2020_League_of_Legends_World_Championship

2020 <i>League of Legends</i> World Championship

2020 League of Legends World Championship

Tenth League of Legends World Championship, held in Shanghai


The 2020 League of Legends World Championship was an esports tournament for the multiplayer online battle arena video game League of Legends. It was the tenth iteration of the League of Legends World Championship, an annual international tournament organized by the game's developer, Riot Games. It was held from 25 September to 31 October in Shanghai, China.[2] Twenty-two teams from eleven regions qualified for the tournament based on their placement in regional circuits, such as those in China, Europe, North America, South Korea and Taiwan/Hong Kong/Macau/Southeast Asia, with ten of those teams having to reach the main "groups" event via a play-in stage.

Quick Facts Tournament information, Sport ...

"Take Over" was the tournament's theme song, put together by Henry Lau, Max Schneider, and A Day to Remember's lead vocalist Jeremy McKinnon.[3]

Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic and other issues

The COVID-19 pandemic, which was mainly confined to China in January and early February 2020, affected the multi-city hosting format that was present previously. On 1 August, Riot Games announced the dates and location of the event, with all stages taking place in Shanghai through the use of an "isolation bubble" environment.[4]

In September 2020, Riot Games announced that due to travel restrictions, two teams from VCS of Vietnam would not participate in the tournament.[5]

During the 2020 Worlds Group Draw Show, it was revealed that PSG Talon's members "River" and "Tank" would be unable to attend the play-in stage due to delayed visas and quarantine issues,[6] and that Hsiao "Kongyue" Jen-tso and Chen "Uniboy" Chang-chu would be loaned from ahq eSports Club to replace them. The organization confirmed this in an official announcement the next day, and further stated that "Unified" would also be unable to participate in the first half of the play-in stage for the same reason. Chen "Dee" Chun-dee was loaned from Machi Esports to replace Unified.[7]

Qualified teams and rosters

Qualified teams

As the two Vietnamese teams (the Champion's Team Flash and Runner-up's GAM Esports of VCS Summer) are unable to participate, the third seed team from South Korea (LCK) will be promoted to start in the main group stage, as they were previously dropped to the play-in stage. The qualification format for North America and Europe changed with teams directly qualifying based on the results from their respective summer playoffs. Due to the merger of Taiwan/Hong Kong/Macau (LMS) and the Southeast Asian (LST) professional leagues into a single league (PCS) and have been reduced number of Worlds' spots from 4 to 2, Europe (LEC) will have another direct spot in the group stage and China (LPL) will have an additional spot in the play-in stage for the regional finals runner-up.[8]

For the pool, the Main Group stage's pool #2 with 8 teams like as last year will be split to two pools #2 and pool #3, with 4 teams each pool. Qualified teams from Play-in stage will be drawn as pool #4. The Play-in stage's pool #3 in last year will be merged into pool #2, increased to 6 teams.[9]

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Venues

Shanghai was the city chosen to host the competition.[2][10] Almost all matches were played at Shanghai Media Tech Studio without spectators due to the COVID-19 pandemic, while the final match was held at Pudong Football Stadium.

More information Shanghai, China, Shanghai ...

Play-in stage

  • Venue: Shanghai Media Tech Studio.

Play-in groups

  • Date and time: 25–28 September, began at 16:00 CST (UTC +08:00).
  • Ten teams are drawn into two groups, with five teams in each group.
  • Single round robin, all matches are best-of-one.
  • If teams have same win–loss record at the end of play-ins, they play a tie-breaker match. A two-way tie is not broken by the results of the head-to-head game those teams played, however the team that won in the head-to-head gets side selection in the tiebreaker game.[11]
  • The top team automatically qualifies for the main event's group stage, while 2nd to 4th-place of each group advance to the play-in knockouts and 2nd-place receives a bye to Round 2. The bottom team is eliminated.

Group A

More information Pos, Team ...
Source: LoL Esports
Rules for classification: 1) Winning percentage; 2) Tiebreaker match(es); 3) Total game victory time[lower-alpha 1]

Group B

More information Pos, Team ...
Source: LoL Esports
Rules for classification: 1) Winning percentage; 2) Tiebreaker match(es); 3) Total game victory time[lower-alpha 1]

Play-in knockouts

  • Date and time: 29–30 September
  • King of the hill format with two branch. Single-elimination. All matches are best-of-five.
  • The 3rd-place and 4th-place teams from the same group play each other in Round 1. Winner will play against with the 2nd-place team from other group in Round 2.
  • The upper-place team chooses the side for all odd-numbered games, while the lower-place team chooses the side of even-numbered games.
  • The winners of the Round 2 in each branch advances to the main event's group stage.
Round 1Round 2
A2 Legacy Esports0
B3 Rainbow70B4 LGD Gaming3
B4 LGD Gaming3
B2 Unicorns of Love3
A3 SuperMassive Esports3A3 SuperMassive Esports0
A4 MAD Lions2

Source: LoL Esports

Group stage

  • Venue: Shanghai Media Tech Studio.
  • Date and time: 3–11 October, began at 16:00 CST (UTC +08:00).
  • Sixteen teams are drawn into four groups with four teams in each group based on their seeding. Teams of the same region cannot be placed in the same group.
  • Double round robin, all matches are best-of-one.
  • If teams have the same win–loss record and head-to-head record, a tiebreaker match is played for first or second place.
  • Top two teams will advance to Playoff Stage. Bottom two teams are eliminated.

Group A

More information Pos, Team ...
Source: LoL Esports
Rules for classification: 1) Winning percentage; 2) Tiebreaker match(es); 3) Total game victory time[lower-alpha 1]

Group B

More information Pos, Team ...
Source: LoL Esports
Rules for classification: 1) Winning percentage; 2) Tiebreaker match(es); 3) Total game victory time[lower-alpha 1]

Group C

More information Pos, Team ...
Source: LoL Esports
Rules for classification: 1) Winning percentage; 2) Tiebreaker match(es); 3) Total game victory time[lower-alpha 1]

Group D

More information Pos, Team ...
Source: LoL Esports
Rules for classification: 1) Winning percentage; 2) Tiebreaker match(es); 3) Total game victory time[lower-alpha 1]

Playoff stage

  • Date and time: 15–31 October, all matches will begin at 18:00 CST (UTC +08:00).
  • Eight teams are drawn into a single elimination bracket.
  • All matches are best-of-five.
  • The 1st-place team of each group is drawn against the 2nd-place team of a different group.
  • Teams from same group will be on opposite sides of the bracket, meaning they cannot play each other until the Finals.
QuarterfinalsSemifinalsFinal
D1 Top Esports3
C2 Fnatic2
Top Esports1
Suning3
A1 Suning3
B2 JD Gaming1
Suning1
Damwon Gaming3
C1 Gen.G0
A2 G2 Esports3
G2 Esports1
Damwon Gaming3
B1 Damwon Gaming3
D2 DRX0

Source: LoL Esports

Ranking

Team ranking

  • (*) Not include tie-break games.
  • The Vietnamese teams from VCS Summer who are unable to attend will be earned a 2.1% of prize pool, with 1.5% of Main Group Stage seed for the Champion (Team Flash) and 0.6% of Play-in Groups seed for the Runner-up (GAM Esports).
More information Place, Region ...

Regional ranking

  • The win-ratio is determined by number of won games compared the number of games played.
  • Bracket stage wins are prioritized.
  • (*) Does not include tiebreaker games.
More information Place, Region ...

Notes

  1. The total amount of time it took a team to win their games against all other teams in the tiebreaker

References

  1. "League of Legends Esports Breaks World Championship Viewership Record". Riot Games. Retrieved 1 October 2022.
  2. "2020 World Championship final heads to Shanghai". nexus.leagueoflegends.com. 10 November 2019. Retrieved 13 September 2020.
  3. "Riot release LoL World's 2020 official song "Take Over"". Dexerto. 17 September 2020. Retrieved 17 September 2020.
  4. Rand, Emily; Wolf, Jacob (1 September 2020). "Sources: Vietnamese teams won't attend League of Legends World Championship". ESPN. Retrieved 13 September 2020.
  5. Martell, Tom (1 September 2020). "Worlds 2020 Update: Format Changes". lolesports. Retrieved 13 September 2020.
  6. "LoL Esports". lolesports.com. Retrieved 12 October 2020.
  7. "2020 World Championship Regional Seed Allocation". lolesports. Retrieved 13 September 2020.
  8. "Worlds 2020 Primer". lolesports. Retrieved 15 September 2020.
  9. "Worlds 2020 Primer". lolesports.com. Retrieved 15 September 2020.
  10. "Important note on tiebreakers for Playins". @MedicCasts Twitter. Retrieved 27 September 2020.

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