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World Championship map 2014

A map to the World Championship's qualification process

The 2014 Hearthstone World Championship was the first year of the Hearthstone World Championship.

Following regional playoffs to select players, the Hearthstone World Championship began on November 2nd/3rd, and concluded at BlizzCon 2014 on November 7th/8th. Matches were streamed live on the official Hearthstone twitch channel. The Championship featured $250,000 USD in total prize money.[1]

On November 8th, 2014, Firebat became the first Hearthstone World Champion, defeating Tiddler Celestial in the finals to claim $100,000 in prize money.

For general information and a list of other years of the Championship, see Hearthstone World Championship.

Structure[]

World Championship prizes 2014

The 2014 Championship was a tournament between 16 players, 4 from each region: Americas, Europe, China and Asia (Korea/Taiwan). The Asia contingent comprised 2 players from Korea, and 2 from Taiwan.

These 16 competitors were selected through regional qualifiers, before participating in the Championship at BlizzCon 2014.

Rewards[]

The 2014 Championship featured a total of $250,000 USD in prize money, awarded in the following scheme:

  • $100,000 for 1st place
  • $50,000 for 2nd place
  • $15,000 for 3rd and 4th places
  • $7,500 for 5th through 8th places
  • $5,000 for 9th through 16th places

World Championship[]

Hearthstone World Championship trophy 2014

The Hearthstone World Championship trophy

The 2014 World Championship was played in a best-of-five "Last Hero Standing" format, with 3 classes per player each match. Players losing a match had to switch to another deck, while the winner continued to use their current deck. Each player brought 3 decks formed from their own card collections. Play continued until one player had won three games.

The Championships began on November 2 and 3, streamed live on the official Hearthstone twitch channel, with the games played at ESL’s Burbank Studio. Further matches including the quarter-finals took place on Friday November 7, while the semi-finals and finals took place on Saturday November 8.[2] These matches will take place at BlizzCon, and will also be streamed live on the official Hearthstone twitch channel.

Prior to the beginning of the Championship itself, interviews were held with the final 16 competitors: Americas pt 1 - Americas pt 2 - Taiwan - Korea

On October 30th, Blizzard released parody Hearthstone cards online representing each of the final 16 competitors. The full list can be found here.

Round of 16[]

Americas Europe Korea/Taiwan China
Group A Firebat Kolento RenieHouR RunAndGun
Group B StrifeCro Greensheep Tom60229 Lu Xiaobu
Group C DTwo Kaor Kranich Tiddler Celestial
Group D Tarei NumberGuy FrozenIce Qiruo

Each of the 4 dual-tournament groups in the Round of 16 competed at Burbank Studio, while the deciding matches of each group were played at BlizzCon. Half of these players advanced to the Round of 8 bracket (also played at BlizzCon).[3]

Round of 8[]

NumberGuy, FrozenIce, Qiruo, RunAndGun, Greensheep, Tom60229, Lu Xiaobu and RenieHouR were knocked out during the Round of 16.

Group 1 Tiddler Celestial DTwo
Group 2 Tarei Kaor
Group 3 Kranich Firebat
Group 4 StrifeCro Kolento

Finals[]

Firebat - Hearthstone World Championship 2014

2014 Hearthstone World Champion Firebat holding his trophy

Hearthstone World Championship 2014 - Firebat crowd

Suffering the admiration of his peers

The quarter finals saw Kolento, the widely-held favourite to win the Championship, knocked out in a tight set by Kranich. StrifeCro, another strong contender, was also eliminated by the lesser-known DTwo. The other series saw Kaor narrowly defeated by the nascent Firebat, and Tarei knocked out by the feted Tiddler Celestial.

Firebat narrowly survived some stiff competition from DTwo in the semi-finals to make it the final series, with some memorable plays including some extreme double-LegacyGadgetzan Auctioneer Miracle Rogue card-drawing action. Tiddler Celestial made a clean sweep against Kranich to join Firebat.

The finals saw Firebat and Tiddler Celestial opening with a druid mirror, which Firebat was able to win. Tiddler Celestial's attempts to counter Firebat's druid deck with both priest and Handlock ultimately proved in vain, and Firebat stomped to victory in a straight-through 3-0 series.

Quarterfinals
  Tiddler Celestial
3
Tiddler Celestial
Tarei


  Tarei
1
  Kranich
3
Kranich
Kolento


  Kolento
2
  Kaor
1
Kaor
Firebat


  Firebat
3
  StrifeCro
2
StrifeCro
DTwo


  DTwo
3
Semifinals
  Tiddler Celestial
3
Tiddler Celestial
Kranich


  Kranich
0
  Firebat
3
Firebat
DTwo


  DTwo
2
Finals
  Tiddler Celestial
0
Tiddler Celestial
Firebat


  Firebat
3


Placings and prizes[]

Hearthstone World Championship 2014 - final moment

The final moment of the Championship

Hearthstone World Championship 2014 - Firebat crowd 2
Place Name Country Prize
Gold 1st Firebat USA $100,000
Silver 2nd Tiddler Celestial China $50,000
Bronze 3rd Kranich Korea $15,000
DTwo USA $15,000
5th-8th Tarei USA $7,500
Kolento Ukraine $7,500
Kaor Italy $7,500
StrifeCro USA $7,500
6th-16th NumberGuy Denmark $5,000
FrozenIce Taiwan $5,000
Qiruo China $5,000
RunAndGun China $5,000
Greensheep UK $5,000
Tom60229 Taiwan $5,000
Lu Xiaobu China $5,000
RenieHouR Korea $5,000

Regional Qualifiers[]

Americas and Europe[]

World Championship Americas Qualifiers

The Americas and Europe regions' qualification processes were identical, although each took place separately and featured separate eligible events.

The Americas and Europe regions each featured a regional Qualification Tournament, where 130 players competed to be selected for the World Championships.[1] Invitation to regional Qualification Tournaments was available through several means, including in-game performance in Ranked mode, and participation in a number of appointed events, community-run tournaments and special Last Call Tournaments held to determine the final invitees. The top 4 competitors from each region's Qualification Tournament were then invited to participate in the World Championships.

An official overview of the rules for the Americas and Europe Qualification Tournaments is provided below.[4] For the full official competition rules, see here: Americas, Europe.

Players cannot compete in multiple Qualifier Tournaments. If a player qualifies for multiple, they must choose one to compete in.[1]
The top 16 Legend players from each of the Ranked Play Seasons from April through August for the region will be invited to participate in that region's Hearthstone Qualifier Tournament.
Each player can only qualify for each region's Qualifier Tournament once. In cases where a player achieves a qualifying rank for a second time or is ineligible to compete in a region's Qualifier Tournament, the next highest ranking player will be selected to qualify for that Qualifier Tournament.
The top players from select community-run weekly tournaments held between April and August will be invited to participate in that region's Qualifier Tournament. [For further details, including a list of eligible community tournaments, see here.]
The top 3 players from select licensed events will also qualify for each region's Qualifier Tournament. Further details, including which events qualify, will be announced at a later date.
A Last Call Tournament will be held immediately prior to each region's Qualifier Tournament to determine any remaining Qualifier spots [up to a total of 130 for each region]. This Last Call Tournament will only be available to players who satisfy residency requirements for that region* [and have reached Legend rank in that region's Ranked Play at least once between April and August]. More details regarding this will be announced at a later date.
Seeding for each region's Qualifier Tournament will be based entirely on consistency of performance during the Ranked Play Seasons. Achieving a high rank multiple times will positively affect the player’s seeding during that region's Qualifier Tournament.
Each Qualifier Tournament will be best of five matches.
The top 4 players from each Qualifier Tournament will qualify for the Hearthstone World Championships at BlizzCon 2014.

* Countries that meet the America region's residency requirements are: United States, Canada, Mexico, Australia, Japan, Indonesia, Malaysia, New Zealand, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, Argentina, Brazil, Columbia, Costa Rica, and Chile.
* Countries that meet the Europe region's residency requirements are: Austria, Belgium, Belarus, Bulgaria, Croatia, The Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, The Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Russia, Serbia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, The Ukraine and The United Kingdom.

Phase 1[]

  • Phase 1 of the Americas Qualifier Tournament took place September 11-13
  • Phase 1 of the Europe Qualifier Tournament took place September 13-14
    • Phase 1 of the Europe Qualifier Tournaments was not streamed
The Americas and Europe Qualifier Tournaments will each have a total of 130 players and takes place in two phases. These 130 players will be matched against each other based on their cumulative placements in that region's Ranked Play rankings from April to August. The top 2 players with the highest cumulative placements will immediately advance to Phase 2 of the Tournament.
All matches will follow a best of five “Last Hero Standing” format. Each player will bring three different decks to each match. If a deck is defeated during a game of the match, that player must change to a different deck for the next game of the match.
Phase 1 of the tournament will consist of “The Constructed Arena Phase.”
  • Players will be matched against each other in a Swiss format based on their initial seeding.
  • If a player loses three matches (not games) in Phase 1, that player will be eliminated from the tournament.
  • If a player ends a round of the Swiss format tournament with a +5 match record, that player will advance to Phase 2. (Match records are determined as Wins minus Losses. 5-0, 6-1, or 7-2 records are all considered +5 match records.)
World Championship Bracket Breakdown

Phase 2 bracket breakdown

Phase 1 participants and standings[]

  • The full list of players who participated in the Americas Qualifier Tournament can be found here, and the standings at the end of phase 1 can be found here
  • The full list of players who participated in the Europe Qualifier Tournament can be found here, and the standings at the end of phase 1 can be found here

Players qualifying for phase 2[]

The following players survived phase 1 and went on to participate in phase 2 of their respective regionals.[5]

Americas Europe
hyped Neirea
Firebat Kolento
Chakki MCPnoisyboy
ThatsAdmirable Thefishou
tidesoftime Theude
StrifeCro Reynad
Tarei NumberGuy
DeathstarV3 TheFallen
Kuhaku Matthew
StUnNeR Frezzar
Deerjason MrYagut
Staz Lowelo
JAB Max
Chalk ThijsNL
Twisted Cupcake
DTwo Lifecoach

Phase 2[]

  • Phase 2 of the Americas Qualifier Tournament took place October 5-6, at the Hammerstein Ballroom, New York, New York
  • Phase 2 of the Europe Qualifier Tournament took place September 26-27, at the Ericsson Globe, Stockholm, Sweden
Phase 2 of the tournament is the “Final Qualifying Round.”
  • In Phase 2 of the tournament, only 16 players will remain from the initial 130 participants.
  • Players will be randomly seeded into four tournament groups of four.
  • The top two players from each group are placed in an eight-player single elimination bracket.
The top four players will advance to the Hearthstone World Championships at BlizzCon 2014!

Europe Phase 2 results[]

World Championship 2014 EU 2

Statistics for the Europe Qualifiers, Phase 2

Phase 2 of the Europe Qualifier Tournament saw Theude and MCPNoisyboy failing to attend, replaced by Phase 1 runners up Greensheep and Kaor.

TheFallen, Lifecoach, Cupcake, Max, Lowelo, Matthew, Reynad and Neirea saw defeat on day 1. Kolento, Greensheep, Kaor and NumberGuy ultimately went on to win places at the championship finals, defeating fellow day 1 survivors MrYagut, Frezzar, ThijsNL and thefishou.

Full results of EU Phase 2, day 1 can be found on DreamHack and on Hearthpwn. Day 2 results can be found here.

Players going to BlizzCon[]

Americas Europe
Firebat Kolento
StrifeCro Greensheep
DTwo Kaor
Tarei NumberGuy

Korea/Taiwan[]

  • Korea: 2 players were selected from the OnGameNet Hearthstone Tournament. For full details, see here
  • Taiwan: 2 players were selected from a Taiwan Qualifier Tournament, in association with the Taipei Computer Applications Show. For full details, see here.

Players going to BlizzCon[]

Korea Taiwan
RenieHouR Tom60229
Kranich FrozenIce

China[]

The China Qualifier Tournament featured the top 12 Legend rank players from the May and June seasons (6 from each season), the top 8 players from the Gold League tournament, and 9 players from licensed Chinese "competitive events".

For the full results of the China Qualifier Tournament, and videos of all matches, see here. The rules for the Qualifier can be found here.

Players going to BlizzCon[]

China
RunAndGun
Lu Xiaobu
Tiddler Celestial
Qiruo

Notes[]

2014 Hearthstone World Championship - stage

The stage for the game's BlizzCon finals reproduced the game's tavern location

Satisfying residency requirements is only required for competing in each region's Last Call Tournament. This means that players from any region are able to qualify for the Americas or Europe regions' Qualifier Tournaments through any of the other listed means, for example. However, players can only participate in one region's Qualifier Tournament.

This may be designed to allow players who traditionally play in a region other than that assigned to their home location to still qualify in the Qualifier Tournament for the region they usually play in, such as a player from Sweden who chooses to play on the Americas server. Such players would have developed their collection in their chosen region, and may not be able to compete at a comparable level in their 'home' region.

Viewer numbers[]

While the Regional Qualifiers saw a maximum of around concurrent 90,000 viewers, the Round of 16 games at Burbank Studio hit a new high point for World Championship (and possibly any Hearthstone tournament) so far, with more than 132,000 concurrent viewers watching the games on November 4th, 2014.[6]

The Championship's final series peaked at more than 135,000 viewers.[7] However, given that it took place at precisely the same time as similar tournaments for both StarCraft II and World of Warcraft, it is possible the figure could have been far higher.

References[]

External links[]

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