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The Dota Pro Circuit (DPC) was the professional league used in Dota 2, a competitive five-on-five video game.Active between 2017 and 2023, the DPC was organized by the game's developer, Valve and consisted of seasonal "Major" tournaments and Regional Leagues from North America, South America, Southeast Asia, China, Eastern Europe, and Western Europe.
For the 2023 season, the league altered the format to separate the 3v3 and 5v5 splits, as well as extending the tournament group play process and removing the additional seed week games. Central market games were moved to District E. [11] The 3v3 split featured a new double-elimination format for tournament and playoff bracket playoff. DUX ...
[1] [2] Teams from North America, South America, Europe and China travelled to Atlanta, Georgia for the tournament. [1] The US$2.6 million prize pool for the tournament was at the time the third-highest in eSports, behind the third and fourth iterations of Dota 2's The International and just slightly ahead of the League of Legends World ...
The International (TI) is an annual esports world championship for the five-on-five video game Dota 2.Produced by the game's developer Valve, the International is the final event of the Dota Pro Circuit (DPC) and consists of 20 teams: 12 based on final results from the DPC; six from North America, South America, Southeast Asia, China, Eastern Europe, and Western Europe regional leagues; and ...
The International 2019 (TI9) was the ninth iteration of The International, an annual Dota 2 world championship esports tournament. Hosted by Valve, the game's developer, the tournament followed a year-long series of awarding qualifying points, known as the Dota Pro Circuit (DPC), with the top 12 ranking teams being directly invited to the tournament, which took place in August 2019 at the ...
[2] Evil Geniuses were the defending champions, but failed to qualify after missing the Americas Playoffs and not having enough championship points. "Superpower" (stylized in all caps), performed by Julie and Natty of Kiss of Life and Mark Tuan of Got7 , was the official theme song for the tournament.
After the official release of the in early 2014, more Hearthstone tournaments followed, including events at EGX Rezzed and DreamHack Bucharest. [4] [5] BlizzCon 2014 featured a Hearthstone tournament with a $250,000 USD prize pool, the largest up to that point, and players from the Americas, Europe, and Asia qualified for the event through winning regional tournaments.
The Season 2 World Championship was held in early October 2012 in Los Angeles, California to conclude the US$ 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 US$ 2 million, US$ 1 million going to the ...