Introducing Hearthstone Masters - Qualifiers, Tour, Grandmasters
Following the video on the Specialist Format, Blizzard has released more information on this year's Hearthstone Competition.
Quote from BlizzardLate last year we revealed we were hard at work evolving Hearthstone Esports into a more sustainable, entertaining, and accessible program. Today we are happy to reveal full details about the first two parts of this new program, which we have collectively named Hearthstone Masters.
Hearthstone Masters’ entry tier of competition, Masters Qualifiers, are open to all eligible players who want to test their Hearthstone skills. Each week during a Masters Tour qualifying season, Blizzard will run approximately 30 tournaments, hosted through Battlefy, which will allow players to compete at a time that works for them. Battlefy is a global platform that has been a trusted partner of Blizzard’s for several years now, and we look forward to working closely with them to make Masters Qualifiers a success.
Winning a Masters Qualifier will earn you an invite to that qualifier’s corresponding Masters Tour event, the second tier of the Hearthstone Masters program detailed below. Online Masters Qualifiers also will award Hearthstone card packs for top-performing competitors. Registration will go live two weeks before each Masters Qualifier is set to begin, with the first tournament scheduled for March 5. Check out the full schedule here; registration already is open for the first tournaments:
But that’s not the only way to qualify! For ladder devotees, each month during a Masters Qualifiers season we will publish the top finishers in the Standard Ranked Play Ladder. Eligible players who end the month in the Top 200 will be invited to participate in a Ranked Ladder Qualifier. Each Ranked Ladder Qualifier follows the same rules of an open-entry Masters Qualifier, except the top four finishers will earn a spot at the next Hearthstone Masters Tour event.
Hearthstone Masters Tour
The first stop on the Hearthstone Masters Tour will be in Las Vegas, at the LINQ hotel, over June 14–16. What are we doing at the LINQ? We’re putting on a huge Hearthstone tournament! For competitors the setup will be familiar. Picture tables wired to the teeth with ethernet, primed for players to prove their merit in Swiss and elimination rounds over three days. There is a $250,000 prize pool, plus the incentive of proving yourself worthy of Hearthstone Grandmaster status—but more on that in a bit.
That $250,000 could potentially be a lot more. We want to give fans the chance to support Hearthstone Masters directly while getting some awesome in-game items. So later this year, we will introduce a limited-time-only esports bundle in the shop. A portion of all sales will be distributed across the base prize pools of each of the three 2019 Hearthstone Masters Tour events. Keep an eye out for more details about the esports bundle soon.
After our trip to Vegas, the Masters Tour will head to Asia and Europe, with even more destinations planned for 2020. The location and dates for each Masters Tour event will be announced at least two weeks prior to the beginning of their associated Masters Qualifiers season.
Players can qualify for Masters Tour events in 2019 through multiple routes, including:
- Winning an online Masters Qualifier
- Placing in the top four of a Ranked Ladder Qualifier
- Securing an invitation through licensed third-party tournaments
- Finishing as a top-performer at a previous Masters Tour event
- Qualifying through the China Gold Series
- Finishing out Year of the Raven with at least 120 Hearthstone Competitive Points
Hearthstone Grandmasters
Last but very much not least we have Hearthstone Grandmasters! We’re not quite ready to announce full details about Hearthstone Grandmasters, including qualifying criteria, but note that one way in which you can be invited to join is via consistent top finishes at Masters Tour events.
Specialist Format
We are sending the Conquest format out with a bang at the 2019 Hearthstone World Championship, starting on April 25. Replacing Conquest will be a new format we’re calling Specialist. We are excited to see how the Specialist format performs when played at the pro level and we’re eager to implement community feedback to improve it as needed throughout 2019. Here’s how the format works:
- Players submit three decks from the same class.
- Players designate one deck as a primary deck, then the other two as secondary and tertiary.
- Secondary and tertiary decks may have up to 5 cards different from the primary deck. For the purposes of this modification, two duplicate cards in the primary deck list count as two cards.
- Players must play game one of each match with their primary deck.
- At the beginning of game two and onward, players may decide to keep playing their primary deck, or switch to their secondary or tertiary decks.
- Deck decisions for games two and three, if necessary, are performed at the start of each game simultaneously and in secret from the opposing player.
- All Masters Qualifier and Ranked Ladder Qualifier matches will be best-of-three. All matches at Masters Tour events will be best-of-three as well, with the exception of a best-of-five finals.
Please see the Official Rules and Hearthstone Tournament Player Handbook for specific competition rules, eligibility requirements, and other important details. We have used feedback from our viewers and competitive community to make several new updates, including allowing note-taking in official competition, and more.
good lord some in this community are negative! this actually looks like a really interesting way to shake up competitive hearthstone! I'm excited to watch players streaming tournament qualifiers instead of only grinding ladder. This opens up a whole new way to play hearthstone since everyone can potentially give it a shot. This is future thinking that could help create other game modes. It's a step in the right direction and, I believe, we as a community should see it as such. I also like that Blizzard put it right in the notes that they will keep working on it until it's something that the majority deems as satisfactory. Things are looking good.
Yep. We essentially have no idea how this will play out, but people already have their pitchforks out.
Oh well, welcome to our Hearthstone community.
Except we already know how this is going to play out. They are all going to bring the exact same class. a difference of 5 cards isn't going to change the deck and even if it did it's till the SAME CLASS. Congrats guys they found a way to make an even less interesting format then we currently have.
u have no clue how wrong you are buddy. this brings so many interesting layers to the strategy of deck creation/choice. If you bring an OTK lineup, and meet Aggro, it will be a race. But what if u meet Control Warlock with tools to steal/transform your key OTK card? How do u adjust to that first game? How would you design your Secondary and Tertiary decks under those conditions?
Making players use 1 class will make for some exciting choices. Could be alot of fun.
Try not to be so quick to get negative. Embrace the change and add to it with positivity.....
for example five cards change control warlock to mill warlock (howlfiend, treachery)
You'll have to wait for the new set to realease. Once journey to un'goro rotates out, it leaves a lot of space to change the meta. I imagine that they had this in mind when changing the tournament format.
You will have to explain to me how you think all 9 classes can be represented in a tournament equally when they can't even get more than three or four balanced right now? The pro players are not going to take chances. they are going to play exactly what is the best deck and the field will look exactly the same. Look at MTG if you don;t think this happens as this is exactly the type of format they are copying.
If this is how you think the tournament will play out you're not really paying attention to pro play. If there is a strong deck that most people are suspected of bringing some pro players will build a deck targeting said strong deck. Then there will be other players targeting the counter to said strong deck.
I have a bad feeling that we will be very-very bored watching one mirror match after another mirror match
Mirror matches aren't that boring... tech cards matter a lot in those... and having 3 sets of tech cards can be pretty interesting...
Hi
The team dealing with competitive Hearthstone doesn't also work on new modes, expansions, or any other Hearthstone issues. So your complaint is ridiculous - this part of the team is doing exactly what they were hired to do.
YAWN
Kind of sucks that Qualifiers are run through Battlefy. If they had implemented the tournament mode it'd be perfect for this kind of events.
This and the new format is really cool. I think we could see a fresh wave of players interested in the competitive format. The odds that tournaments end up being just one class being brought and played should be slim because all it takes is for one "random" to show up and sweep the event by countering that top deck.
It adds an interesting element of mind games. Can't wait to see how the first few events go.
So I hope I have this correct. I was reading the rules and regulations for the masters tour, and it claims that I can participate in any of the regions Battlefy tournament qualifiers so long as we are residents of the list of countries outlined.
So does that mean I can participate in a Eu or Asia region tournament qualifier with my NA account? Or do I have to use my Eu, Asia, NA accounts in their respective regions for the tournaments on Battlefy?
Also, for the big tournaments, do you have to use the region account you qualified with? Or the account of the region? NA for Na, Asia for Asia, Eu for Eu?