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This is an overview of all televised competitions and offline qualifiers for major international competitions that have taken place in South Korea and were mainly aimed at Korean competitors for Warcraft III: Reign of Chaos and Warcraft III: The Frozen Throne .
Competition | Year | Place | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1st | 2nd | 3rd | 4th | ||
Electronic Sports World Cup [1] | 2007 | Jang "Moon" Jae Ho | Park "Lyn" Jun | Dae Hui "FoV" Cho (3/4) | Deokman "Soccer" Yoon (3/4) |
MBCGame World War III [2] | 2007 | Jang "Moon" Jae Ho | Park "Lyn" Jun | Li "Sky" Xiaofeng | Kang Seo "ReiGn" Woo |
MBCGame World War II [3] | 2007 | Jang "Moon" Jae Ho | Li "Sky" Xiaofeng | Park Se "Swain" Ryong | Kim Dong "Gostop" Moon |
MBCGame World War I [4] | 2007 | Jang "Moon" Jae Ho | Manuel "Grubby" Schenkhuizen | Park chul "Shy" Woo | Hyo "FoCuS" Sub |
MBCGame World War III [4] | 2006 | Jang "Moon" Jae Ho | Dae Hui "FoV" Cho | Kim Sung "ReMinD" Sik | Park "Lyn" Jun |
Battle.Net Season 4 [5] | 2006 | Jae Wook "Lucifer" Noh | Jung Hee "Sweet" Chun | Kang Seo "ReiGn" Woo | Dae Hui "FoV" Cho |
MBCGame World War II [6] | 2006 | Jang "Moon" Jae Ho | Yoan "ToD" Merlo | Tae min "Zacard" Hwang | Kim Tae "Rainbow" In |
World Cyber Games [7] | 2006 | Lee Sung "SoJu" Duk | Kim Dong "Gostop" Moon | Jae Wook "Lucifer" Noh | Seok Ho "HomeRunBall" Bong |
KODE 5 [8] | 2006 | Lee Sung "SoJu" Duk | Park Se "Swain" Ryong | Park chul "Shy" Woo (3/4) | Kang Seo "ReiGn" Woo (3/4) |
MBCGame International League [9] | 2006 | Dae Hui "FoV" Cho | Jae Wook "Lucifer" Noh | Kim Sung "ReMinD" Sik | Lee "Check" Hyung Joo |
World Cyber Games [10] | 2005 | Dae Hui "FoV" Cho | Lee Sung "SoJu" Duk | Seok Ho "HomeRunBall" Bong | Ryong Lim "Ohjie" Dong |
World E-Sports Games III [10] | 2005 | Jae Wook "Lucifer" Noh | Jung Hee "Sweet" Chun | Kim Sung "ReMinD" Sik (3/4) | Kim Tae "Rainbow" In (3/4) |
MBCGame WarCraft League [9] | 2005 | Jang "Moon" Jae Ho | Park "Lyn" Jun | Dae Hui "FoV" Cho | Hong "FarSeer" Won |
MBCGame Champions Carnival [11] | 2005 | Jung Heon "Dayfly" Lee | Lee Jae "EvenStar" Pak | Jang "Moon" Jae Ho | Kang Seo "ReiGn" Woo |
Electronic Sports World Cup 2005 [12] | 2005 | Kang Seo "ReiGn" Woo | Ho Gyeong "EnDure" Lee | Jung Hee "Sweet" Chun | Jung Ki "Susiria" Oh |
MBC Land Cinema Prime League V [13] | 2005 | Jang "Moon" Jae Ho | Kim Hong "Romeo" Jae | Jang Yong "FreeDoM" Suk (3/4) | Lee Jae "EvenStar" Pak (3/4) |
ACON 5 [14] | 2005 | Kim Sung "ReMinD" Sik | Ho Gyeong "EnDure" Lee | Kim Dong "Gostop" Moon | Dae Young "NangChun" Kwak |
Ongamenet Invitational [11] | 2005 | Jang Yong "FreeDoM" Suk | Jang "Moon" Jae Ho | Kang Seo "ReiGn" Woo | |
World Cyber Games [15] | 2004 | Jang Yong "FreeDoM" Suk | Tae min "Zacard" Hwang | Jang "Moon" Jae Ho | Jae Wook "Lucifer" Noh |
MBC Daum Prime League IV [13] | 2004 | Lee Jae "EvenStar" Pak | Kang Seo "ReiGn" Woo | Park Se "Swain" Ryong (3/4) | Jung Hee "Sweet" Chun (3/4) |
MBC Sonokong Prime League III [13] | 2004 | Park Se "Swain" Ryong | Jang "Moon" Jae Ho | Jang Yong "FreeDoM" Suk | Kim Tae "Rainbow" In |
Electronic Sports World Cup [11] | 2004 | Dae Hui "FoV" Cho | Jung Hee "Sweet" Chun | Kim Dong "Gostop" Moon | |
ACON 4 [16] | 2004 | Jung Hee "Sweet" Chun | Kang Seo "ReiGn" Woo | ||
Blizzard Worldwide Invitational [17] | 2003 | Lee Jae "EvenStar" Pak | Kang Seo "ReiGn" Woo | ||
World Cyber Games [18] | 2003 | Lee "Check" Hyung Joo | Dae Young "NangChun" Kwak | Yun Seok "Topspeed" Kang | |
Electronic Sports World Cup [19] | 2003 | Daeho "Showtime" Kim | Jung Heon "Dayfly" Lee | Jojo | |
Sonokong OnGamenet II [11] | 2003 | Lee "Check" Hyung Joo | Jung Heon "Dayfly" Lee | Jung Hee "Sweet" Chun | |
MBC Sonokong Prime League II [13] | 2003 | Jang "Moon" Jae Ho | Jung Hee "Sweet" Chun | Lee "Check" Hyung Joo | Yim Hyo "Anyppi" Jin |
Sonokong OnGamenet I [11] | 2003 | Lee "Check" Hyung Joo | Kang Seo "ReiGn" Woo | Kim Tae "Rainbow" In | |
MBC HanbitSoft Prime League [13] | 2003 | Jung Heon "Dayfly" Lee | Lee "Check" Hyung Joo | Yim Hyo "Anyppi" Jin | starTRuth |
MBC Hanbitsoft II [13] | 2002/4 | Yim Hyo "Anyppi" Jin | Jung Heon "Dayfly" Lee | ReadyTo | JuJu |
MBC Hanbitsoft I [13] | 2002/4 | Shoo | Medusa | Gerrard | Joon Goo "Skelton" Bong |
OGN League IV [13] | 2002/4 | Daeho "Showtime" Kim | Jung Heon "Dayfly" Lee | ||
OGN League III [13] | 2002/4 | Gerrard | Jung Heon "Dayfly" Lee | ||
OGN League II [13] | 2002/4 | Jojo | Medusa | ||
OGN WarCraft Retail League [13] | 2002 | Medusa | Bertrand “Elky” Grosspellier |
Rankings for all Korean WarCraft III players throughout history.
# | Player | 4th | Current or last team | Setting | Status | Korean nickname | Global | |||
1 | Jang "Moon" Jae Ho | 7 | 2 | 2 | 0 | WeMadeFox | Night Elf | Active | The Fantasista | #3 |
2 | Dae Hui "FoV" Cho | 3 | 1 | 1 | 1 | mousesports | Undead | Inactive | Ghoul Master | #6 |
2 | Lee "Check" Hyung Ju | 3 | 1 | 1 | 1 | SK Gaming | Night Elf | Active | Fever Blood | None |
4 | Jung Heon "DayFly" Lee | 2 | 5 | 0 | 0 | World Elite | Orc | Inactive | The 'Nang-Man-Orc' | None |
5 | Jae Wook "Lucifer" Noh | 2 | 1 | 1 | 1 | U2Clan | Undead | Active | #7 | |
6 | Lee Jae "EvenStar" Pak | 2 | 1 | 1 | 0 | SK Gaming | Night Elf | Inactive | Elune's 'Evasion' | None |
7 | Lee "SoJu" Sung Duk | 2 | 1 | 0 | 0 | SK Gaming | Night Elf | Inactive | None | |
8 | Jang "FreeDoM" Yong Suk | 2 | 0 | 2 | 0 | Samsung Khan | Night Elf | Inactive | Destination Wizard | None |
9 | Daeho "Showtime" Kim | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | New Russia | Night Elf | Inactive | Hide Your Face | None |
10 | Kang "ReiGn" Seo Woo | 1 | 4 | 3 | 0 | SK Gaming | Undead | Inactive | Smart Scourge | None |
10 | Jung Hee "Sweet" Chun | 1 | 4 | 3 | 0 | Beijing eSport Team | Undead | Inactive | Devil Scourge | #5 |
12 | Jeon "Medusa" Ji Yoon | 1 | 2 | 0 | 0 | S/U/M/A Go | Human | Inactive | The Human King | None |
13 | Park "Swain" Se Ryong | 1 | 1 | 2 | 0 | Beijing eSport Team | Human | Inactive | The Human Master | None |
14 | Kim "ReMinD" Sung Sik | 1 | 0 | 3 | 0 | EHome | Night Elf | Active | #12 | |
15 | Yim "Anyppi" Hyo Jin | 1 | 0 | 1 | 1 | Samsung KHAN | Night Elf | Inactive | None | |
17 | Park "Gerrard" Oi Sik | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | Hanbit Stars | Night Elf | Inactive | None | |
18 | Shoo | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | Hanbit Stars | Unknown | Inactive | None | |
19 | Ho Gyeong "EnDure" Lee | 0 | 2 | 0 | 0 | Play.it | Orc | Inactive | None | |
20 | Kim "GoStop" Dong Moon | 0 | 1 | 2 | 0 | eSTRO | Undead | Inactive | Nerubian Lord | #17 |
21 | Tae min "Zacard" Hwang | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | Beijing eSport Team | Orc | Inactive | Ultimate Orc Warrior | #16 |
22 | Park "Lyn" Jun | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | Team DK | Orc | Active | Tough "Gruntist" | None |
23 | Kim "Romeo" Hong Jae | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | mousesports | Orc | Inactive | Orc-The-Handsome | None |
24 | Park "Shy" Chul Woo | 0 | 0 | 2 | 0 | Team GO | Night Elf | Inactive | None | |
25 | Kim "Rainbow" Tae In | 0 | 0 | 1 | 3 | mTw | Human | Inactive | Bandit Human | None |
Manuel "Grubby" Schenkhuizen is a Dutch professional eSports player. He competes in the real-time strategy games Warcraft III (WC3), Warcraft III: The Frozen Throne and Starcraft 2. As an Orc player, Schenkhuizen has won more than 38 LAN tournaments, of which six are World Championships. His command over the Horde placed him early enough among the elite of the WC3 players, while his clash with Jang "Spirit Moon" Jae-ho rewarded him with a legendary status among the fans of the game. Grubby has been known for being part of one of the most successful WC3 teams in history, namely the British 4Kings. Later teams include the Danish MeetYourMakers and the North American Evil Geniuses. Grubby is now a popular full-time streamer on Twitch.
SK Gaming is a professional esports organization based in Germany that has teams across the world competing in different titles. SK is particularly known for their success in Counter-Strike (CS) tournaments. SK's Brazilian CS team won the ESL One Cologne 2016 Major. SK currently has players and teams competing in League of Legends and Hearthstone. SK Gaming was founded in 1997 by a small group of Quake players in Oberhausen.
Defense of the Ancients (DotA) is a multiplayer online battle arena (MOBA) mod for the video game Warcraft III: Reign of Chaos (2002) and its expansion, The Frozen Throne. The objective of the game is for each team to destroy their opponents' Ancient, a heavily guarded structure at the opposing corner of the map, which is based on the "Aeon of Strife" map for StarCraft. Players use powerful units known as heroes, and are assisted by allied teammates and AI-controlled fighters. As in role-playing games, players level up their heroes and use gold to buy equipment during the mission.
The Electronic Sports World Convention (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.
Fredrik Johansson, better known by the pseudonym MaDFroG, is a retired Swedish Warcraft III player.
Jang Jae-ho is a South Korean professional gamer of the popular Blizzard real-time strategy games Warcraft III and StarCraft II. He is seen by many as the best Night Elf player in the world. Jang Jae-ho is a five time world champion and has won three televised national Korean WarCraft III Championships as well as four seasons of MBCGame's World War. He is particularly known for his excellent micromanagement and innovative strategies. He is often seen using strategies that later set the benchmark for many Night Elf players and was nicknamed the "5th Race" by Gametv.com. He has played and won more televised WarCraft III games than any other Warcraft III players. Jang Jae-ho is featured in the documentary film Beyond the Game. His prize money of Warcraft 3 exceed $648,380 which is the highest among all players in Warcraft 3 history. Moon transitioned to StarCraft II and without a team for a while, and later retired from professional gaming in order to fulfill South Korean military service requirements. Moon has returned to Warcraft 3 and is still actively playing.
Bertrand Grospellier, also known as ElkY, is a French poker player and former StarCraft: Brood War and Warcraft III esports player. He has won a World Poker Tour (WPT), a World Series of Poker (WSOP) bracelet and a European Poker Tour (EPT) title, giving him the Triple Crown. He is a partypoker Pro and he currently resides in Prague, Czech Republic. ElkY is ranked #77 on the Global Poker Index. In November 2015 ElkY returned to the esports scene by joining Team Liquid as a Hearthstone player.
This article lists the top four teams or players in each of the various eSports world championships of the 2006 season.
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 Lan section subcontracted out to Lanwar Inc.
Li "Sky" Xiaofeng, who also goes by the pseudonym "Sky" or "WE.Sky", is a Chinese former professional gamer of the popular Blizzard Entertainment real-time strategy game Warcraft III: The Frozen Throne. He played for the China-based World Elite team. He is considered as one of the best Human players in the game's history by World Cyber Games In the past few years he has been heavily involved with coaching Team WE's League of Legends team.
The expansion to the computer game Warcraft III: Reign of Chaos, known as The Frozen Throne, had an active professional competition scene, particularly in China, Germany, and South Korea. The game was featured at eSports festivals including the World Cyber Games, the Electronic Sports World Cup, the World e-Sports Games, the World Series of Video Games and the International E-Sports Festival. Outside of the professional circuit, the game had many active competitive circuits, with users at Battle.net ranging between the 70,000 and 100,000 at any given moment. In China, in which Warcraft III was extremely popular due to it being easily available through piracy, fans and users often used an alternative client due to the country's poor internet connections to the outside world. Around 3,000,000 copies of the game were sold in the country. 500,000 Chinese competed in the Chinese qualifiers for the 2006 World Cyber Games. The amount of prize money through the years has been significant with top players winning hundreds of thousands of dollars. As usual in competitive gaming, income for Warcraft 3 professional players flowed from various sources like team salaries from pro-gaming teams and sponsorships usually computer technology related. A famous example was Danish gaming organization known as Meet Your Makers which boasted of paying their players US$300,000 on an annual basis. Similar to older games with huge competitive scenes like Starcraft:Brood War and Counter-Strike 1.6, the popularity of Warcraft 3 steadily declined and towards the end of the previous decade almost all tournaments and players were Chinese. After 2010, with Starcraft 2, League of Legends, and Dota 2 being released and becoming popular, Warcraft 3 gave up its position as one of the prime eSports titles.
Yoan "ToD" Merlo is a French former professional player of the real-time strategy games Warcraft III and Starcraft II. In WarCraft III he played as the Human race and in StarCraft he played as Protoss. he was signed to the top esports team in the United Kingdom, Four-Kings, until November 7, 2007, when he decided not to renew his contract for unspecified reasons. He later explained in an interview that the dissatisfying results of the Four Kings team were the reason for his departure. After much speculation, Merlo unexpectedly joined the team Mousesports on December 1, 2007.
Serious Gaming is a professional gaming team based in Amsterdam, Netherlands. It was founded in 2004 by entrepreneur Bas Peeperkorn. Serious Gaming is known for their achievements in first-person shooter Deathmatch tournaments, most notably those by Quake series players Maciej "av3k" Krzykowski and Alexey "cypher" Yanushevsky.
The Intel Extreme Masters (IEM) is a series of international esports tournaments held in countries around the world. These Electronic Sports League (ESL) sanctioned events, sponsored by Intel, as of 2020 currently host events in Counter-Strike and Starcraft II. Other game titles were hosted in the past. The body that owns the league is Turtle Entertainment. The League has operated 14 seasons as of 2020. The season finals, with the largest prize pool, takes place in Katowice, Poland. Mid-season events are held in numerous cities around the globe, including Chicago, Shanghai and Sydney.
Lu Weiliang, who also goes by the pseudonym Fly100%, is a Chinese professional esports player of the real-time strategy game Warcraft III: The Frozen Throne. He previously been a member of Team Hacker, EHOME and Mousesports. He is considered one of the best Orc players. He had one of the longest playing careers of professional players of Warcraft III.
Wang Xuwen, who goes by the pseudonym "infi" is a Chinese professional esports player of the real-time strategy games Warcraft III: The Frozen Throne and Starcraft II. He previously served in team World Elite, Tyloo and VICI GAMING. He is considered one of the best Human players in the world. In 2008, World Elite was the best team of the year and Wang Xuwen was the core member. In 2009, Wang Xuwen helped World Elite obtain the champion of Warcraft III Champions League Season XIV. Additionally, Wang Xuwen also has many individual champion titles from various Premier Tournaments such as World Cyber Games and World e-Sports Games. From 2008 to 2011, the Chinese competitive scene for Warcraft III was dominated by 4 players, Lu "Fly100%" Weiliang, Li "Sky" Xiaofeng, Wang "Infi" Xuwen and Huang "TH000"Xiang. Wang "Infi" Xuwen and the other three were considered the four kings in Chinese Warcraft III. He played Starcraft II for a few years before retiring from competitive gaming.
Park "Lyn" June is a professional Starcraft II Terran player and former Warcraft III Orc player from South Korea who is currently playing for Team DK. Lyn was a successful Warcraft III player before transitioning to Starcraft II. He is the only player to have won almost all of the premier tournaments, including the World Cyber Games, Electronic Sports World Cup, BlizzCon and Intel Extreme Masters. The only two premier tournaments which he has never won are the World e-Sports Games and International E-Sports Festival, instead placing second in the World e-Sports Games in 2008 and 2010, and in the International E-Sports Festival in 2007. The total prize money Lyn has won playing Warcraft 3 is behind only Jang "moon" Jae-ho.
Michael LaBelle, is a web-based entertainer, video producer, and a professional FIFA player for New York Red Bulls, previously known by the pseudonyms michs09 and Dirty Mike. He is known mostly for providing tips via nontraditional methods through YouTube and Twitch outlets.