Thursday 6 November 2014

AsiaFortress - An Idiot's Guide to Competitive TF2 in Asia

Originally posted at: http://www.teamfortress.tv/21011/asiafortress-an-idiots-guide-to-competitive-tf2-in-asia

Oi, You! Avid TF2 fanboy! Yes, you sat slumped in your chair, listen here:
Are you familiar with the European scene? Do you think you know everything about North American TF2? You enjoy watching the Australian TF2 games at breakfast, and even the South American scene is on your radar, right? Well I have some good news for you: a true enigma has emerged out of the mists of the Far East.
I must confess that, even as a self-professed connoisseur of competitive TF2, I could not name you one player from the AsiaFortress league. I am aware that they have a growing community, with regular competitions and I think I even saw a kick-ass fragmovie once. I've decided that this lack of knowledge is simply unacceptable, and I'm embarking on a Columbus-esque expedition to find out about our Asian friends. You can be the judge of whether or not I'm more successful than my navigationally-impaired idol.
In order to keep my feeble body from succumbing to the journey, I've employed the services of the two finest guides AsiaFortress has to offer, shounic and teejay. They originally came to me to talk about the currentAsiaFortress Cup 8 they have going on, and the Grand Finals that are happening this Saturday! Don't worry loyal twitch viewer, TeamFortressTV will be there to cover all the action as it unfolds.
The AsiaFortress Cup 8 has been a nail-biting tournament, with the Grand Final this weekend!

A Short History About The Scene

The first difference to wrap your head around is that the AF scene talks about Cups rather than Seasons. They run roughly one cup per year and the most recent AsiaFortress Cup 8 had 3 divisions (Division 1 down to Division 3). This time around, each division had seven teams battling it out - they all play a round-robinphase before taking the top four teams into a single-elimination playoff. In case your maths isn't the best, that makes the scene a fairly small one at only 21 teams; all in all, this is a small but vibrant community that showcases the best talent Asia has to offer.
One of the best things about the upper echelons of this community is how fiercely close it is. In the past, much like their European and North American counterparts, the top has been dominated by two superteams - mostly due to the language barriers, these have often been national teams hailing from Korea, Japan and Singapore. Historically it has always been the Korean superteams which edge out a victory in the Grand Finals, while the Japanese are left to pick up the pieces and fend off any Singaporean teams that are eyeing up the podium as well. The last few Grand Finals have been very close affairs, but the Cup itself had been dominated by two teams, never in doubt of a 1st and 2nd place finish. A similar story also exists in that a lot of these teams are recycled from the same band of old-school Division 1 players, occasionally picking up fresh talent to fill an open slot. This time though, for AFC8, the superteams scattered. But more on that later on in the article when we take a look at AFC8 in more detail!
I took a more general look into the scene to begin with. The general opinion is that the scene is growing, albeit slowly, but there is difficulty with players making the jump up the skill levels; this is a frequent problem in TF2 communities where there is such a skill separation. This is probably down to a mixture of factors: the higher level players don't have enough time to commit to mentoring, there are difficult language barriers to overcome so incestuous national teams form and stagnate, and the Divisions contain such a range of talent that the lower skilled teams don't have a great opportunity to play similarly-skilled opponents and improve. Nonetheless fresh talent and new teams do appear fairly regularly, and I think the doom and gloom is just a bit of pollution that'll soon blow over.
The topic of interaction with the wider TF2 community was something that I was very curious about. It soon transpired that most of their players are aware of the NA/EU scenes, and pay particular attention to the ESEA seasons whenever they come around - they even occasionally get some NA invite players pugging with them. They frequently visit TeamFortressTV and read up on competitive TF2, but prefer to lurk in the shadows, and with no real casting organisations or coverage to speak of their exposure is often minimal. I was aware that AsiaFortress had previously received some attention from Australian mix teams trying to prove their superiority, but ever since they repelled the high-ping invaders in the AFC6 Grand Final, the interest has dwindled. Of course it's difficult to integrate the scenes nicely when we have anywhere from 150 to 300 ping on their servers and don't speak any eastern language beyond "nǐ hǎo".
The top teams in Asia typically play hyper-aggressively. They can be often found non-uber pushing, bullying their way through choke-points and generally giving their opponents little respect. It's a high-risk, high-rewardstyle of playing the game which is definitely fun to watch. Their rules mirror the EU ruleset, with timelimit 30 and windifference 5 (Golden Caps to decide map winners with winlimit 1 and timelimit 0) and a fairly limited whitelist that is almost identical to ETF2L's. The top four teams all play around their scouts, using them to pocket and get frags, apart from the new Singaporean superteam who have more of a fluid dynamic and a more rounded team. A lot of inspiration seems to have been taken from Froyotech and Mixup/XTS, so if you're an NA fanboy and you want to see some familiar action make sure to catch the Grand Finals this Saturday!

Asia Fortress Cup 8

As I previously said, before AFC8 there were two superteams dominating the scene. Perhaps they were bored of facing the same opponents? Perhaps they were uninterested in playing with the same teammates? Whatever the reason, the AsiaFortress scene underwent a serious shakeup before this Cup. The two dominant superteams spread themselves out across three other rosters, whilst a new superteam from Singaporeemerged from the smog of Division 2. The core of the Korean roster was split, to form the new team KIN Gaming, while the Japanese roster managed to form two new teams - deadly momentum (led by natto) andGood Luck Matsukaze (led by gappo3). They had to face up against the new Singaporeans on the block,MVP, who already had a few local LAN victories and better team synergy. It was set to be an enthralling Cup.
All of these teams had an equal chance of winning, and so all eyes were trained on the early results in order to get any kind of indication. GLM and MVP came out strong at the beginning of the round robin, beating down both of the other playoff contenders with ease. This did not put off KIN Gaming or deadly momentum; they were only motivated more by their losses. They managed to make it through to the playoffs in 3rd and 4th place respectively, while MVP and Good Luck Matsukaze pulled off almost perfect seasons (drawing with each other). The dedication from dmm and KIN was rewarded though when an opportunity was gifted to them in the Semi-Finals. Both GLM and MVP lost some crucial players: for GLM their pocket, oldest player, and root of their team horihori had left a few games previously and they were unable to field their demoman noki for the match either; MVP were also not quite able to field their main lineup and had to juggle some classes around. KIN Gaming took full advantage of the situation and smashed GLM in the semi-finals, securing their spot in the Grand Final. deadly momentum took on a wounded but ferocious MVP side, eventually besting the beast in a very close two maps.

Good Luck Matsukaze

MedicDemomanSoldierSoldierScoutScout
*SaN**noki**horihori**gappo3**nypro**hoshimi*


MVP

MedicDemomanSoldierSoldierScoutScout
*Z**Rufus**aycan**teejay**Summer**Crabby*

Grand Final

And thus the AsiaFortress Grand Final stage was set, with both the 1st seed and 2nd seed team being nowhere to be seen. Once again it was the battle of the nationalities, Korea vs. Japan. But is this finallyrevenge for the Japanese? My navigators are doubtful, but I remain ever optimistic. One thing is for certain, it will be exceedingly close, lightning-fast and tense.

deadly momentum

MedicDemomanSoldierSoldierScoutScout
*hikoku**firidd**peanut**natto**ozr**toki*
This team values their scouts above all else. It is the main advantage they hold over KIN Gaming, although it is a slim one. While key calls and leadership do come from their combo, their soldiers have been identified as weak points in an otherwise very strong team. firidd can definitely match the demoman from KIN Gaming and if natto can give his team some room to work with, firidd and the scouts could well pair up to become an unstoppable machine of death. The pressure is on ozr and toki to deliver on the day and bring home the glory for Japan.

KIN Gaming

MedicDemomanSoldierSoldierScoutScout
*genos**forceedge**babel**creep**flower**hsk*
This team may well have the practice advantage coming into this Grand Final. While both of these teams are keen and constantly scrim, it's KIN who manage to keep their full roster intact for all of their practice games. This undoubtedly gives them a boost of teamwork going into these games, and their lineup is arguably more rounded than dmm's. Their scouts are the best in Korea and the playstyle of both of these teams puts a lot of pressure on hsk and flower to out-compete their rivals. That could well be a hard task for them to manage, but thankfully they're backed up by some very solid soldier play from babel and creep. Whether or not the slightly new-school player genos will throw a spanner in the works when it comes to this high-pressure match remains to be seen.

Cast

This Grand Final will be covered on TeamFortressTV by an, as yet, unknown trio. I hear rumours of a potato king and an Australian pocket though...
Catch them on TeamFortressTV at 14:30 CET!

Tuesday 19 August 2014

10 Reasons Why The Aussies Will Dominate i52

Originally posted at: http://www.teamfortress.tv/19660/10-reasons-why-the-aussies-will-dominate-i52

˙spɹɐʇsɐq ǝlqɐʌol 'Wᴉ ɥɐǝʎ ʞɔnℲ ˙puɐlɐlɐoʞ ɹᴉǝɥʇ ʞɔɐq sɹǝpuǝq ɐuɐuɐq ǝɥʇ ǝʌᴉƃ puɐ uǝǝnQ ǝɥʇ ɥʇᴉʍ ǝnlq ɐ ǝʌɐɥ 'ǝɹǝɥ ɹǝʌo ǝɹ,ʎǝɥʇ ǝlᴉɥʍ ǝɔɐlɐԀ ɯɐɥƃuᴉʞɔnq uo uᴉ doʇs oʇ ƃuᴉllᴉʍ puɐ ;ʎɥdoɹʇ-ɹɐʍ uɐᴉlɐɹʇsn∀ lɐᴉɔᴉɟɟo uɐ 'sɐxǝ┴ 'ɐᴉɹoʇɔᴉΛ ʎƃpoq ɹǝɥʇo ʇɐɥʇ ǝʞɐɯ oʇ pǝɹɐdǝɹd ;ǝʞᴉW ɯoɹɟ sǝlɐM ɥʇnoS plO ʞɔɐq ǝʞɐʇ oʇ ʎpɐǝɹ ǝɹɐ soƃuᴉp uǝǝʞ ǝsǝɥ┴ ¡sooɹɐƃuɐʞ ǝɥʇ ɟo ɥɔɹɐɯ pɹɐʍɥʇɹou ǝlqɐɹoxǝuᴉ ǝɥʇ ʎq ʇɹɐdɐ uɹoʇ ʇǝƃ sɯɐǝʇ uɐɔᴉɹǝɯ∀ puɐ uɐǝdoɹnƎ snoᴉɔǝɹd ɹnoʎ sɐ ɥɔʇɐʍ oʇ ʎpɐǝɹ ǝɹ,noʎ ǝdoɥ I ˙,uᴉoƃ ɐʎ ʍoɥ ʇᴉq ɐ ǝɹ,noʎ ƃuᴉʞuᴉɥʇ ʇɐ ƃuᴉʞool ǝɹɐ ǝldoǝd puɐ sᴉɥʇ pɐǝɹ oʇ uʍop ǝpᴉsdn spɐǝɥ ɹnoʎ pǝuɹnʇ ǝʌɐɥ ɯnɔs ʇɔᴉʌuoɔ-uou noʎ ɟo ʇsǝɹ ǝɥʇ llɐ ǝdoɥ ʎllɐǝɹ I ¡∀I˥∀ɹ┴S∩∀ ʎ∀p,פ
Oh goodness me, I do apologise. I've been hanging round these rowdy Australians for too long. I think it's infectious.
First of all, if you haven't checked out the doco by CUBE and BoneS then give it a burl. The Aussies were the wildcards at i49 and impressed everybody there with how competitive they managed to be, especially since they're the only good team in a very small scene. The incredible competition at i49 motivated yuki and the mob to practice hard, beef themselves up and get prepared for the biggest TF2 LAN that the world has ever seen. Are you ready? 'Cause they are frickin' PUMPED!
But it's not just iM that have changed since i49. Epsilon have changed their roster around from the dominating superteam that we saw win the last LAN. The Americans have been over the pond messing about with their crazy unlocks and petty national LANs. They've even had to send two teams this time to make up for their inadequacy.
It isn't just their turn for one of these articles (shoutout to Hildreth). It's their turn to genuinely win the biggest international LAN in TF2 history. And it's not a pipe dream. Here we go with the 10 completely uncontroversial, irrevocable, undeniable reasons why iM will storm i52 and come back with a brace of scalps from these pathetic whingey northern-hemispherians. I'd like to see you stop them.
MedicDemomanPocketRoamerScoutScout
*bonobo**termo**yuki**aporia**sheep**snowblind*

1. They won the CyberLeague.EU tournament

Have the Aussies crippled Awsomniac and Reason's chances of putting up a challenge before LAN has even begun?! Surely this victory, on their own turf no less, has shaken the European scene to its core. We've been following the iM scrims since they touched down on Pommie shores and they've been steadily improving, having close games against EpsilonAwsomniac and Reason. The Euros weren't within cooee of beating iMeither, not even taking a single map off the Aussies in the entire competition.
And here's the kicker. Their internet is cactus, with lagspikes up to 200 ping being a regular occurrence. How does that feel, Euro scrubs?

2. They trimmed the fat from their i49 roster

If any single person was going to be highlighted as having underperformed last LAN, compared to their counterparts on other teams, it would have to be Bulk. The demoman for iM was a brilliant guy, but his DM and play style didn't quite cut the vegemite. With another upgrade in the form of snowblind (Australia's answer to DM-hero clockwork) iM have shredded those last ounces of blubber. They're chiselled surf yobbos ready to ride the wave of success and pick up Aquagirl along the way.

3. Yuki is the best pocket in the world

Think Mike or Zeb have a chance at i52? Pig's arse! yuki showed us at i49 that he can aim, position and move better than any of the pocketing competition - and yes that includes TLR and his little brother, Lansky. His incredible ubers, speedshots, airshots and raw fragging ability made the rest of the soldiers at LAN look like pansies. I have absolutely no doubt he'll turn up again for i52 and put on a master class for the others to learn from.

4. They've been bootcamping for two weeks

iM have got the feel of how these Pommie bastards and their friends play. The Americans certainly haven't been keen enough to come over and bootcamp, and the Euros are showing standard complacency: the assumption that LAN will be the same as scrims online has hurt them before and it might again. iMbootcamped before i49 as well and steadily improved; this time they've raced through their scrims, devouring teams in their path like shrim-...no. I won't. I'll resist. They've simply shat on nerds.
STRAYA, yesterday.

5. The Term0nator is looking incredible

If you're going to replace Bulk, it better be for someone good. This controversial arsehole of a player is a god at demoman - everybody I've been with whilst spectating termo has been suitably impressed. He has nailed and beaten kaidus at his own superfast rollouts, hit sick airpipes on WAR, took a big shiny dump on huhy with a stickytrap and will continue to do the same to duwatna and Platinum.

6. Epsilon are on holiday in Zimbabwe and have lost schocky, GeaR & numlocked (not in Zimbabwe)

The entirety of the best team in Europe are sat on their fat dates waiting for KilerbasH and tek to come back from holiday. Not only have they forgotten their lesson from the debacle that was i46 (PRACTISE, IDIOTS), they've also lost their three best players to div4, work and LOL respectively. They've had to fill these big shoes with subpar players like Kilertek and WARHURYEAH. Not only that, but they seem to have lost the raw aggression that they played with at i49, and I don't know how well their "pocket demo and two roamers" strat will work without Sebastian 'Powerhouse' Barton. They're playing more and more passively, and if any team is looking shaky going into i52, it's these wankers.

7. Jukebox has quit TF2, so sheep is going to molest everybody on sniper

After that dag gave up, there's no hope for lovers of foreheads this LAN (poor Admirable). Everybody who pokes their fat head above a piece of cover is getting it forcibly removed by an Aussie bullet. He might be predictable, but iM are so good at setting themselves up to give sheep space, it often doesn't even matter. Without any good counter-snipers, sheep is going to tear it up on the big stage. Feelings? Look mate, you know who has a lot of feelings?

8. The Americans are so passive it hurts

It's really incredible how different the American scene is to an outsider when you compare now to i46. Two years ago, aggression was the key to mix^ and LG's stomping defeat over the cowering, spamming, defensive Europeans. Now the shoe is on the other foot, with American teams rarely pushing without uber, often stalemating and flinging their roamers into the fray in a desperate attempt to make something useful happen.
This will play perfectly into iM's hand. They're perfectly comfortable playing the American style, sitting back and relying on sheep to decimate their passive opponents who can't hold a candle to his scoped plays. But they're equally comfortable pushing without ubers and relying on their teamwork and focus fire to win pushes. In fact, even if it does come to ubers, I would put my life savings on yuki to out-manoeuvre TLR and Lansky if saloon.tf allowed it.
We're all going to turn up and realise that the Americans are all figjams. Their demomen are about as useful as tits on a bull with b4nny on scout now and let's face it: Mixup will probably end up shit-talking themselves into a boxing match with Coleman and that'll be the end of that.

9. They have the best synergy

No other team in the world has a history of such dominance over their scene. yukiaporiasheep and bonobohave been playing and destroying people together for many more years than any other team present at i52. They've honed their focus fire, their ability to read each other and cover weaknesses, and they can pretty much read each other's minds.

10. IT IS FATE, IT IS DESTINY

It's London to a brick that iM will win LAN. Three continents, three LANs, three different winners. And so the intercontinental Insomnia series must continue! To find the REAL winner! It's for this reason mainly that I am supporting iM to win i52. I can feel it in my bones. And besides, if I'm wrong Hildreth still has a 100% perfect prediction for these i-LANs.
So there you have it! 10 indisputable reasons why the Aussies are going to be the ones lifting the oversized cheque and trash-talking us for a year. It'll be hilarious to watch EpsilonAwsomniacReasonFroyotech andMixup flounder in their inadequacies and fight over 2nd place; that mediocre struggle should be one of the closest contests we've ever seen at an intercontinental LAN! I can't call it at all, and I'm incredibly hyped to see those amazing games casted.
But enough of my yabber! Tell me what you think of my genuine opinions in the comments! Evidence is not needed to back up your outrageous views, but posting logs, scrim results, MGE points and wild speculation is thoroughly encouraged. Hooroo!