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Revision as of 19:22, 24 October 2023
- WCS23 redirects here. For Pokémon Trading Card Game set using this set code, see 2023 World Championships Yokohama Deck: Pikachu (TCG).
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World Championships |
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The 2023 World Championships was held at Pacifico Yokohama in Yokohama, Kanagawa, Japan from August 11 to 13, 2023. It was the eighteenth invitation-only championships for players of the Pokémon Trading Card Game, the thirteenth for players of the Pokémon video games, and the second for players of Pokémon GO and Pokémon UNITE. This was the third time the World Championships is held outside of the U.S., and the first time the event was held in Japan.
Trading Card Game Championships
The 2023-24 Standard format was used for the Pokémon TCG Championships, allowing all cards with regulation mark E or later. Players received invitations from gaining enough Championship Points throughout the year or from the previous World Championships. The top cut for some rating zones were able to go straight to Day Two: the Top 2 of the Middle East and South Africa, Top 4 of Oceania, Top 12 of Latin America, Top 16 of US and Canada, and Top 22 of Europe.
Day One was composed of Swiss rounds, with players earning enough match points moving on to Day Two. Players competed in a new set of Swiss rounds on Day Two until a Top 8 was determined. The Top 8 then had a single elimination bracket, with the finals taking place on Day Three. All games were best of three.
Junior Division
Rikuto Ohashi was the defending champion.
Shao Tong Yen became the new champion with a record of 6/1/1.
Senior Division
Liam Halliburton was the defending champion.
Gabriel Fernandez finished with a record of 6/1/1 to become the new World Champion.
Master Division
Ondřej Škubal was the defending champion and didn't make it to Day Two.
Vance Kelley defeated Tord Reklev in sudden death to become World Champion with a 9/0/2 record.
Video Game Championships
Players received invitations from gaining enough Championship Points throughout the year or from the previous World Championships. The top cut for some rating zones were able to go straight to Day Two: the Top 4 of Oceania, Top 8 of US/Canada and Latin America, and Top 16 of Europe.
Day One players competed in Swiss rounds, with those ending the day with fewer than three losses and no ties moving on to Day Two. A new set of Swiss rounds was played Day Two until a top cut could be determined to play a single elimination bracket. The finals of this bracket were played on Day Three.
Matches took place in Pokémon Scarlet and Violet and were all Double Battles. All Pokémon in the games (including by transfer from Pokémon HOME) were eligible except any special Pokémon, Iron Leaves, or Walking Wake. Levels for all Pokémon were adjusted to level 50 and no duplicate Pokémon or items were allowed.
Junior Division
Kosaku Miyamoto was the defending champion but was eligible for the Senior Division.
Sora Ebisawa succeeded them as World Champion.
Senior Division
Yasuharu Shimizu was the defending champion but was eligible for the Masters Division this year. He didn't make it to Day Two.
Tomoyo Ogawa of Japan defeated Robbie Schaaij of the Netherlands to become World Champion.
Master Division
Eduardo Cunha was the defending champion and didn't make it to Day Two.
Shohei Kimura became the World Champion.
Pokémon GO Championships
Competitors for the Pokémon GO Championships were grouped into four double elimination pods to determine a Top 32. Top 32 competed in another double elimination bracket on Day Two, with grand finals taking place Day Three. The Great League format was utilized. All non-finals matches were best of three, while finals were best of five.
Maxwell "MEWeedle" Ember and Robert "DancingRob" Waßmer were defending champions but were both knocked out in the group stage.
ItsAXN became the new Pokémon GO World Champion.
Pokémon UNITE Championships
Teams qualified for the Pokémon UNITE Championships by having the most Championship Points within their regional zone or winning their Regional Finals. Regional zones had the following number of invitations: four from North America, Europe, and Japan; three from Latin America - North, Asia Pacific - East, and Asia Pacific - West; and two from Brazil, Korea, India, Latin America - South, and Oceania.
All matches were 5-on-5 and took place on Theia Sky Ruins. Players were allowed to play on any of the three available platforms. Day One had the teams compete in a best of three Single Round Robin bracket to determine Top 8. On Day Two, the Top 8 competed in a best of three double elimination bracket, with grand finals being best of five.
BLVKHVND, the defending champions, competed under the Luminosity Gaming name. They swept Day Two, not losing a game, becoming two-time World Champions.
Winners Semifinals | Winners Final | Grand Final | Reset | ||||||||||||||
Japan | Oyasumi Makuro | 2 | |||||||||||||||
Japan | MJK | 1 | Japan | Oyasumi Makuro | 0 | ||||||||||||
North America | Luminosity Gaming | 2 | North America | Luminosity Gaming | 2 | North America | Luminosity Gaming | 3 | N/A | ||||||||
Asia Pacific - East | OMO Abyssinian | 0 | Asia Pacific - East | OMO Abyssinian | 0 | N/A | |||||||||||
Losers Quarterfinals | Losers Semifinal | Losers Final | |||||||||||||||
Japan | MJK | 2 | Japan | Oyasumi Makuro | 1 | ||||||||||||
Brazil | 00 Nation | 0 | Japan | MJK | 1 | Asia Pacific - East | OMO Abyssinian | 2 | |||||||||
Asia Pacific - East | OMO Abyssinian | 2 | Asia Pacific - East | OMO Abyssinian | 2 | ||||||||||||
Korea | AKJIL | 0 |
Pokémon Fantasy Team
Pokémon Fantasy Team was a fantasy sport draft contest for U.S. residents built around the 2023 World Championships. Users with a Pokémon Trainer Club account could create teams from August 1 to 10 that were scored based on the TCG and VGC Masters Division results. The top 100 finishers for each division received a booster box of Obsidian Flames and an Umbreon Sitting Cuties plush, with first place also receiving a jumbo Spheal Poké Plush. The first 10,000 registrations also got a code for a Stretchy Form Tatsugiri.
Entrants could build a team of six from specific groups of then-legal cards/Pokémon. Registering a team also required making a guess to a tiebreaker question.
- TCG teams required
- a Pokémon V
- a Pokémon VMAX
- a Pokémon VSTAR
- a Radiant Pokémon
- a Pokémon ex
- a Pokémon not in any previous group
- a guess on the total number of cards in both discard piles at the end of the final match
- VGC teams required
- a Treasure of Ruin
- a Paradox Pokémon
- a Generation IX Pokémon not in the previous groups
- two Pokémon that became legal in Regulation Set D
- a Pokémon not in any previous group
- a guess on the HP of the Pokémon delivering the final Knock Out
Scoring was determined by each team member's highest-placing appearance in Masters Division Top 8 teams. In case of ties, the entrant whose guess to the tiebreaker was closest to correct was placed higher. Prizes could only be won from one division; an entrant's higher placement nullified their other placement.[1]
Top 8 placement | TCG pts. | VGC pts. |
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1st | 48 | 16 |
2nd | 24 | 8 |
3rd-4th | 12 | 4 |
5th-8th | 6 | 2 |
Event Pokémon
Wonder Card 505 | Tatsugiri (Stretchy Form) Gift | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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This Pokémon's Scale value is random. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
This Pokémon may only be redeemed once per save file. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Date received is the date on the system when the gift is redeemed. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
This Pokémon is set to the same language as the game that received it. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
References
External links
- Event site
- RK9 standings:
- Challonge | Pokémon GO Championships
This article is part of both Project TCG and Project Games, Bulbapedia projects that, together, aim to write comprehensive articles on the Pokémon Trading Card Game and Video Game Championship Tournaments. |