The 2014 StarCraft II World Championship Series (WCS) is the 2014 edition of the StarCraft II World Championship Series, the highest level of esports competition for StarCraft II. The tournament series' Global Finals were won by South Korean professional player Lee "Life" Seung Hyun.

Format

The 2014 StarCraft II World Championship Series introduced some residency requirements for participation in the three different WCS Premier leagues, in reaction to Korean dominance across all WCS leagues. Korea's WCS Premier League returned to Global StarCraft II League (GSL) branding, with all three seasons fully run by GOMTV, marking the end of the Ongamenet Starleague (OSL). All WCS leagues featured three seasons of regular play, while the cross-regional Season Finals from 2013 did not return.

To support larger third party tournaments, tiers of non-WCS events that give out WCS points were created, for a total of three non-WCS tiers based on prize pool, qualification and invitation process, number of participants, language coverage, and other factors.

Seeding

All WCS-sanctioned events gave out points to players based on their ranking and the event's tier. The sixteen highest-ranking players received invites to the Global Finals, seeded into a bracket based on their rank.

Results

Global Finals

The WCS Global Finals were held at the Anaheim Convention Center in Anaheim, California as part of BlizzCon 2014. They featured bracket play in the round of sixteen, played out for the first time the week prior to the main event as part of BlizzCon Opening Week, with the quarterfinals onward at the convention center itself.

References


Final europea del StarCraft II World Championship Series BornToPlay

StarCraft II World Championship Series 2014 — StarCraft II

StarCraft II World Championship Series plans out 2014 Destructoid

StarCraft II World Championship Series 2017 announced with 2 million

2012 StarCraft II World Championship Series France Nationals