League of Legends: Season 2 World Championship explained

Season 2 World Championship
Sport:League of Legends
Year:2012
Location:Los Angeles, California
Start Date:October 4
End Date:October 13
Administrator:Riot Games
Venues:Galen Center
Teams:12
Purse:US$2,000,000
Champion:Taipei Assassins
Runner-Up1:Azubu Frost
Matches:31
Previous:2011
Next:2013

The League of Legends: Season 2 World Championship was an esports tournament for the multiplayer online battle arena video game League of Legends, held from October 4 to October 13, 2012, in Los Angeles, California. It was the second iteration of the League of Legends World Championship, an annual international tournament organized by the game's developer, Riot Games. The tournament was won by Taipei Assassins who defeated Azubu Frost 3–1 in the final.

Background

After Season 1, Riot announced that 5,000,000 would be paid out over Season 2. Of this $5 million, $2 million went to Riot's partners including the IGN Pro League and other major esports associations. Another $2 million went to Riot's Season 2 qualifiers and championship. The final $1 million went to other organizers who applied to Riot to host independent League of Legends tournaments.[1]

The Season 2 World Championship was held in early October 2012 in Los Angeles, California to conclude the 5 million season. Twelve qualifying teams from around the world participated in the championship, which boasted the largest prize pool in the history of e-sports tournaments at the time at 2 million, 1 million going to the champions, until The International 2013 beat it the next year. The group stage, quarterfinal, and semifinal matches took place between October 4 and 6. The grand final took place a week after, on October 13 in the University of Southern California's Galen Center in front of 10,000 fans, and were broadcast in 13 different languages.[2] In the grand final, Taiwan's professional team Taipei Assassins triumphed over South Korea's Azubu Frost 3-to-1 and claimed the 1 million in prize money.[3]

Over 8 million viewers tuned in to the Season 2 World Championship broadcast, with a maximum of 1.1 million concurrent viewers during the grand final, making the Season 2 World Championship the most watched esports event in history at the time.[4]

Controversies

Format

Several top teams missed out on the World Championship, including S1 champions Fnatic and Azubu Blaze. (Till 2022, Fnatic had only missed the Worlds for two times, the second was in 2016.)[5]

Cheating incident

During the quarterfinal round of the Season 2 World Championship, Jang Gun Woong of team Azubu Frost cheated by turning his head to look at the big screen which was positioned behind him. The screen, which presents an overview of the game, is meant to be watched only by the crowd, as it displays elements that are supposed to be hidden from the players inside the game. This led to Azubu Frost being fined 30,000.[6] [7] [8]

Technical issues

During the last quarterfinal best-of-three match on October 6 between European team Counter Logic Gaming EU and Chinese team Team WE, multiple technical difficulties occurred. Roughly twenty minutes into the second game, the network connection in the arena went down, terminating the live stream on Twitch and disconnecting all ten players from the game, forcing a remake of the game. Then, roughly sixty minutes into the third game, the network went down again. A final attempt was made at finishing the third game, but due to more network outages and technical issues, including a player's defective computer which had to be replaced, the last game and the following semifinals were rescheduled to be played on October 10 in the Galen Center, which was still undergoing construction work. The cause of the connection issues is uncertain, but is suspected to have been caused by faulty hardware.[9] [10] [11] This incident,which was called "拔网线"(lit:unplugging the network cable) by many Chinese LoL fans,was seemed as a conspiracy that denied Team WE from winning the championship, whom later won the IPL5 by beating Azubu Blaze, Moscow Five, CLG Europe and Fnatic.

Qualification

The Participants qualified through the Regional Finals:

Teams

Of the five first seeds of five regions (China, Europe, North America, South Korea, Taiwan/Hong Kong/Macau) a random drawing was done to determine which four teams skip the group stage

RegionPathTeamID
Starting in the Playoff stage
ChinaMost Circuit Points Team WEWE
EuropeRegional Finals Winner Moscow FiveM5
North AmericaRegional Finals Winner Team SoloMidTSM
TW/HK/MORegional Finals Winner Taipei AssassinsTPA
Starting in the Group stage
South KoreaSummer Champion Azubu FrostAZF
Regional Finals Winner NaJin SwordNJS
ChinaRegional Finals Runner-Up Invictus GamingIG
EuropeRegional Finals Runner-up SK GamingSK
Regional Finals 3rd Place CLG EuropeCLG.EU
North AmericaRegional Finals Runner-up Team DignitasDIG
Regional Finals 3rd Place CLG PrimeCLG.NA
Southeast AsiaRegional Finals Winner Saigon JokersSAJ

Venues

Los Angeles was selected as the host city for the World Championship.[12]

Los Angeles, California
Groups and QuarterfinalsSemifinals and Final
L.A. LiveGalen Center
Capacity: 2,300Capacity: 10,258

Group stage

Group B

Knockout stage

Final standings

PlaceTeamPrize money
1st Taipei Assassins$1,000,000
2nd Azubu Frost$250,000
3rd–4th Moscow Five$150,000
CLG Europe
5th–8th Invictus Gaming$75,000
NaJin Sword
Team SoloMid
Team WE
9th–10th CLG Prime$50,000
Saigon Jokers
11th–12th SK Gaming$25,000
Team Dignitas

Notes and References

  1. Web site: League of Legends Season 2 . February 26, 2014 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120115133917/http://competitive.na.leagueoflegends.com/competitive/season-2/introduction . January 15, 2012 . dead .
  2. Web site: The League of Legends Season 2 World Championship Live from the Galen Center (TV Movie 2012) - Plot Summary - IMDb. IMDb. October 8, 2014.
  3. Web site: Taipei Assassins triumph in 'League of Legends' world finals. NBC News. February 26, 2014.
  4. Web site: Riot: League of Legends Season 2 Championships most watched eSports event of all time. October 19, 2014.
  5. Web site: Archived copy . 2016-07-21 . 2016-08-22 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160822163456/https://gamurs.com/articles/the-greatest-tournament-of-all-time-the-storylines-of-ipl-5 . dead .
  6. Web site: League of Legends playoffs soured by allegations of cheating. PC Gamer. 8 October 2012. June 25, 2014. Sykes. Tom.
  7. Web site: League of Legends tournament cheaters fined $30,000. June 25, 2014. https://web.archive.org/web/20140510220409/http://massively.joystiq.com/2012/10/10/league-of-legends-tournament-cheaters-fined-30-000/. May 10, 2014. dead.
  8. Web site: World Playoffs - Rule Violations. June 25, 2014.
  9. Web site: League of Legends Season 2 playoffs Day 3 recap: Network failure suspends play, Riot postpone finale of CLG EU v. World Elite match, semifinals PCGamesN. October 16, 2014.
  10. Web site: League of Legends season two World Playoffs rescheduled - Destructoid. 10 October 2012. October 16, 2014.
  11. CLG.eu vs WE - Game 3 - Season 2 Quarter Finals - YouTube. Riot Games. October 12, 2012. 0:00. October 16, 2014.
  12. News: Sarkar . Samit . League of Legends Season 2 World Championships set for October 13 in Los Angeles . November 22, 2023 . . September 26, 2012.