Starcraft Wesg
Serral | |
---|---|
Joona Sotala | |
Personal information | |
Born | March 22, 1998 (age 22)[1] |
Nationality | Finland |
Nickname(s) | Serral, The Night King, The Finnish Phenom, The Finnisher, |
Career information | |
Status | Active |
Current team | ENCE eSports |
Games | StarCraft II |
Career prize money | ~US$832,158.99[1] |
Career history | |
2012 | eXelon Gaming |
2013-2014 | ENCE eSports |
2014-2016 | mYinsanity |
2016-present | ENCE eSports |
The LAN-finals of WESG 2018-2019 Ukraine Qualifiers have finished on the 23rd of December. The strongest representatives of Ukraine in CS:GO, Dota 2, Hearthstone and StarCraft II have received the so-desired tickets and will stand for their country at the Grand Final in China. WESG (World Electronic Sports Games) is an event hosted by AliSports, which is a subsidiary of Alibaba Group. During 2017, qualifiers were held throughout the world to find the best players from every continent and have them compete in China. Follow us on Twitter @LiquipediaSC2 if you'd like to be kept up to date on all things StarCraft II! World Electronic Sports Games 2018.
Medal record | ||
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World Championship | ||
2018 United States of America |
Joona Sotala (born March 22, 1998), better known by his gaming handle Serral, is a Finnish professional Starcraft II player using the race Zerg. In 2018, Serral became the first non-Korean player to win the StarCraft II World Championship Series (WCS).[2][3] He won every major non-Korean tournament in 2018, the 2018 Global Starcraft II League (GSL) vs. the World event and, ultimately, the 2018 WCS Global Finals.[4]
Starcraft II Career[edit]
Early career[edit]
Serral started competing at Starcraft II in 2012, but did not initially make a big splash. He would improve his play steadily, taking a first minor US$1,000 tournament win in 2015.[citation needed] His first major tournament win would come in 2017 with the World Championship Series (WCS) Jönköping European Qualifier win, beating Zanster, Mana, ShowTimE, Namshar and Elazer.[5][6] He took 2nd place in the main event after beating Stephano, PtitDrogo and Elazer, but lost 3-4 to Neeb in the Finals.[7] In 2017, he also won the European Qualifier for WCS Valencia, taking out Stephano, Bly, HeRoMaRinE and Elazer twice.[8] During the main event, he was knocked out in the quarter finals by TRUE.[9]
Serral won the European Qualifier for World Electronic Sports Games (WESG) by beating Clem, NightEnD, Starbuck, Majestic, uThermal, Elazer and Nerchio.[10] In the main event, he did not lose a map during group play, beating ShoWTimE, Minato, Has, Elazer, Bly and Lambo. During playoffs he beat Neeb in the quarterfinals, but lost 0-3 to the eventual champion Maru.[11]
2018[edit]
His first premier tournament win came in 2018 when he won WCS Leipzig, beating MaSa, Nerchio, SpeCial and ShoWTimE.[12] He went on to win all 3 other major WCS tournaments in 2018, getting the first clean sweep, or Grand Slam, in WCS history.[13] In WCS Austin, he defeated Kelazhur, HeRoMaRinE, Lambo and MaNa.[14] In WCS Valencia, he beat Scarlett, Reynor, HeRoMaRinE and Has.[15] In WCS Montreal, his domination of the 2018 WCS circuit was underscored by beating JonSnow, Scarlett, Lambo and Reynor.[16] Serral also showed his prowess in the Korean scene at the 2018 Global Starcraft II League (GSL) vs. the World tournament where he took home a $26,901 prize over several of the strongest Korean players, beating Kelazhur, INnoVation, Dark and Stats.[17][18]
The year end WCS Global Finals at Blizzcon featured 2018's eight best non-Koreans and eight best Koreans, including Cho 'Maru' Seong Ju, who qualified for the Global Finals by making a clean sweep of GSL. Serral would win this tournament beating sOs, Zest, Dark, Rogue and Stats to become the first non-Korean to do so in the history of the Starcraft franchise.[2][3][19]
2019[edit]
To start off the year 2019, Serral competed in the WCS Winter Europe Tournament, where he was expected to win. However, he was defeated 4-3 by 16-year-old Italian Zerg player, Reynor, in the Grand Finals in an incredibly close series.[20] A month prior, he was also defeated by INnoVation in the WESG Finals.[21] Not to mention, earlier that week he was eliminated in the Round of 8 of IEM Katowice to soO, the eventual winner of the tournament.[22] After not losing a tournament in 2018, then falling short of victory in his first three tournaments of 2019, many started to question his dominance over the scene.[23]
After the conclusion of WCS Winter, the Challengers for WCS Spring quickly started where Serral easily won, defeating ShoWTimE in the finals 4–2.[24] During the main tournament, Serral quickly advanced to the playoff round. He defeated Lambo and TIME to advance to the semifinals. In the semifinal, he swept Reynor 3-0 to advance into the Grand Final—as a revenge for WCS Winter. In the Grand Final, Serral won 4-0 versus the Mexican Terran player SpeCial. His victory in WCS Spring was his Fifth WCS Circuit title.[25][26]
However, he lost again to Reynor in the WCS Summer Grand Final 4–2. In his home tournament in Finland, Asus ROG Assembly 2019, he was projected to be one of the favorites to win the tournament, but lost to the strong Korean Protoss player Stats 2–3 in semifinals. Later during the summer, he won the GSL vs. the World tournament on Korean soil by defeating another Zerg player, Elazer, in the finals 4–2. The first time in the history no Korean players appeared in the final match. The win was Serral's second consecutive in the tournament.[27] Serral won the last 2019 WCS Fall circuit tournament at Montreal against Reynor 4-1, and broke the previous WCS record by achieving an unprecedented map score of 17-1 - with his only map loss in the finals. Serral won the WCS season with 10,200 points, having already earned the top seed in Blizzcon 2019 with tournament victories in WCS Spring and WCS Fall tournaments.[28] Despite of being one of the main favorites to win The Blizzcon 2019 he lost the semifinal match against his season long rival Reynor 2-3, the eventual tournament runner-up, after tight series of best of 5.[29][30]
In the season's last premier tournament HomeStory Cup XX held at Tropical Islands Resort in Germany, Serral came back to the winning ways defeating Reynor twice (2–1 and 3–2) in the finals after winning the double-elimination loser bracket final against Innovation 0-3, to which he was first relegated from winners' round 2 by him with map score 3–1.[31][32]
Serral played crucial role in Nationwars 2019 tournament when Team Finland (ZhuGeLiang, Serral, TheMusZero) defeated Team Korea in the final match 5-3 becoming the champion.[33]
For recognition and honor of Serral's accomplishments and continued success in StarCraft II esports, the President of FinlandSauli Niinistö invited him to take part to the traditional Independence Day Reception in the Presidential Palace, Helsinki, December 6th 2019.[34]
2020[edit]
Serral faced Dark in the TSL6 finals where he lost 0-4.[citation needed]
References[edit]
Wesg 2019 Starcraft 2
- ^ ab'Serral - Joona Sotala - StarCraft II Player Profile :: Esports Earnings'. www.esportsearnings.com. Retrieved 2019-10-19.
- ^ abKurt, Lozano. 'Serral dominates, becomes first non-Korean to win the WCS'. www.foxsportsasia.com. Retrieved 22 November 2018.
- ^ abHorti, Samuel (2018-11-04). 'Serral becomes first non-Korean to win StarCraft 2's biggest prize'. PC Gamer. Retrieved 2019-10-19.
- ^'StarCraft II: Serral wins WCS Global Finals'. ESPN.com. Retrieved 22 November 2018.
- ^'2017 WCS Jönköping - Europe Qualifier - Liquipedia - The StarCraft II Encyclopedia'. liquipedia.net.
- ^Miles, Yim. 'Serral searching to cement his StarCraft legacy'. ESPN.com. Retrieved 22 November 2018.
- ^'2017 WCS Jönköping - Liquipedia - The StarCraft II Encyclopedia'. liquipedia.net.
- ^'2017 WCS Valencia - Europe Qualifier - Liquipedia - The StarCraft II Encyclopedia'. liquipedia.net.
- ^'2017 WCS Valencia - Liquipedia - The StarCraft II Encyclopedia'. liquipedia.net.
- ^'WESG 2017 - Europe & CIS Qualifier - Liquipedia - The StarCraft II Encyclopedia'. liquipedia.net.
- ^'World Electronic Sports Games 2017 - Liquipedia - The StarCraft II Encyclopedia'. liquipedia.net.
- ^'2018 WCS Leipzig - Liquipedia - The StarCraft II Encyclopedia'. liquipedia.net.
- ^Miles, Yim. 'Serral searching to cement his StarCraft legacy'. ESPN.com. Retrieved 22 November 2018.
- ^'2018 WCS Austin - Liquipedia - The StarCraft II Encyclopedia'. liquipedia.net.
- ^'2018 WCS Valencia - Liquipedia - The StarCraft II Encyclopedia'. liquipedia.net.
- ^'2018 WCS Montreal - Liquipedia - The StarCraft II Encyclopedia'. liquipedia.net.
- ^'2018 GSL vs. the World - Liquipedia - The StarCraft II Encyclopedia'. liquipedia.net.
- ^Miles, Yim. 'Serral searching to cement his StarCraft legacy'. ESPN.com. Retrieved 22 November 2018.
- ^'2018 WCS Global Finals'. Liquipedia StarCraft 2 Wiki.
- ^'2019 WCS Winter Europe - Liquipedia - The StarCraft II Encyclopedia'. liquipedia.net. Retrieved 2019-05-19.
- ^'World Electronic Sports Games 2018 - Liquipedia - The StarCraft II Encyclopedia'. liquipedia.net. Retrieved 2019-05-19.
- ^'IEM Season XIII - Katowice - Liquipedia - The StarCraft II Encyclopedia'. liquipedia.net. Retrieved 2019-05-19.
- ^'Reynor wins WCS Winter: Europe'. tl.net. Retrieved 2019-05-19.
- ^'2019 WCS Spring: Europe Qualifier - Liquipedia - The StarCraft II Encyclopedia'. liquipedia.net. Retrieved 2019-05-19.
- ^'2019 WCS Spring - Liquipedia - The StarCraft II Encyclopedia'. liquipedia.net. Retrieved 2019-05-19.
- ^'Serral wins WCS Spring, claims fifth circuit title'. tl.net. Retrieved 2019-05-19.
- ^'Serral defeats Elazer to win GSL vs The World 2019'. tl.net. Retrieved 2020-01-26.
- ^'WCS 2019 Global Standings'. wcs.starcraft2.com. Retrieved 2020-01-26.
- ^'2019 WCS Global Finals'. liquipedia.net. Retrieved 2020-01-26.
- ^'CONGRATS TO THE STARCRAFT II WCS GLOBAL FINALS CHAMPION!'. blizzcon.com. Retrieved 2020-01-26.
- ^'HomeStory Cup XX'. liquipedia.net. Retrieved 2020-01-26.
- ^'Serral wins HomeStory Cup XX'. tl.net. Retrieved 2020-01-26.
- ^'StarCraft II: NationWars 2019'. liquipedia.net. Retrieved 2020-01-26.
- ^'StarCraft II -pelin maailmanmestari Joona Sotala sai kutsun Linnan juhliin'. is.fi. Retrieved 2020-01-26.
Preceded by Lee 'Rogue' Byung Ryul | StarCraft II World Championship Series Winner 2018 | Succeeded by Park 'Dark' Ryung Woo |