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Published on February 7th, 2014 | by Firestorm

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2014 Pokémon Asia Cup

Last week we brought you a team report from a qualifier event leading up to 2014 Pokémon Asia Cup, but today we’ll be talking a little more about what it is! Asia’s qualification system for the Pokémon World Championships is quite different from North America, Europe, and even Australia. Only Japan and Korea have any way of qualifying outside the Last Chance Qualifier and they are done through varying means that change from year-to-year. One thing that hasn’t changed is that there has really only been one large tournament a year for them to qualify through. The 2014 Pokémon Asia Cup will not change that because it is an unofficial grassroots tournament series. However, what it will do is allow players from Asia, including countries outside Japan and Korea, more large competitive tournaments to play in!

There are eight countries involved in the 2014 Pokémon Asia Cup:

  • Japan
  • South Korea
  • Singapore
  • Malaysia
  • Indonesia
  • Philippines
  • Hong Kong
  • Taiwan

Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia, Philippines, Hong Kong, Taiwan

Each country held its own qualification tournaments in January and determined their top eight players to send to stage two of the tournament. This month, they will play in a 40 person online tournament to determine who will represent their countries in the final stage of the 2014 Pokémon Asia Cup at the end of March. There will be five swiss rounds followed by a top 8 cut. A total of 12 players will move to the final stage of the tournament: the top ranking player from each country and the six top ranking players who didn’t get a country-based invite.

We’ll be working to get more team reports and videos from these events for you all so keep an eye on the site and our YouTube channel!

Japan

Japanese players will seed 16 players into the final stage of the tournament. Eight of these players will be determined using an online qualifier held by R_Justice and livestreamed on his twitcast channel. The other eight will be determined using the Battle Road Gloria local tournament series.

Battle Road Gloria Schedule

Level Date City # of Qualifiers Capacity
Regional Saturday, January 18th Tokyo 4 113
Regional Saturday, February 1st Hiroshima 2 80
Regional Saturday, February 9th Fukuoka 2 80
Regional Saturday, February 23rd Osaka 2 90
Regional Saturday, March 8th Ishikawa 2 72
Regional Saturday, March 15th Miyagi 2 64
Last Chance Qualifier Saturday, March 22nd Osaka 6 130
National Sunday, March 23rd Osaka 20 + 110

The online qualifier will happen on Sunday, March 2nd, 2014. So far 56 players have registered for the online tournament with a cap of 128 set.

Korea Qualification Method

South Korea will seed four players into the final stage of the 2014 Pokémon Asia Cup using an online tournament. The schedule is as follows and the top four players will move on:

  • Top 64: February 8th to 14th
  • Top 32: February 15th to 21st
  • Top 16: February 22nd to 28th
  • Top 8: March 1st to 7th
  • Top 4: March 8th to 14th
  • Finals: March 15th to 28th

Finals

The 16 Japanese players, 4 Korean players, and 12 players from the other countries involved will play in a 32 person swiss tournament with 4 to 5 rounds. The top four players will move on to an elimination bracket. This is scheduled to happen most likely on March 29th and/or March 30th, 2014. The games will all be best of 3 and the winner will be considered the 2014 Asian Champion!

Still confused about the flow? Hopefully this chart from 1hko log helps!

asiacup_flow


About the Author

is one of the co-founders of Nugget Bridge and the Community Manager for eSports Tournament Platform Battlefy. He has been playing Pokémon since 1999, competitively since 2007, and attending tournaments since 2010. He lives in Vancouver, Canada with a degree in Interactive Art & Technology + Communications. You can follow him on Twitter at @rushanshekar.



3 Responses to 2014 Pokémon Asia Cup

  1. tanzying says:

    Malaysian qualifiers top 8: (in no particular order)
     
    Julian.
    Destiny D SkyCloud
    Tan Jin Hong.
    Yeow Zhen Wei.
    Vince Ang
    Chan Ji Yun.
    Winson Lye.
    Mohamad Fadzirul.

     
    Phillipines top 8: (in order of merit)
     
    Ray Powao
    Kelvin Klein Lazam
    Welco Orejola
    Alvin Rambano
    Paul Vincent Vitalez
    John Renelle Payumo
    Rap Perez
    Marlon Valeza
    (actually #11 but replaced #3 who volutarily dropped due to other commitments)
     
    Singapore top 8: (in order of merit)
     
    Max Goh
    Ryan Chiam
    Jim Chu
    Low Kit Meng
    Lum Jun Jie
    Ong Pang Wen
    Nelson Lim
    Jaryl Chan
     
    (Max’s team report is avaliable at External but he says he intends to contribute it proper to NB some time soon)
     
    Indonesian Top 8: (in order of merit)
     
    Jason Oktavian
    Muhammad Aldo
    Airi
    Taufik Hidayat
    Ama Bari
    Jonita L
    Aji Bima
    Firmansyah

  2. Kurenai says:

    I would like to ask a blaring question as how did you guys get this information and does anyone know how to actually sign up when we are in Japan. My friend (Japanese) and I want to join but it seems like this terrible exclusive system… and I would appreciate any help! It seems that the “gloria qualifiers” in my region were a “first come first serve’ comment on the blog post” system.

  3. Firestorm says:

    Tanzying is from Singapore. For the information in the article we used information from the Japanese blog post, Facebook chat, and Twitter to gather the info.

    I would say the best way to stay up to date on the Japanese scene is to use Twitter. Maybe tweet R_Justice about how you can attend another Battle Road Gloria?

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