YOU HAVE FAILED TO PROPERLY KEEP UP WITH THE KARDASHIANS
INITIATING "ELIMINATION MODE"
seen from United States

seen from Saudi Arabia
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Malaysia
seen from Russia
seen from China

seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Canada
seen from Netherlands

seen from United States
seen from Kosovo

seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia

seen from Canada
seen from United States
seen from Italy
seen from Brazil
YOU HAVE FAILED TO PROPERLY KEEP UP WITH THE KARDASHIANS
INITIATING "ELIMINATION MODE"
What gets Googled more? Winning The Elimination mode.
1st out of 54.
How To Make An Already Crazy Game Even More Insane
See on Scoop.it - eSports
Moonduck Studio & Agency, a newly formed Dota 2 coverage organization, introduces a new game mode for Dota 2: Elimination Mode. Elimination Mode has ...
ALL IN Magazine's insight:
A quick look at Moonduck Studio & Agency shows that this company is super new. They don't have a schedule of events lined up. They only have two videos up, both of which have limited production values. They have no sponsors yet.
But if they may be on to something with this. Elimination mode is an idea that is gaining some attention from the eSports community. The structure of the game mode will force players to eventually chose champions they are unfamiliar with. Everything that is taught through DOTA 2's meta will be completely thrown out by about halfway through the second draft.
This mode isn't going to be the next big change to DOTA 2 competitions. It creates too many variables for players to become proficient at. Assuming a player chooses their second choice for each round (which is completely unrealistic considering the format), a player would have to develop a familiarity with ten different champions, which isn't crazy, but at least 3-4 of them are completely irrelevant in the current meta. It will definitely be entertaining to watch, but should just be a flash in the pan. Good press for a young company though.
From Inquirer
See on esports.inquirer.net