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Mobile Legends: Bang Bang Southeast Asia Cup

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Mobile Legends: Bang Bang Southeast Asia Cup
Tournament information
SportMobile Legends: Bang Bang
LocationRegional (SEA)
Established2017; 6 years ago (2017)
Number of
tournaments
6
AdministratorMoonton
Tournament
format(s)
Venue(s)Varies
Participants
  • 8 teams (2017)
  • 10 teams (2018)
  • 12 teams (2019–present)
Websitemcl.mobilelegends.com
Current champion
Indonesia ONIC Esports (2nd title)
Most recent tournament
MSC 2023

Mobile Legends: Bang Bang Southeast Asia Cup, often called as MSC,[1] is an annual esports tournament for the mobile MOBA game Mobile Legends: Bang Bang in Southeast Asia. The tournament consists of different teams from different countries in Southeast Asia such as Malaysia, Philippines, Indonesia, Thailand, and Singapore (Since 2017), Vietnam, and Myanmar (Since 2018), Cambodia, and Laos (Since 2019).

History

MSC 2017

The first season of "ML (Mobile Legends) Southeast Asia Cup" (MSC) started in September 1, 2017 and was held at Jakarta, Indonesia.[2] It is a 3-day event with 8 teams from 5 countries: Philippines, Malaysia, Cambodia, Singapore, and Indonesia, and a total prize pool of $100,000.[1] IDONOTSLEEP (IDNS), an e-sports team based in Thailand were crowned as the champions.[3] MSC 2017 used a qualification system in determining the finalists.[4][5]

MSC 2018

The second year of MSC took off on July 27–29, 2018 and was held again at Jakarta, Indonesia with a similar prize pool of $100,000. MSC 2018 did not use a qualification system but started inviting teams from countries with established Mobile Legends: Bang Bang Professional Leagues (MPL). 10 teams were invited from 7 countries: Indonesia, Philippines, Malaysia, Singapore, Myanmar, Thailand, and Vietnam.[6] IDNS, a competing team, reported technical issues during the tournament where the game casts lsdasdasdasdwithout player input. Moonton put out a notice for a rematch but took it down and no rematch occurred.[7] Regardless of the technical difficulties, Aether Main - a Philippines based team, won the championship.[citation needed]

MSC 2019

The third year of MSC 2019 was held at the Smart Araneta Coliseum in the Philippines from June 19–23, 2019. There were a total of 12 teams from 9 countries in Southeast Asia. The nine countries that took part were Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, the Philippines, Cambodia, Laos, Thailand, Myanmar and Vietnam with a total prize pool of US$120,000. [8] Onic Esports - a team based in Indonesia were crowned as champions after defeating fellow Indonesian based team Louvre Esports in the Grand Finals. This marked the 1st MSC Champions title for the Indonesia.

MSC 2020

On 11 May 2020, Moonton announced that the 2020 Mobile Legends: Bang Bang Southeast Asia Cup was officially canceled due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.[9][10] Moonton explained that due to international travel limitations, and local government regulations about COVID-19, the events were impossible to be held.[10] Hereby, Moonton planned to conduct alternative esports events in each participating MSC country respectively.[10]

MSC 2021

The 2021 Mobile Legends: Bang Bang Southeast Asia Cup, would be held virtually from June 7–9, 2021 for the Group Stages, and from June 11–13, 2021 for the Playoffs.[11] At the Grand Finals, two Philippines based teams, Blacklist International and Execration, reigned supreme and battled it out at for the title in the first best of 7 series ever in the history of Mobile Legends. The title went to Execration,[12] winning $150,000 and gave the Philippines its 2nd MSC Champions title.

MSC 2022

The 2022 Mobile Legends: Bang Bang Southeast Asia Cup was held in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia from June 11 to 19, 2022. Twelve teams from nine countries participated in the championship with a total prize pool of $300,000. At the Grand Finals, RSG Philippines and RRQ Hoshi fought to win the entire championship. RSG Philippines swept RRQ Hoshi 4 to 0 and were deemed the Champions of the 2022 MSC (Mobile Legends: Bang Bang Southeast Asia Cup) and gave the Philippines its 3rd MSC Title, currently the most out of any country playing for MLBB.[13]

MSC 2023

The 2023 Mobile Legends: Bang Bang Southeast Asia Cup was held in Cambodia from June 10 to 18, 2023. Twelve teams from ten countries participated in the championship with a total prize pool of $300,000. At the grand finals, ONIC Esports of Indonesia won Blacklist International of the Philippines.[14]

Format

Two teams from Mobile Legends: Bang Bang Professional Leagues (MPL) on different Southeast Asian countries are invited to MSC. For countries without MPL, local qualifiers are hosted. The tournaments start with a group stage where teams fight for the spot in the upper bracket through best of 3 round robin. Teams winning the best of 3 in the group stage get the spot for the upper bracket. The other two teams compete on play-ins where the winning team gets to the lower bracket and the losing team is eliminated. After the group stage is the tournament proper. Losing teams from the upper bracket are demoted to the lower bracket while losing teams from the lower bracket are eliminated. One finalist will come from each bracket and compete in the Grand Finals.[15] From 2017 to 2019, the Grand Finals are played in best of 5, but since the 2021 version, it is played in best of 7.

Winners

Year Winner Prize Pool Date Venue
2017 Thailand IDONOTSLEEP (IDNS)[3] $100,000 September 1–3, 2017 Mall Taman AnggrekJakarta, Indonesia
2018 Philippines Aether Main[16] $100,000 July 27–29, 2018 Jakarta International Expo − Jakarta, Indonesia
2019 Indonesia ONIC Esports[17] $120,000 June 21–23, 2019 Smart Araneta ColiseumManila, Philippines
2020
Canceled due to COVID-19 pandemic
2021 Philippines Execration $150,000 June 11–13, 2021 None (Held Virtually)
2022 Philippines RSG Philippines $300,000 June 14–19, 2022 Malaysia International Trade and Exhibition CentreKuala Lumpur, Malaysia
2023 Indonesia ONIC Esports $300,000 June 10–18, 2023 Aeon Mall Mean Chey, Phnom Penh, Cambodia

Viewership

Mobile Legends: Bang Bang Southeast Asia Cup is streamed live to Facebook Gaming and YouTube.

Year Peak Viewers Average Viewers Hours Watched Reference
2017 53,837 20,102 353,451 [18][better source needed]
2018 100,000+ N/A N/A [19]
2019 276,579 68,220 2,887,965 [20][better source needed]
2020
Canceled due to COVID-19 pandemic
2021 2,284,012 514,618 29,461,866 [21][better source needed]
2022 2,800,606 477,042 35,181,778 [22]

Participating teams

MSC 2017

Five-Nations Finals
Team Seed
Malaysia Team Saiyan MSC 2017 Malaysia Winner
Malaysia MYA JR MSC 2017 Malaysia Runner-Up
Philippines Solid Gaming Alpha MSC 2017 Philippines Winner
Philippines Salty Salad MSC 2017 Philippines Runner-Up
Indonesia Saints Indo MSC 2017 Indonesia Winner
Indonesia Elite8 Esports MSC 2017 Indonesia Runner-Up
Thailand IDNS MSC 2017 Thailand Winner
Singapore Impunity MSC 2017 Singapore Winner

References:[23]

MSC 2018

Group A Group B
Team Seed Team Seed
Indonesia Aerowolf Roxy1 MPL-ID S1 Winner Philippines Bren Esports4 MPL-PH S1 Winner
Singapore Bigetron Esports2 MPL-MY/SG S1 Winner Indonesia EVOS Esports MPL-ID S1 Runner-Up
Malaysia AirAsia Saiyan3 MPL-MY/SG S1 Runner-Up Indonesia RRQ.O2 MPL-ID S1 3rd Place
Philippines Digital Devils Pro Gaming MPL-PH S1 Runner-Up Thailand IDNS Thailand Local Qualifiers
Myanmar Burmese Ghouls Myanmar Local Qualifiers Vietnam Fantasy Main Vietnam Local Qualifiers

1 = Formerly known as Team NXL

2 = Formerly known as IDNS SG

3 = Formerly known as Team Saiyan

4 = Played as Aether Main

References:[24]

MSC 2019

Group A Group B
Team Seed Team Seed
Malaysia Geek Fam MPL-MY/SG S3 Winner Philippines ArkAngel MPL-PH S3 Winner
Philippines Bren Esports MPL-PH S3 Runner-Up Singapore EVOS.SG MPL-MY/SG S3 Runner-Up
Thailand IDNS Thailand Local Qualifiers Vietnam Overclockers Vietnam Local Qualifiers
Group C Group D
Team Seed Team Seed
Myanmar Team Resolution MPL-MM S2 Winner Indonesia ONIC Esports MPL-ID S3 Winner
Indonesia Louvre Esports MPL-ID S3 Runner-Up Myanmar Burmese Ghouls MPL-MM S2 Runner-Up
Cambodia Diversity Helheim Cambodia Local Qualifiers Laos WAWA Gaming Laos Local Qualifiers

References:[25]

MSC 2021

Group A Group B
Team Seed Team Seed
Malaysia RSG Malaysia MPL-MY S7 Champion Indonesia EVOS Legends MPL-ID S7 Champion
Singapore RSG Singapore MPL-SG S1 Runner-Up Malaysia Todak MPL-MY S7 Runner-Up
Thailand IDONOTSLEEP Thailand Local Qualifiers Vietnam Cyber EXE Vietnam Local Qualifiers
Group C Group D
Team Seed Team Seed
Philippines Blacklist International MPL-PH S7 Champion Singapore EVOS SG MPL-SG S1 Champion
Indonesia Bigetron Alpha MPL-ID S7 Runner-Up Philippines Execration MPL-PH S7 Runner-Up
Cambodia Impunity KH Cambodia Local Qualifiers Laos Nightmare Esports Laos Local Qualifiers

References:[26]

MSC 2022

Group A Group B
Team Seed Team Seed
Malaysia TODAK MPL-MY S9 Champion Philippines RSG Philippines MPL-PH S9 Champion
Myanmar Falcon Esports Myanmar Qualifier Champion Cambodia See You Soon MPL-KH Spring 2022 Runner-Up
Indonesia ONIC Esports MPL-ID S9 Runner-Up Singapore RSG Singapore MPL-SG S3 Champion
Group C Group D
Team Seed Team Seed
Indonesia RRQ Hoshi MPL-ID S9 Champion Cambodia Impunity KH MPL-KH Spring 2022 Champion
Thailand IDONOTSLEEP Mekong1 Qualifier Champion Malaysia Orange Esports MPL-MY S9 Runner-Up
Philippines Omega Esports MPL-PH S9 Runner-Up Singapore EVOS SG MPL-SG S3 Runner-Up

1 = Laos, Thailand, Vietnam

Reference:[27]

MSC 2023

Group A Group B
Team Seed Team Seed
Philippines ECHO Philippines MPL-PH S11 Champion RSG Slate Singapore MPL-SG S5 Champion
Turkey Fire Flux Impunity MTC-Turkiye S1 Champion EVOS Legends MPL-ID S11 Runner-Up
Laos Team EVO Mekong Qualifier Myanmar Fenix Esports Myanmar Qualifier
Group C Group D
Team Seed Team Seed
Indonesia ONIC Esports MPL-ID S11 Champion Philippines Blacklist International MPL-PH S11 Runner-Up
Cambodia BURN x FLASH MPL-KH Spring Champion Malaysia TODAK MPL-MY S11 Champion
United States Outplay NACT Spring 2023 Runner-Up Egypt Team Occupy MPL-MENA Spring 2023 Champion

Reference:[28]

Results

Edition Year Hosts Grand Final Third place Fourth place No. of teams
Champions Score Runners-up
1 2017  Indonesia Thailand
IDONOTSLEEP
3–0 Philippines
Salty Salad
Philippines
Solid Gaming Alpha
Singapore
Impunity
8
2 2018  Indonesia Philippines
Aether Main
3–0 Philippines
Digital Devils Pro Gaming
Indonesia
RRQ.O2
Indonesia
Aerowolf Roxy
10
3 2019  Philippines Indonesia
ONIC Esports
3–0 Indonesia
Louvre Esports
Philippines
ArkAngel
Vietnam
OverClockers
12
2020 Canceled because of COVID-19 pandemic
4 2021 None
[note 1]
Philippines
Execration
4–1
[note 2]
Philippines
Blacklist International
Indonesia
EVOS Legends
Malaysia
RSG Malaysia
12
5 2022  Malaysia Philippines
RSG Philippines
4–0 Indonesia
RRQ Hoshi
Philippines
Omega Esports
Myanmar
Falcon Esports
12
6 2023  Cambodia Indonesia
ONIC Esports
4–2 Philippines
Blacklist International
Philippines
ECHO Philippines
Cambodia
BURN x FLASH
12
Notes
  1. ^ Online tournament.
  2. ^ Since 2021, Grand Final would be held in best-of-seven (BO7) series format.

Performances by teams

Teams reaching the Top Four
Team Champions Runners-up Third place Fourth place Top
Four
Total
Indonesia ONIC Esports 2 (2019, 2023) 2
Thailand IDONOTSLEEP 1 (2017) 1
Philippines Bren Esports1 1 (2018) 1
Philippines Execration 1 (2021) 1
Philippines RSG Philippines 1 (2022) 1
Philippines Blacklist International 2 (2021, 2023) 2
Philippines Salty Salad 1 (2017) 1
Philippines Digital Devils Pro Gaming 1 (2018) 1
Indonesia Louvre Esports 1 (2019) 1
Indonesia RRQ Hoshi2 1 (2022) 1 (2018*) 2
Philippines Solid Gaming Alpha 1 (2017) 1
Philippines ArkAngel 1 (2019*) 1
Indonesia EVOS Legends 1 (2021) 1
Philippines Omega Esports 1 (2022) 1
Philippines ECHO Philippines 1 (2023) 1
Singapore Impunity 1 (2017) 1
Indonesia Aerowolf Roxy 1 (2018*) 1
Vietnam OverClockers 1 (2019) 1
Malaysia RSG Malaysia 1 (2021) 1
Myanmar Falcon Esports 1 (2022) 1
Cambodia BURN x FLASH 1 (2023*) 1
Notes
* Nation hosts.
1. ^ Includes result playing as Aether Main during 2018.
2. ^ Includes result playing as RRQ.O2 during 2018.

Performances by nations

Teams reaching the Top Four
Team Champions Runners-up Third place Fourth place Top
Four
Total
 Philippines 3 (2018, 2021, 2022) 4 (2017, 2018, 2021, 2023) 4 (2017, 2019*, 2022, 2023) 11
 Indonesia 2 (2019, 2023) 2 (2019, 2022) 2 (2018*, 2021) 1 (2018*) 7
 Thailand 1 (2017) 1
 Singapore 1 (2017) 1
 Vietnam 1 (2019) 1
 Malaysia 1 (2021) 1
 Myanmar 1 (2022) 1
 Cambodia 1 (2023*) 1
Notes
* Hosts.

References

  1. ^ a b Sadang, Kim Earlie (September 1, 2017). "'Mobile Legends: Bang Bang' MSC finals are ongoing". Blasting News. Retrieved March 9, 2020.
  2. ^ "MSC 2017: Indonesia Takluk dari Thailand dan Singapura". detik.com. September 1, 2017. Retrieved September 5, 2021.
  3. ^ a b Angelline, Michelle (September 4, 2017). "MSC Grand Champion Winner". Eternal Organizer. Retrieved March 9, 2020.
  4. ^ "Globe Holds First-Ever Mobile Legends Southeast Asia Cup Philippine Finals". Globe. Archived from the original on September 10, 2017.
  5. ^ "MSC Malaysia and Singapore Qualifiers Finals ends with a bang!". July 30, 2017.
  6. ^ "A Legendary Competition: Mobile Legends MSC 2018". Archived from the original on 2019-06-22.
  7. ^ "Drama Breakouts Out at Mobile Legends Southeast Asia Cup 2018 Execration were the champion that time". IGN. July 28, 2018.
  8. ^ "Mobile Legends' Sea Cup (Msc) Will Feature a Us$120,000 Prize Pool". ONE Esports. June 5, 2019.
  9. ^ Subari, Hilmy R. (14 May 2020). "Moonton Officially Announces MSC 2020 Canceled". Dunia Games. Retrieved 21 May 2020.
  10. ^ a b c "Mobile Legends: Bang Bang". Facebook (in Indonesian). 11 May 2020. Retrieved 21 May 2020.
  11. ^ Dewangga, Adithya. "Jadwal dan Grup MSC 2021". Esportsku. Retrieved September 14, 2021.
  12. ^ Ahmed, Wasif (April 27, 2021). "Mobile Legends Southeast Asia Cup (MSC) 2021 unveiled with $150,000 prize pool". Dot Esports. Retrieved April 29, 2021.
  13. ^ Ahmed, Wasif (2022-04-07). "MLBB Southeast Asia Cup (MSC) 2022 will take place in Kuala Lumpur". Dot Esports. Retrieved 2022-04-17.
  14. ^ "MSC 2023: Schedule, results, format, where to watch | ONE Esports". www.oneesports.gg. 2023-06-18. Retrieved 2023-09-16.
  15. ^ "Mobile Legends: Bang Bang Southeast Asia Cup is coming to the Philippines this 19 to 23 June 2019".
  16. ^ "PH eSports teams bag $77,714 prize at Mobile Legends Southeast Asia Cup".
  17. ^ "Esports: Philippines squad Bren wins PH-based Mobile Legends tiff".
  18. ^ "MSC Grand Final 2017". Esports Charts. Retrieved March 9, 2020.
  19. ^ "Kemewahan Event MSC ML 2018 di Balik Penderitaan Pemain" [Players Suffering Behind MSC 2018 Event Luxuriousity]. Kaskus ID (in Indonesian). July 18, 2018.
  20. ^ "MLBB SEA Cup 2019 (MSC) detailed stats". Esports Charts.
  21. ^ "MLBB Southeast Asia Cup 2021". Esports Charts.
  22. ^ "MLBB Southeast Asia Cup 2022". escharts.com. March 31, 2023.
  23. ^ Kun, Coffin (September 1, 2017). "[MSC Five Nations Invitational] MSC 2017 - Grand Finals RESULTS!". Mobile Legends Forum. Retrieved March 9, 2020.
  24. ^ Rifki, Billy (July 27, 2018). "Hasil Undian Grup MSC 2018, Aerowolf Dikepung Tim Asing" [MSC 2018 Group Draw Result, Aerowolf Besieged by Fovereign Teams]. Esports ID (in Indonesian). Retrieved March 9, 2020.
  25. ^ Dexter "the Heartbreaker" (June 4, 2019). "The MSC 2019 Groups Have Been Announced!". eGG Network. Retrieved March 9, 2020.
  26. ^ Elona, Jules (June 7, 2021). "MSC 2021: Results, schedule, format, prize pool, participating teams". ONE Esports. Retrieved June 7, 2021.
  27. ^ "MSC 2022 group draw results | ONE Esports". ONE Esports. 2022-05-27. Retrieved 2022-05-29.
  28. ^ "MSC 2023 group draw results: Fenix Esports takes on group of death in Group B". ONE Esports. 2023-05-26. Retrieved 2023-06-20.

External links

This page was last edited on 16 December 2023, at 22:27
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