ESL One Rio Major 2020

The ESL One Rio Major 2020, also known as ESL One Rio 2020 or Rio 2020, is scheduled to be the sixteenth Counter-Strike: Global Offensive Major Championship. It will be held in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.[1] It featured a US$2,000,000 prize pool and twenty-four professional teams from around the world as with previous Majors.[2] Twenty four teams around the world will qualify through regional qualifiers called the Road to Rio. It would have been the seventh time ESL will be hosting a Major.[3]

ESL One Rio 2020
2020
The ESL One logo
Tournament information
GameCounter-Strike: Global Offensive
LocationRio de Janeiro, Brazil
Date11—24 May 2020 (originally)
9—22 November 2020 (cancelled)
Administrator(s)Valve
ESL
Tournament
format(s)
Two 16 team swiss-system group stages
8 team single-elimination playoff
VenueJeunesse Arena
Teams24
PurseUS$2,000,000

The Major was originally scheduled to take place from May 11 to May 24, 2020. However, due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Valve and ESL announced that the Major tournament was postponed to November. In September 2020, Valve and ESL announced that the CS:GO major will be canceled.[4]

Background

Counter-Strike: Global Offensive (CS:GO) is a multiplayer first-person shooter video game developed by Hidden Path Entertainment and Valve. It is the fourth game in the Counter-Strike series. In competitive play, the game pits two teams against each other: the Terrorists and the Counter-Terrorists. Both sides are tasked with eliminating the other while also completing separate objectives. The Terrorists must either plant a bomb or kill the entire Counter-Terrorist team, while the Counter-Terrorists must either prevent the bomb from being planted by killing the entire Terrorist team or defusing the bomb. Once the bomb is planted, counter-terrorists have forty seconds to defuse the bomb; under normal circumstances, it takes ten seconds to defuse the bomb, but purchasing a defuse kit reduces the defuse time to five seconds. At the end of each round, players are rewarded based on their individual performance with in-game currency to spend on more powerful weapons in subsequent rounds. Winning rounds results in more money than losing, and completing objectives such as killing enemy players gives cash bonuses. However, the more consecutive rounds a team loses, the more money the losing team earns, with the loss bonus capping after five rounds; once that team wins a round, the loss round bonus resets to the minimum amount each player could earn after a round.

Format

There are six regional qualifiers – North America, South America, Europe, CIS, Asia, and Oceania. Each regional qualifier received a set number of spots in the Rio Major. The number of spots corresponds with the number of teams from that region at the previous major, the Berlin Major.[6]

Regional Major Rankings

Road to Rio

Before the Rio Major, each major had four regional qualifiers. Each regional qualifier, called "Minors", featured eight teams per region. Because of the 14-month gap between the Rio Major and the Berlin Major, Valve revised the system into the Road to Rio.[5] Valve has announced that these events will continue to be held until a new date for the major can be determined.[7]

Teams competing

Legends
  • TBD (European Major Rankings)
  • TBD (European Major Rankings)
  • TBD (European Major Rankings)
  • TBD (North American Major Rankings)
  • TBD (North American Major Rankings)
  • TBD (North American Major Rankings)
  • TBD (CIS Major Rankings)
  • TBD (CIS Major Rankings)
Challengers
  • TBD (European Minor Rankings)
  • TBD (European Major Rankings)
  • TBD (European Major Rankings)
  • TBD (European Major Rankings)
  • TBD (European Major Rankings)
  • TBD (North American Major Rankings)
  • TBD (North American Major Rankings)
  • TBD (CIS Major Rankings)
Contenders
  • TBD (European Major Rankings)
  • TBD (European Major Rankings)
  • TBD (North American Major Rankings)
  • TBD (CIS Major Rankings)
  • TBD (CIS Major Rankings)
  • TBD (South American Major Rankings)
  • TBD (Asia Major Rankings)
  • TBD (Oceania Major Rankings)

References

  1. "ESL One Rio Overview". HLTV.org. Retrieved March 23, 2020.
  2. "ESL One Rio 2020 - ESL Pro Tour Masters Championship". ESL One Rio. Retrieved December 11, 2019.
  3. "ESL One Rio announced, first CS:GO major in Brazil". ESPN.com. December 11, 2019. Retrieved December 12, 2019.
  4. Wolf, Jacob (September 10, 2020). "ESL One: Rio Major canceled due to coronavirus concerns". ESPN. Retrieved September 13, 2020.
  5. "The Road to the November Rio Major". Counter-Strike: Global Offensive blog. April 2, 2020. Retrieved April 9, 2020.
  6. "ESL One: Road to Rio to fill May CS:GO Major void". ESL One Rio. April 2, 2020. Retrieved April 11, 2020.
  7. Mira, Luis. "ESL One: Rio 2020 Major cancelled due to coronavirus pandemic". HLTV. Retrieved November 29, 2020.
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