Dota 2 New Tournament Structure – Review

The truth is that change has become the most constant thing in life, and it happens in every aspect of our lives. The world is changing from time to time, and everything in the world tends to follow suit in the bid to catch up with others. E-sports have been growing in leaps and bounds in the last few years. Popular e-sports tournaments have become the rave of the moment. Most of the tournaments have garnered a very huge followership in all angles. The money involved has also increased tremendously, and people are learning how to bet online on e-sport. Some have become a huge franchise of their own and will need some important reviews from time to time.

p1

Just a few weeks before the Dota 2 tournament for 2017, the Valve group which is the body in charge came out with some structural changes to the tournaments. However, they announced that the changes rolled out will only take effect after the 2017 $20+ million tournaments in August.

The team made it clear that the tournaments of the coming years will involve an approach described as more organic. According to them, this decision is to ensure that the competitive ecosystem is enhanced and allowed to grow. This will be done in collaboration with the third party tournaments. The explanation of this according to Valve is that the game will not only have a few huge tournaments backed by it alone. Instead, there will be lots of smaller tournaments that

the game publishers will choose and sponsor. This, for them, will help in creating two different levels of competition with different sizes of prize money.

For valve, the minor events will come with a minimum prize of $150,000 with a small addition from Valve, while the major tournaments will be sponsored with $500,000 and an additional $500,000 from Valve. Another significant aspect of the structural changes is that the events will now have a qualifier process through which teams from different regions will participate. The regions include the CIS, EU, CN, SEA, SA and NA. In order to make the tournaments very smooth, and to avid anything clashing in terms of time and fixtures, Valve says that she will be the person to manage the schedule.

Meanwhile, if you are thinking that this is all there is to the changes, you are wrong, because the biggest of them all seem to be the tweaking that happened in the area of grading and rating. This is because a point system has been brought in. This is geared towards having a more open and more transparent method of getting teams into the tournaments.

The invites that were normally given out by the stakeholders in the tournament has been canceled. Rather, the teams to be invited are considered according to the point value system.  The players’ performance in the teams will earn them the points, and these points will stick with them because even if they transfer to other teams, they will still have the points.

The major tournaments will have more points on offer than the minor events. But the highest points will come from events that are closer to the year’s TI.

About the team’s score, this could only be contributed by only the topmost three player point values. This is to ensure that teams are not punished just because they brought in fresh hands into the team. The bringing in of new talents is actually encouraged every year. That is the reason behind this decision. If the teams’ overall points value is considered depending on the scores of the new players also, teams will not be ready to bring them in. anyone who knows how to bet online on e-sport will realize that this stunts the game in a very big way. The position of the teams against each other would be revealed in a leaderboard all through the year to get interested parties involved.

It would be recalled that the Dota 2 group and Valve has been criticized by people. They felt that chaos, burnout, and uncertainty are brought into the game through the method they have been handing off the invites before. The new review tends to encourage some level of consistency, and will also move away from just a few huge events during the year, to a lot of smaller events. The process is also made simpler by the points method.

p1

A good look at these reviews will show that they are all steps in the right direction. Of course, this ceases to be a tournament if you keep handing out invites as you wish. The qualifying process makes it a real tournament by giving more people the chance to fight their way into the ring. On the issue of the increase in the number of tournaments, this will give room for more teams and more players. It expands the frontiers of the game, and is a very good omen to the Dota 2 esports.