ http://www.eswc.com/news/89/eswc-2010-results
- ↑ Wong, Terrence (2011-08-31). "ESWC cancels WC3 event, opens registration". GosuGamers. Retrieved 2011-10-24.
- ↑ Mcghee, Mick (2011-09-23). "DotA 2 At ESWC". Cadred. Retrieved 2011-10-24.
- ↑ Sheffield, Brett (2011-02-24). "ESWC 2011 with CS, adds CS:S". ESEA. Retrieved 2011-10-24.
- ↑ Bagdocimo, Rebeca (July 10, 2015). "Cyber-athletes unite in Montreal for the Electronic Sports World Cup". LA Times.
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