League of Legends Master Series

The League of Legends Master Series (LMS) was a professional League of Legends league with teams from Taiwan, Hong Kong, and Macau from 2015 to 2019.[1] Eight teams competed over two seasons to qualify for the League of Legends World Championship. In September 2019, Riot announced that the LMS would merge with the League of Legends SEA Tour (LST) to create a new professional league for all Garena-affiliated regions except Vietnam, the Pacific Championship Series (PCS).

League of Legends Master Series
FormerlyLeague of Legends Nova League (LNL)
SportLeague of Legends
Founded2014 (2014)
Inaugural seasonSpring 2015
Ceased25 November 2019 (2019-11-25)
Replaced byPCS
(merged with LST)
Owner(s)Garena
No. of teams8
CountriesTaiwan/Hong Kong/Macau
HeadquartersNeihu, Taipei
Venue(s)Garena e-Sports Stadium
Last
champion(s)
J Team (1st title)
Most titlesFlash Wolves (7 titles)
TV partner(s)Garena Live, Twitch, YouTube
Sponsor(s)Garena, Riot Games
Relegation toElite Challenger Series (ECS)
Related
competitions
Garena Premier League
Official websitelms.garena.tw
League of Legends Master Series
Traditional Chinese台港澳職業聯賽
Simplified Chinese台港澳职业联赛
Literal meaningTW/HK/MO Professional League

History

An announcement was made by Garena in October 2014 about plans of creating a new league to separate Taiwan, Hong Kong, and Macau from the rest of the Garena Premier League (GPL) of Southeast Asia. The league would have two seasons per year, spring and summer.[2] The regional quota of two slots in the GPL and a single seed in the World Championship every year temporarily offset the dominance of the Taiwanese teams, but these conditions were not enough as the slots of the Southeast Asia in the World Championship 2014 were both filled by Taiwanese teams. As part of the changes to the 2015 GPL, the region consisting of Taiwan, Hong Kong, and Macau left the GPL and began to compete instead in the League of LMS, which replaced the Nova League in Taiwan. This action was done to allow Southeast Asian teams a better chance at winning the GPL, as Taiwanese teams had won every GPL season.

In September 2019, it was announced that the LMS would be merged with the League of Legends SEA Tour (LST) to create a new professional league for all Garena-affiliated regions (excluded Vietnam), the Pacific Championship Series (PCS).[3]

Logistics

Each LMS team was supported by Garena with NT$200,000, which did not include prize money. Teams from Hong Kong and Macau were provided with flights and accommodations, and received an additional NT$60,000. The beginning of the LMS coincided with the construction of the Garena e-Sports Stadium, located on the first floor of an office building in Neihu, Taipei.[4][5]

Format

Group stage

  • Offline tournament
  • Double round robin, matches are best-of-three
  • Top four teams receives a spot in playoffs
  • Bottom team will play in the promotion tournament for a spot in the next season

Playoffs

  • Offline tournament
  • Single elimination tournament, seeding is based on regular season ranks
  • All matches are best-of-five
  • Total prize pool is NT$5,800,000 (≈$182,740 USD)

Past seasons

Year Split 1st 2nd 3rd 4th Qualified for Worlds
Seed 1 Seed 2 Seed 3
2015 Spring ahq eSports Club Flash Wolves Taipei Assassins Hong Kong Esports ahq eSports Club Flash Wolves N/A
Summer ahq eSports Club Hong Kong Esports Flash Wolves[6] Midnight Sun Esports
2016 Spring Flash Wolves ahq eSports Club Machi 17 Taipei Assassins Flash Wolves ahq eSports Club N/A
Summer Flash Wolves J Team ahq eSports Club Hong Kong Esports
2017 Spring Flash Wolves ahq eSports Club J Team Machi 17 Flash Wolves ahq eSports Club Hong Kong Attitude
Summer Flash Wolves ahq eSports Club Raise Gaming J Team
2018 Spring Flash Wolves G-Rex MAD Team Machi 17 Flash Wolves MAD Team G-Rex
Summer Flash Wolves MAD Team J Team Hong Kong Attitude
2019 Spring Flash Wolves MAD Team ahq eSports Club J Team J Team ahq eSports Club Hong Kong Attitude
Summer J Team ahq eSports Club Hong Kong Attitude MAD Team

References

As of this edit, this article uses content from "2015 season", which is licensed in a way that permits reuse under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License, but not under the GFDL. All relevant terms must be followed.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.