乐派英雄联盟宝盒 world championship

LoL 2016 World Championship Betting Odds | Odds SharkFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The League of Legends World Championship is the annual professional
world championship tournament hosted by
and is the culmination of each season. Teams compete for the champion title, the 70 pounds (32 kg) Summoner's Cup, and a US$1,000,000 champion prize. In , the finals were watched by 60 million people, breaking 's finals' viewer record. The tournament has been widely praised for its ceremonial performances, while receiving attention worldwide due to its multiple dramatic and emotional series, and 's tributary moments. A donation of US$2 million were also raised through the sales of Worlds 2017 Championship Ashe skin, reaching out to different charities and receiving commendations.
LA 2024, which is overseeing the Los Angeles bid for the 2024 Summer Olympics was inspired by the growing success of League of Legends World Championship and is considering to plan and include
if they win the bid. Casey Wasserman, the chairman of LA 2024, suggested using technology used in certain segments of League of Legends Worlds such as augmented reality and virtual reality to make the Olympics more accessible to a younger demographic.
The League of Legends World Championships has gained tremendous success and popularity, making it among the world's most prestigious and watched tournaments (surpassing even conventional sports tournaments), as well as the most watched video game in the world. Due to its success, eSports scenes became prominent and widely seen as a potential Olympics event, already being included as a medal event in .
currently holds the highest record of wins, with three world championship wins (, 2016).
Riot Games, which owns League of Legends, commissioned the winner's trophy known as the Summoner’s Cup. Riot specified that it should weigh 70 pounds, though the actual weight of the finished cup was reduced so it would not be too heavy to lift in victory. MacTavish, having already created the Season Two World Championship Cup in 2012, crafted the winners' trophy for the 2014 games.
Finals location
Semi-finalists
Peak viewership
against All authority
11,000,000
14,000,000
14,700,000
To be determined
The Season 1 Championship in June 2011, held at
in Sweden, featured a US$100,000 tournament prize pool. 8 teams from North America, Southeast Asia and Europe participated in the championship. Over 1.6 million viewers watched the streaming broadcast of the event, with a peak of over 210,000 simultaneous viewers in the final matches.
Prize money
LaMiaZeaLoT
Enrique Cede?o Martinez
Maciej Ratuszniak
Lauri Happonen
Manuel Mildenberger
Peter Meisrimel
against All authority
Paul Boyer
Damien Lorthios
Maik Wallus
Jerome Negretti
TheRainMan
Christian Kahmann
Brian Wyllie
Shan Huang
A group picture of the , the champions of season 2.
After Season 1, Riot announced that US$5,000,000 would be paid out over Season 2. Of this $5 million, $2 million went to Riot's partners including the
and other major
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.
The Season 2 World Championship was held in early October 2012 in
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, with US$1 million going to the champions. The group stage, quarter-final, and semi-final matches took place between October 4 and 6. The grand final took place a week after, on October 13 in the 's
in front of 10,000 fans, and were broadcast in 13 different languages. In the grand final, 's professional team
triumphed over 's Azubu Frost 3-to-1 and claimed the US$1 million in prize money.
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.
Prize money
Wang June Tsan
Kuan-Po Alex Sung
Kurtis Lau Wai-kin
Cheng Bo-Wei
Chen Hui Chung
$1,000,000
Azubu Frost
CloudTemplar
Park Sang-myeon
Lee Hyun-woo
Jung Min-sung
Jang Gun-woong
Hong Min-gi
yellowpete
Mike Petersen
Stephen Ellis
Henrik Hansen
Peter Wüppen
Mitch Voorspoels
Evgeny Mazaev
Danil Reshetnikov
Alexey Ichetovkin
Evgeny Andryushin
Edward Abgaryan
A group picture of , the champions of season 3.
The Season 3 World Championship was held in late 2013 in . 14 teams from North America, Korea, China, Southeast Asia, Europe, and one of the emerging League of Legends territories measured up at the World Playoffs after having qualified through their regional competitions. The grand final were held in the
on October 4, 2013, where Korean team
defeated the Chinese team Royal Club, granting them the title of the Season 3 world champions, the Summoner’s Cup and the $1 million prize.
The Season 3 World Championship grand final broadcast on October 4 was watched by 32 million people with a peak concurrent viewership of 8.5 million. The numbers once again beat the previous records for esports viewership.
Prize money
Jung Eon-yeong
Bae Seong-ung
Lee Sang-hyeok
Chae Gwang-jin
Lee Jeong-hyeon
$1,000,000
Liu Junjie
Pun Wai Lo
Jian Zihao
Pak Kan Wong
Paul Boyer
Lauri Happonen
Enrique Cede?o Martinez
Johannes Uibos
NaJin Black Sword
Gu Bon-taek
Cho Jae-geol
Kim Sang-moon
Kim Jong-in
Jang Nu-ri
The 2014 World Championship featured 16 teams competing for a $2.13 million prize pool, with 14 teams qualifying from the primary League of Legends regions (China, Europe, North America, Korea and Taiwan/SEA) and two international wildcard teams.
The group stage began September 18 in
and concluded September 28 in
with eight teams advancing to the bracket stage. The bracket stage started on October 3 in , South Korea, and concluded on October 19 with the grand final hosted at the 45,000-seats , where South Korean team
beat the Chinese team Star Horn Royal Club to become the 2014 League of Legends world champions.
American band
contributed the theme song "" for the tournament, and performed live on the grand final stage in South Korea. All games were made available for free via live streaming.
The 2014 World Championship games were streamed live by 40 broadcast partners, and cast in 19 languages. The grand final was watched by 27 million people, with concurrent viewership peaking at over 11 million viewers.
Prize money
Jang Hyeong-seok
Choi In-kyu
Heo Won-seok
Gu Seung-bin
Cho Se-hyeong
$1,000,000
Choi In-seok
Jian Zihao
Yun Kyung-sub
Gao Diping
Guo Junliang
Hu Zhenwei
Choi Cheon-ju
Lee Da-yoon
Bae Eo-jin
Kim Hyuk-kyu
Lee Gwan-hyung
After the 2014 season,
introduced a number of changes to competitive League of Legends. The number of teams in the
was increased from 8 to 10 in both the North America and Europe regions. A second Riot Games official international tournament was announced, the Mid-Season Invitational, which took place in May 2015, and featured a single team from each major region and one international wildcard. Additionally, starting from 2015, all teams are required to field a head coach in their competitive matches, who will stay on stage and speak with the team via voice-chat in the pick-ban phase of the game. This change makes the head coach an officially recognized member of the team.
The 2015 World Championship concluded the 2015 season, and was held at several venues across Europe in October 2015. Like the 2014 World Championship, the 2015 World Championship was a multi-city, multi-country event.
2015 Worlds was won by , their second title, as they won the 2013 Worlds too. SKT Top laner
was named the tournament
The finals were watched by 36 million people, with a peak concurrent viewership of 14 million viewers.
Prize money
Easyhoon (Substitute)
Jang Gyeong-hwan
Bae Seong-ung
Lee Sang-hyeok
Bae Jun-sik
Lee Jae-wan
Kim Jeong-gyun
Lee Ji-hoon
$1,000,000
NoFe (Coach)
Song Kyung-ho
Lee Ho-jin
Lee Seo-haeng
Kim Jong-in
Kang Beom-hyeon
Jeong No-chul
Deilor (Coach)
Heo Seung-hoon
Kim Ui-jin
Fabian Diepstraten
Martin Larsson
Louis Sevilla
Hermit (Coach)
Paul Boyer
Maurice Stückenschneider
Enrique Cede?o Martínez
Jesper Svenningsen
Alfonso Aguirre Rodriguez
Tadayoshi Littleton
The various stages of the 2016 Worlds were held throughout the
in , , , and the finals in .
The Groups of teams were decided through a live Group Draw Show on September 10. The games were played on the 6.18 patch of the game with Yorick disabled and Aurelion Sol was disabled for days 1-3. There were 16 teams and 4 groups that consisted of 4 teams. The group stage was Bo1 and the top two teams from each groups would advance to the Knockout Stage. The Knockout Stage was Bo5 and the #1 vs #2 teams from each group would face each other in the bracket. The total prize pool was $6,700,000 USD and it was spread among the teams. The first place (SK Telecom T1) took $2,680,000, the second team (Samsung Galaxy) took $1,005,000, the third place (ROX Tigers) took $502,500. The rest of the prize pool was distributed among the 5th-16th places.
SKT won 3-2 vs. Samsung Galaxy in the 2016 World Championship Finals, with Faker winning the MVP award, and along with teammate Bengi captured their third world championship in four seasons (, 2016), cementing SKT's legacy as the most dominant League of Legends team in the world.
The finals were watched by 43 million people, with a peak concurrent viewership of 14.7 million viewers, breaking 2015's finals' viewer records.
Prize money
KkOma (Coach)
Blank (Substitute)
Lee Ho-seong
Bae Seong-ung
Lee Sang-hyeok
Bae Jun-sik
Lee Jae-wan
Kim Jeong-gyun
Kang Sun-gu
$2,680,000
Edgar (Coach)
Wraith (Substitute)
Lee Sung-jin
Kang Chan-yong
Lee Min-ho
Park Jae-hyeok
Jo Yon-gin
Choi Woo-bum
Kwon Ji-min
$1,005,000
Pr0lly (Coach)
(Substitute)
Andrei Pascu
Marcin Jankowski
Yoo Sang-wook
Konstantinos-Napoleon Tzortziou
Oskar Bogdan
Neil Hammad
Ale? Kně?ínek
NoFe (Coach)
Cry (Substitute)
Song Kyung-ho
Han Wang-ho
Lee Seo-haeng
Kim Jong-in
Kang Beom-hyeon
Jeong No-chul
Hae Seong-min
This section needs expansion. You can help by . (July 2017)
The 2017 League of Legends World Championship series started in September 2017, and is scheduled to conclude in November 2017. It is held in 4 different locations throughout China:
(Play-In and Groups),
(Quarterfinals),
(Semifinals), and
(Finals). It is played on patch 7.18, with the newest champion Ornn being disabled. Patch 7.18 is slightly older than patches 7.19 and 7.20, which are the new standard for online matches during the September - November period. The most notable difference being the stronger Ardent Censer support meta with patch 7.18.
A total of 24 teams participated in the tournament: 3 teams from South Korea, China, North America, Europe and Taiwan/Hong Kong/M 1 team from Brazil, Latin America North, Latin America South, Japan, Oceania, Turkey, Southeast Asia and CIS/R and 1 team from the Wildcard region with the highest rank finish at the 2017 Mid-Season Invitational (GPL in Southeast Asia, due to Gigabyte Marines from Vietnam prevailing there, and Vietnam received 1 more slot for VCSA's second seed to participate GPL 2017 summer split).
Samsung Galaxy reversed the previous year's result and defeated SK Telecom T1 3-0 in the 2017 World Championship Finals. Park "Ruler" Jae-hyuk, the AD carry of Samsung, was named MVP.
The finals were watched by 60 million people, breaking 2016's finals' viewer records. The tournament is widely praised for its high quality of plays and amazing ceremonial performances, while receiving worldwide attention for its dramatic and emotional series. It is currently the most watched tournament in League of Legends' history, and is lauded as one of the best.
Prize Pool: $2,350,000 (Riot) + ~$2,650,000 Fan Contribution = ~5 million as of October 7.
Prize money
Edgar (coach)
Haru (substitute)
Lee Sung-jin
Kang Chan-yong
Lee Min-ho
Park Jae-hyeok
Jo Yon-gin
Choi Woo-bum
Kang MinSeung
$1,540,000
KkOma (Coach)
Blank (Substitute)
Heo Seunghoon
Han Wang-ho
Lee Sang-hyeok
Bae Jun-sik
Lee Jae-wan
Kim Jeong-gyun
Kang Sun-gu
Firefox (Coach)
Y1HAN (Substitute)
Yuanhao Li
Zihao Jian
Senming Shi
Dingxiang Huang
Homee (Coach)
Zero (Substitute)
Ke Chang Yu
Xiang Ren Jie
Su Han Wei
Jin Sung Jun
Nam Dong Hyun
Kim Nam-hoon
Yoon Kyung Sub
Allen, Eric Van. . Compete.
. The Rift Herald.
Dwan, Hannah (19 October 2017). . The Telegraph.
. ESPN.com.
News, Blasting. . Blasting News.
. Dexerto.
. pcgamer.
. Mail Online.
Walker, Alex. .
. ESPN.com.
. Fortune.
Wong, Joon Ian. . Quartz.
Myers, Maddy. . Compete.
. www.lolesports.com.
. The New York Times. October 12, 2014 – via New York Times.
. Riot Games. January 28, 2013. Event occurs at 0:06 2014.
Tom Senior (April 8, 2011). . PCGamer.com 2014.
John Funk (June 23, 2011). .
Farokhmanesh, Megan (October 5, 2013). . Polygon 2014.
Magrino, Tom.
. Lazygamer.net 2015.
Allen, Eric Van. . Compete.
. The Rift Herald.
Dwan, Hannah (19 October 2017). . The Telegraph.
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News, Blasting. . Blasting News.
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. Mail Online.
and competitive video gaming
. Sports Innovation Lab.
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