2016 League of Legends World Championship

The 2016 League of Legends World Championship was the sixth world championship for League of Legends, a video game developed by Riot Games. It was held from September 29  October 29, 2016, in cities across the United States. Sixteen teams qualified for the tournament based on their placement in regional circuits such as those in North America, Europe, South Korea, and China. The tournament's group stage was held at the Bill Graham Civic Auditorium in San Francisco, the quarterfinals at The Chicago Theater in Chicago, and the semifinals at Madison Square Garden in New York City. The final was held in front of a crowd of nearly 20,000 fans at the Staples Center in Los Angeles. Russian-German DJ Zedd made an exclusive song for the tournament titled "Ignite", the song became available for streaming viewing on the game's official YouTube channel.

League of Legends World Championship
2016
Tournament information
Location United States
DatesSeptember 29–October 29
Administrator(s)Riot Games
Tournament
format(s)
16 team round-robin group stage
8 team single-elimination bracket
Venue(s)
Teams16
Purse$5,070,000 USD[1]
Final positions
Champion SK Telecom T1
(3rd title)
Runner-up Samsung Galaxy
Tournament statistics
Matches played75
MVP Lee "Faker" Sang-hyeok (SK Telecom T1)

SK Telecom T1 defended their title from the 2015 League of Legends World Championship by defeating runner-up Samsung Galaxy 3–2 in a best of five final series. With their win, SKT became the first three-time League of Legends world champion. SKT's Lee "Faker" Sang-hyeok was named MVP of the tournament. The final prize pool reached $6.7 million, the largest single prize pool in League of Legends history. The final was followed by 43 million unique viewers, with a peak concurrent viewership of 14.7 million. Its success prompted the team in charge of the Los Angeles bid for the 2024 Summer Olympics to look into including esports presentation technologies used by Riot Games if the bid is successful.

Background

After the 2015 League of Legends World Championship was held across Europe, the 2016 edition was held in North America.[2][3]

The original prize pool was $2.13 million contributed by Riot Games, with the final amount being calculated after fan contributions stopped on November 6.[4] Riot pledged to add 25% of all revenue generated from selling Championship wards and skins – customizations for the player controlled hero character – to the prize pool.[5] On October 28, the sale of these unique Championship skins had grown the prize pool to $5.07 million, making it the largest single prize pool in League of Legends history.[6][7] The final prize pool reached $6.7 million.[8] Riot announced that 40% of the prize pool will be awarded to the winning team and 15% to the runner up.[4] The winning team would also receive 25% of revenue from skins created to commemorate the championship victory.[5]

To encourage new viewers to watch, Riot Games set up a second stream specifically for new viewers, which would help explain basic game concepts that more experienced viewers on the regular stream would be familiar with.[9]

Riot Games collaborated with Zedd, an electronic dance music disc jockey to create "Ignite", a dance music anthem for the tournament. The video referenced multiple highlights from previous League of Legends world championships.[10] As of April 2017, it has over 26 million views on YouTube.[11]

Teams and qualifications

Based on the results of 2016 MSI, the European (EU LCS) summer split champion team was seeded to Pool 2 due to didn't qualify for top 4.

The playoff stage for the third place match of the 2016 Summer NA LCS playoffs between Immortals and Counter Logic Gaming.
Region League Path Team ID Pool
North America NA LCS Summer Champion Team SoloMid TSM 1
Most Championship Points Counter Logic Gaming CLG 2
Regional Finals Winner Cloud9 C9 3
Europe EU LCS Summer Champion G2 Esports G2 2
Most Championship Points H2k-Gaming H2K
Regional Finals Winner Splyce SPY 3
China LPL Summer Champion EDward Gaming EDG 1
Most Championship Points Royal Never Give Up RNG 2
Regional Finals Winner I May IM
South Korea LCK Summer Champion ROX Tigers ROX 1
Most Championship Points SK Telecom T1 SKT 2
Regional Finals Winner Samsung Galaxy SSG
TW/HK/MO LMS Summer Champion Flash Wolves FW 1
Regional Finals Winner ahq e-Sports Club AHQ 2
Wildcard Brazil CBLOL IWCQ CBLol Winter Champion
►IWCQ Brazil Winner #1
INTZ e-Sports ITZ 3
CIS LCL LCL Summer Champion
►IWCQ Brazil Winner #2
Albus NoX Luna ANX 3

Rosters

Team Players[12][13]
Name Role
North America
Team SoloMid

Kevin "Hauntzer" Yarnell
Dennis "Svenskeren" Johnsen
Søren "Bjergsen" Bjerg
Yilliang "Doublelift" Peng
Vincent "Biofrost" Wang

Top
Jungle
Mid
ADC
Support

Counter Logic Gaming

Darshan "Darshan" Upadhyaya
Jake "Xmithie" Puchero
Choi "Huhi" Jae-hyun (최재현)
Trevor "Stixxay" Hayes
Zaqueri "aphromoo" Black

Top
Jungle
Mid
ADC
Support

Cloud9

Jung "Impact" Eon-yeong (정언영)
William "Meteos" Hartman
Nikolaj "Jensen" Jensen
Zachary "Sneaky" Scuderi
Andy "Smoothie" Ta

Top
Jungle
Mid
ADC
Support

China
EDward Gaming

Tong "Koro1" Yang (童扬)
Ming "Clearlove" Kai (明凯)
Heo "Pawn" Won-seok (허원석)
Lee "Scout" Ye-chan (이예찬)
Kim "Deft" Hyuk-kyu (김혁규)
Tian "Meiko" Ye (田野)

Top
Jungle
Mid
Mid (substitute)
ADC
Support

Royal Never Give Up

Jang "Looper" Hyeong-seok (장형석)
Liu "Mlxg" Shi-Yu (刘世宇)
Li "Xiaohu" Yuan-Hao (李元浩)
Jian "Uzi" Zi-Hao (简自豪)
Cho "Mata" Se-hyoung (조세형)

Top
Jungle
Mid
ADC
Support

I May

Shek "AmazingJ" Wai Ho (石偉豪)
Fan Jun "Avoidless" Wei (范俊偉)
Kang "Athena" Ha-woon (강하운)
Kang "Baeme" Yang-hyun (강양현)
Xie "Jinjiao" Jin-Shan (谢金山)
Yun "Road" Han-gil (윤한길)

Top
Jungle
Mid
Mid (substitute)
ADC
Support

Europe
G2 Esports

Ki "Expect" Dae-han (기대한)
Kim "Trick" Gang-yun (김강윤)
Luka "PerkZ" Perković
Jesper "Zven" Svenningsen
Alfonso Aguirre "mithy" Rodríguez

Top
Jungle
Mid
ADC
Support

H2K-Gaming

Andrei "Odoamne" Pascu
Marcin "Jankos" Jankowski
Yoo "Ryu" Sang-wook (유상욱)
Konstantinos "FORG1VEN" Tzortziou
Oskar "Vander" Bogdan

Top
Jungle
Mid
ADC
Support

Splyce

Martin "Wunder" Hansen
Jonas "Trashy" Andersen
Chres "Sencux" Laursen
Kasper "Kobbe" Kobberup
Mihael "Mikyx" Mehle

Top
Jungle
Mid
ADC
Support

South Korea
ROX Tigers

Song "Smeb" Kyung-ho (송경호)
Han "Peanut" Wang-ho (한왕호)
Lee "Kuro" Seo-haeng (이서행)
Kim "Pray" Jong-in (김종인)
Kang "Gorilla" Beom-hyeon (강범현)

Top
Jungle
Mid
ADC
Support

SK Telecom T1

Lee "Duke" Ho-seong (이호성)
Kang "Blank" Sun-gu (강선구)
Bae "Bengi" Seong-woong (배성웅)
Lee "Faker" Sang-hyeok (이상혁)
Bae "Bang" Jun-sik (배준식)
Lee "Wolf" Jae-wan (이재완)

Top
Jungle
Jungle (substitute)
Mid
ADC
Support

Samsung Galaxy

Lee "CuVee" Seong-jin (이성진)
Kang "Ambition" Chan-yong (강찬용)
Lee "Crown" Min-ho (이민호)
Park "Ruler" Jae-hyuk (박재혁)
Jo "CoreJJ" Yong-in (조용인)
Kwon "Wraith" Ji-min (권지민)

Top
Jungle
Mid
ADC
Support
Support (substitute)

Taiwan/Hong Kong/Macau
Flash Wolves

Yu "MMD" Li-Hung (游立宏)
Hung "Karsa" Hau-Hsuan (洪浩軒)
Huang "Maple" Yi-Tang (黃熠棠)
Hsiung "NL" Wen-An (熊汶銨)
Hu "SwordArT" Shuo-Chieh (胡碩傑)

Top
Jungle
Mid
ADC
Support

ahq e-Sports Club

Chen "Ziv" Yi (陳奕)
Xue "Mountain" Zhao-Hong (薛兆鴻)
Liu "Westdoor" Shu-Wei (劉書瑋)
Wong Xing "Chawy" Lei (王心磊)
Chou "AN" Chun-An (周俊諳)
Kang "Albis" Chia-Wei (康家維)

Top
Jungle
Mid
Mid (substitute)
ADC
Support

Wildcard
INTZ e-Sports

Felipe "Yang" Zhao
Gabriel "Revolta" Henud
Gabriel "tockers" Claumann
Micael "micaO" Rodrigues
Luan "Jockster" Cardoso

Top
Jungle
Mid
ADC
Support

Albus NoX Luna

Dmitri "Smurf" Ivanov
Aleksander "PvPStejos" Glazkov
Mykhailo "Kira" Harmash
Vladislav "aMiracle" Scherbyna
Kirill "Likkrit" Malofeyev

Top
Jungle
Mid
ADC
Support

*Tong "Koro1" Yang replaced Chen "Mouse" Yu-Hao after the latter retired from the tournament due to a private issue.[14]

Venues

San Francisco, Chicago, New York City, Los Angeles were four cities chosen to host the tournament.[15]

San Francisco, California Chicago, Illinois
Group Stage Quarterfinals
Bill Graham Civic Auditorium Chicago Theatre
Capacity: 7,000 Capacity: 3,800
Sep 29  Oct 9 Oct 13  Oct 16
New York City, New York Los Angeles, California
Semifinals Finals
Madison Square Garden Staples Center
Capacity: 18,200 Capacity: 18,188
Oct 21  Oct 22 Oct 29

Group stage

The group stage was held at the Bill Graham Civic Auditorium in San Francisco, California.[5] The group stage was played in a best of one double round-robin format, where each team played every other team in their group twice, with the top two teams from each of the four groups advancing to the knockout stage.[5][16]

Tiebreaking matches were played in groups A and C.[17][18][19]

Group A

The Cinderella story of the tournament was the run of Albus NoX Luna, the CIS champions who became the first wildcard team to make it to the quarterfinals in the history of the League of Legends World Championship.[19] European first seed G2 Esports underperformed in this group, while ROX Tigers, the second seed from Korea, won the group as expected, but had to do so by defeating Albus NoX Luna in a tiebreaker game.[19]

# Team 1 2 3 4 W L ±
1 ROX Tigers ~1–11–12–0523
2 Albus NoX Luna 1–1~2–01–1431
3 Counter Logic Gaming 1–1 0–2~2–0330
4 G2 Esports 0–21–10–2 ~15 −4

Group B

Group B's deciding matches all occurred on the last day, when all teams except for the Korean first seed SK Telecom T1 had 2–3 records.[20] In the end, it was Cloud9, the sole North American team to move on,[21] that moved on after exploiting the inconsistent play of the Chinese and Taiwanese teams.[20] I May was also hurt when one of its players was suspended for one match on the last day and fined $2000 for abusive behavior in online games.[22] During Cloud 9's match against Flash Wolves, Zachary "Sneaky" Scuderi killed 690 minions, which set a new record for this statistic at worlds.[8]

# Team 1 2 3 4 W L ±
1 SK Telecom T1 ~2–02–01–1514
2 Cloud9 0–2~2–01–1330
3 I May 0–2 0–2~2–024−2
4 Flash Wolves 1–11–10–2 ~24 −2

Group C

Group C was the only group without a Korean team seeded first. Its two qualifiers were both considered championship favorites, since H2K-Gaming was a strong European team and EDward Gaming was a strong Chinese team.[23] Despite a 1–2 showing in the first week, H2K managed to make the quarterfinals at the top of its group by winning four straight matches, including a tiebreaker against EDward Gaming,[19] to become the only European team to move on.[23][24]

# Team 1 2 3 4 W L ±
1 H2K-Gaming ~1–11–12–0523
2 EDward Gaming 1–1~2–01–1431
3 ahq e-Sports Club 1–1 0–2~2–0330
4 INTZ e-Sports 0–21–10–2 ~15 −4

Group D

Group D was considered to be the group of death because it had three top Korean, Chinese, and North American teams, and a strong European team.[25] Samsung Galaxy, would convincingly win the group with help from the strong play of Kang "Ambition" Chang-yong.[25] Royal Never Give Up defeated the North American champions TSM to even their records at 3–3 and win the head-to-head tiebreaker to move on to the quarterfinals.[26]

# Team 1 2 3 4 W L ±
1 Samsung Galaxy ~2–01–12–0514
2 Royal Never Give Up 0–2~2–01–1330
3 Team SoloMid 1–1 0–2~2–0330
4 Splyce 0–21–10–2 ~15 −4

Knockout stage

Quarterfinals and semi-finals

The quarterfinals were held at the Chicago Theatre, starting on October 13.[24] Teams were seeded against each other based on their performance in the group stage, and played a best-of-five, single-elimination bracket.[5]

All three of the Korean teams, SK Telecom T1, ROX Tigers, and Samsung Galaxy, advanced to the quarterfinals from the group stage. Two Chinese teams, EDward Gaming and Royal Never Give Up, advanced by finishing second in their groups. Cloud9 and H2k-Gaming were respectively the only North American and European teams to advance out of groups. The last team to make it to the quarterfinals was Albus NoX Luna, a Russian wildcard team that finished second in its group.[24]

Three teams from the League of Legends Champions Korea (LCK) circuit and one from the European League of Legends Championship Series (EULCS) made it to the semi-finals.[27] H2K-Gaming ended the wildcard run of Albus NoX by sweeping them 3–0 in the quarterfinals.[28] Meanwhile, the three Korean teams ended the runs of EDward Gaming and Royal Never Give Up, the last two Chinese teams, and the run of Cloud 9, the last North American team.[21]

The semi-finals were held at Madison Square Garden in New York over two days.[29] SK Telecom T1 won a five-game series against the ROX Tigers, who had won the 2015 Summer League of Legends Championship Korea season and were favorites to win this event.[27] Many commentators called this matchup the true World Finals.[27] In the other semi-finals, Samsung Galaxy swept H2k-Gaming, the last European team in the tournament, 3–0 to advance to the finals.[27][29]

Finals

The Staples Center as used for the 2016 League of Legends World Championship finals.

The final lasted six hours and was played in front of a crowd of nearly 20,000 fans at the Staples Center in Los Angeles.[30] A projection of the minimap which showed each team's map control was shown on the floor of the arena between the two teams.[31] Most of the players for Samsung Galaxy (SSG) had never played in the finals before, while most members of SK Telecom (SKT) were returning members of the 2015 championship team.[32] It was the first finals series in a League of Legends world championship to go the full five games.[32]

The first match of the best of five series lasted 40 minutes and was won by SK Telecom,[32] who were able to attack Samsung Galaxy's undefended base after winning a big "all-in" battle between the two teams.[33] The second match was also won by SKT, who were able to continuously build up an insurmountable advantage after winning a battle in the mid-game,[33] ending the game after 31 minutes.[34]

After losing the first two games, Samsung Galaxy won a long third game against SK Telecom.[30] SKT dominated the early stages of the game and built up a lead in both kills and gold.[34] The turning point in this game was a fight over Baron, an important in-game objective, where Samsung Galaxy was able to kill half of SK Telecom's team and destroy two of their turrets afterwards.[34] After winning a similar engagement over Baron later in the game, Samsung Galaxy was then able to quickly destroy five of SKT's defensive towers and win the game.[33] This third game was the second-longest in competitive League of Legends history,[33] at 71 minutes and 20 seconds.[34]

Samsung Galaxy then won the fourth game, also after winning a key fight over Baron.[32] Despite losing two inhibitor buildings in their base, SKT was able to stall SSG with defensive play until the 42-minute mark, after which SSG took three Dragons – another in game objective – uncontested and gained buffs that allowed them to win the game.[34] In the final game, SK Telecom played a more cautious gameplay style, which was effective against Samsung Galaxy's riskier play.[34] SKT was able to grab two Baron kills and two Elder Dragon kills en route to winning the final game.[30]

SK Telecom's team shared a $2 million prize purse between its members.[30] The championship victory was SKT's third in four years, and a successful defense of their 2015 title.[30] SKT also became the first team to win three world championships.[27] ESPN's Timothy Lee called the finals "an instant classic".[34] SKT's Lee Sang-hyeok, who uses the handle "Faker", was named as the tournament MVP.[30] It was Faker's first Worlds MVP.[32] Faker's performance on the map's middle lane broke the previous 208 kills record at Worlds by the third map of the finals, and he ended up with 217 kills.[32]

Bracket

Competition table[35]
 
Quarter-finalsSemi-finalsFinal
 
          
 
 
 
 
SK Telecom T13
 
 
 
Royal Never Give Up1
 
SK Telecom T13
 
 
 
ROX Tigers2
 
ROX Tigers3
 
 
 
EDward Gaming1
 
SK Telecom T13
 
 
 
Samsung Galaxy2
 
H2K-Gaming3
 
 
 
Albus NoX Luna0
 
H2K-Gaming0
 
 
 
Samsung Galaxy3
 
Samsung Galaxy3
 
 
Cloud90
 

Final standings

  • Initial prize pool US$2,130,000
  • 25% of sales from Championship Zed skins & Championship ward skins increase the prize pool.
  • On October 28, the prize pool reached US$5,070,000
Final standings, 2016[17][35][36]
Places Team Prize (USD) Prize (%)
1st SK Telecom T1 $2,028,000 40%
2nd Samsung Galaxy $760,500 15%
3rd–4th ROX Tigers $380,250 7.5%
H2K-Gaming
5th–8th Cloud9 $202,800 4%
EDward Gaming
Royal Never Give Up
Albus NoX Luna
9th–12th Counter Logic Gaming $114,075 2.25%
ahq e-Sports Club
Team SoloMid
I May
13th–16th Flash Wolves $63,375 1.25%
INTZ e-Sports
G2 Esports
Splyce

Legacy

Viewership numbers were higher than those for the 2015 League of Legends World Championship. 43 million unique viewers saw the finals and peak concurrent viewership for the finals was 14.7 million; 370 million hours of esports were streamed over the course of the entire world championship.[8] The final prize pool, which included fan contributions via purchase of in-game items, was worth $6.7 million.[8] The total cumulative daily unique impressions (the amount of unique viewers that tuned in every day via online and television channels) reached 396 million.[37]

LA 2024, which is overseeing the Los Angeles bid for the 2024 Summer Olympics, was inspired by the success of this edition of the League of Legends World Championship to plan and include esports in the Olympic Games if they win the bid.[38][39] Casey Wasserman, the chairman of LA 2024, suggested using technology used in certain segments of the League of Legends World Championship such as augmented reality and virtual reality to make the Olympics more accessible to a younger demographic.[38]

References

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  3. Kollar, Philip (February 17, 2016). "League of Legends 2016 World Championship will take place across North America this fall". Polygon. Vox Media. Retrieved May 11, 2016.
  4. Howell, Leo (October 29, 2016). "Worlds: $5.07M prize pool with fan contributions". ESPN.com. Retrieved October 31, 2016.
  5. Isaac, Marvin (September 26, 2016). "2016 League of Legends World Championship: The Pinoy's Guide". Philippine Daily Inquirer. Retrieved March 19, 2017.
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  7. Cocke, Taylor (October 28, 2016). "League of Legends World Championship prize pool now at record $5.07 million, will continue to rise". Yahoo! Esports. Retrieved November 1, 2016.
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  9. Volk, Pete (October 27, 2016). "LoL Worlds finals will have a new viewer stream". The Rift Herald. Retrieved October 31, 2016.
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  11. Riot Games (September 29, 2016), Zedd: Ignite | Worlds 2016 – League of Legends, retrieved March 19, 2017
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  13. "World Championship Stats – Knockout Stage". lolesports.com. Retrieved March 14, 2017.
  14. Lee, Julia (October 12, 2016). "EDG top laner Mouse leaves Worlds for family emergency". The Rift Herald. Retrieved March 11, 2017.
  15. Rozelle, Whalen. "2016 World Championship hits North America". lolesports.com. Riot Games. Retrieved September 5, 2016.
  16. Goslin, Austen (September 5, 2016). "Here are the 16 teams going to Worlds 2016". The Rift Herald. Retrieved March 19, 2017.
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  21. Washenko, Anna (October 21, 2016). "A look at the 'League of Legends' Worlds semifinals match-ups". Mashable. Retrieved November 1, 2016.
  22. Gach, Ethan (October 9, 2016). "League of Legends Pro Suspended During Worlds For Toxic Chat, Will Be Fined $2,000". Kotaku. Retrieved November 1, 2016.
  23. Chouadria, Adel (October 13, 2016). "H2k's redemption of Europe at Worlds". ESPN.com. Retrieved November 1, 2016.
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  25. Lee, Timothy (October 9, 2016). "Worlds Day 7: 'Group of death' does not disappoint". ESPN.com. Retrieved October 31, 2016.
  26. Volk, Pete. "RNG stuns TSM, knocks North American champions out of Worlds". The Rift Herald. Retrieved November 1, 2016.
  27. Perez, Matt. "SK Telecom T1 Wins Their Third 'League Of Legends' World Championship". Forbes. Retrieved October 31, 2016.
  28. Erzberger, Tyler (October 16, 2016). "Worlds: H2k sweeps Albus NoX Luna 3–0". ESPN.com. Retrieved November 1, 2016.
  29. Fitzpatrick, Alex. "We Hung Out With a Top League of Legends Team During Worlds". TIME.com. Retrieved October 31, 2016.
  30. "SKT crowned 2016 League of Legends world champions". BBC News. October 31, 2016. Retrieved October 31, 2016.
  31. Gach, Ethan. "The League Finals Are Playing Out On Top Of A Giant Projection". Kotaku. Retrieved November 1, 2016.
  32. Beck, Kellen. "'Faker' wins MVP as SKT claims another 'League of Legends' championship". Mashable. Retrieved October 31, 2016.
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  38. Van Allen, Eric (November 1, 2016). "LA 2024 interested in esports technology for Olympics". ESPN.com. Retrieved December 6, 2016.
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