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2013 League of Legends World Championship

League of Legends World Championship
2013
Tournament information
Location  United States
Dates September 15–October 4
Administrator(s) Riot Games
Tournament
format(s)
10 team round-robin group stage
8 team single-elimination bracket
Venue(s) 3 (in 1 host city)
Teams 14
Purse $2,050,000
Final positions
Champions SK Telecom T1 (1st title)
Runner-up Royal Club
Tournament statistics
Matches played 63
← 2012
2014 →

The Season 3 World Championship was won by SK Telecom T1 K with the roster of Lee "Faker" Sang-hyeok, Jung "Impact" Eon-yeong, Chae "Piglet" Gwang-jin, Lee "Easyhoon" Ji-hoon, Lee "PoohManDu" Jeong-hyeon, and coach Kim "kKoma" Jung-Gyun. It was the third iteration of the annual League of Legends World Championship and the last one not to be formally titled after the year it took place.

The following teams qualified to participate in the tournament's group stage:

The group stage was played in a best of one double round-robin format, with the top two teams from each of the two groups advancing to the knockout stage.

The 2013 World Championship final was watched over Twitch by over 32 million people, with a peak of 8.5 million concurrent views, a large increase from the 2012 finals of 8.2 million viewers, with 1.1 millions peak concurrent ones. The numbers shattered the previous records for any eSports event. These numbers were much higher than those of other competitor eSports events for Dota 2 and Starcraft 2, the former of which only reached one million concurrent viewers.

Riot's 8.5 million concurrent viewers is on a par with the "more than 8 million" people that watched Felix Baumgartner's jump from the edge of space. Exact figures for streaming events are difficult to ascertain, but All Things D reports that Baumgartner's jump was "web video's biggest event ever."

League of Legends is by far the biggest entity in the pro-gaming sector, regularly outstripping the stream viewer numbers of its major competitors, including Valve's Dota 2 and Blizzard's StarCraft II. In context, Valve's flagship Dota 2 tournament — The International 3 — took place two months before the League of Legends Season 3 World Championship finals and reached one million concurrent viewers.


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