Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Team Liquid is a multi-regional professional esports organization based in the Netherlands that was founded in 2000. They signed their first professional players with the release of StarCraft II: Wings of Liberty. In 2012, Team Liquid acquired a North American Dota 2 team, marking their first venture into multi-genre management. [1]
StarCraft II: 2011–present Park Se-jun: Park Se-jun: South Korea: SK Telecom T1: Pokémon: ... Team Liquid: StarCraft II: 2010–2012 Fly100% Lu Weiliang: China ...
Following his participation in the Team Liquid StarLeague, Life made his debut in the Global StarCraft II League (GSL) Code S, the highest division of GSL, during GSL Season 4 in 2012. This season, Life achieved a feat known as "walking the Royal Road," a term used when a player secures a premier Korean title during their first qualification ...
Professional StarCraft II competition features professional gamers competing in Blizzard Entertainment's real-time strategy game StarCraft II.Professional play began following the game's initial release in 2010, as the game was the sequel to StarCraft, considered one of the first esports and the foundation of South Korea's interest and success in competitive gaming. [1]
Victor "Nazgul" Goossens (Dutch: ['vIktɔʁ 'xosəns]; born 3 May 1983) is a Dutch retired professional StarCraft: Brood War player. He is the founder and co-owner of the multiregional professional esports organization Team Liquid. [1] [2]
Jinro became the first non-Korean to reach the semi-finals in GSL Season 3. [2] Jinro then went on to reach the semi-finals a second time. So far, Jinro is the only foreigner to reach the Ro4 in GSL. [citation needed] In November 2010 he won the Major League Gaming Starcraft 2 tournament in Dallas. His nickname comes from the Korean distiller ...
Starcraft 2 1v1: Liquid`Jinro: FnaticMSi.TT1 PainUser Liquid`Tyler Halo Reach 4v4: UoR SyA ... StarCraft 2 1v1: CMStorm Polt Quantic HyuN Liquid`HerO Alliance NaNiwa
StarCraft was the very first game to have been accepted into the World Cyber Games tournament, and had a tournament at their events every year until it was replaced by StarCraft II in 2011. [59] In Korea, prominent StarCraft competitions included the Ongamenet Starleague, the MBCGame StarCraft League, and Proleague. Finals for these league ...