We hope you are enjoying the first week of the 2021 DPC. It’s already been a wild ride, and we are only half way through Week 1. So, let’s take a tactical pause and recap this first part of the NA/SA DPC season.
Before we fountain dive into our recap, be sure to check out our
NA/SA Pre-Season Power Rankings to see where all of the NA/SA DPC teams stood before games kicked off this week. Now, let's recap.
#1 Evil Geniuses vs. #4 4Zoomers Recap (Evil Geniuses 2-1) This one had a little bit of everything that makes NA Dota worth watching. It was messy, it was competitive, it was dramatic, it was chaotic, and it was a hell of a good time.
Evil Geniuses appeared to be in control throughout Game 1, with their Mid Laner Abed landing Flamebreak into Flaming Lasso combos on Batrider while 4Zoomer’s Mid Laner Gunnar missed multiple Tornados on his Invoker. It was 4Zoomers’ Position 1 SammyBoy on Phantom Lancer who out-farmed his counterpart on EG, Arteezy, early and managed to maintain top Net Worth status for much of the game. This allowed 4Zoomers to hang around longer than Evil Geniuses would have liked, but an aggressive smoke play towards 4Zoomers’ Triangle around the 31 minute mark from EG enabled Abed to land a Flaming Lasso on Brax’s Position 3 Mars which gave a clear path for iceiceice on his Position 3 Lycan to massacre 4Zoomer’s backline leading to a full team wipe for 4Zoomers. Another team wipe five minutes later would seal the EG win in Game 1.
Game 2 saw a strong draft from 4Zoomers where they managed to score three strong meta heroes in Batrider, Keeper of the Light, and Nyx Assassin. With Gunnar on a Mid Lane Earth Spirit, the mobile 4Zoomers lineup looked to fight right away and tried to throw Evil Geniuses off in order to extend the game for SammyBoy to catch back up after two early deaths on Riki. The plan worked and 4Zoomers managed to outlast Evil Geniuses to force a deciding Game 3. Game 2 also featured Arteezy being Arteezy with a double Rapier situation where both Rapiers ending up on the deck in the Rosh Pit at one point. If you only watch one DPC game this week, this one is worth
watching.
As well as SammyBoy played in Game 1 and Game 2, it was Sammyboy’s play and hero choice in Game 3 that doomed any chance of a 4Zoomers come back and upset. Drafting squishy Clinkz as a Hard Carry Position 1 tied one arm behind the back of 4Zoomers for Game 3. Sammyboy was nowhere to be seen (no kills for the first 29 minutes) as iceiceice, on Tidehunter, dominated Brax’s Batrider in lane before chasing the 4Zoomers’ heroes down, landing big Ravages, and helping Evil Geniuses snowball to an easy Game 3 win to clinch the series.
It’s disappointing the veteran captain for the 4Zoomers, Brax, was not able to redirect his young Position 1’s desire to play a weak, squishy Carry hero. SammyBoy enjoys playing heroes he is comfortable with (even if the heroes are out of the current meta) like Clinkz and Naga Siren, but you can bet the teams that are serious about challenging for top 2 finishes in NA/SA (Quincy Crew, Thunder Predator, etc.) are not going into DPC matches looking to force heroes they have a personal affinity for into the current meta. We’ll see if 4Zoomers go with more meta defined drafts next week in their clashes against A-Team and Quincy Crew.
The unsung hero for Evil Geniuses of the series was Abed who enabled his team with constant pressure on 4Zoomers and was powered by his far superior laning ability against 4Zoomers’ Mid Laner Gunnar. The FRLH (First Rune Last Hits) stats from all three games show Abed’s lane domination:
Abed - 14/7 FRLH Game 1 \ 22/9 FRLH Game 2 * 26/2 FRLH Game 3*
4Zoomers - 13/3 FRLH Game 1 \ 10/2 FRLH Game 2 * 19/5 FRLH Game 3*
(Look for more on FRLH and other analytic analysis in a future post, but for now we calculate FRLH as the number of Last Hits/Denies at the 4 minute mark of each game.) One big takeaway for teams scouting the newest addition to Evil Geniuses’ lineup, iceiceice, is don’t expect EG to run Legion Commander in many more games in the DPC. iceiceice may be one of the best offlaners in NA/SA, but he looked completely lost as Legion Commander in Game 2 against 4Zoomers going a disappointing 2-12-18 in the hour long game. If iceiceice was able to make more of an impact in Game 2 on a hero he was more comfortable with, EG may have avoided the pivotal Game 3 altogether.
#8 Beastcoast vs. #13 EgoBoys Recap (Beastcoast 2-0) For much of 2020, Beastcoast was a far cry from the team that placed 8th at TI9 (at the time this Beastcoast roster played under the Infamous banner). COVID related issues in 2020 prevented Beastcoast from training inperson together and meant they would play with a “ping disadvantage” for much of the NA/SA online season, but many NA/SA teams faced similar challenges and outperformed expectations. So, heading into the 2021 SA DPC Upper Division with a Direct Invite, it was unclear how Beastcoast would look in their first action of the season against the hastily assembled roster of EgoBoys that fought through the Closed Qualifier to earn its spot in the SA Upper Division.
Beastcoast looked like the diminished Beastcoast of 2020 for the first 21 minutes of Game 1 as EgoBoys built a 7k Net Worth lead on the back of Alone’s Mid Lane Lycan play. It also seemed Beastcoast still thought it was 2020 when they drafted Sven for Position 1 Hard Carry K1 (Hector), but the 7-21 kill score in favor of EgoBoys was all part of Beastcoast’s plan it seemed as K1 spent much of the early and mid game farming a Midas into an Eco Saber into a BKB. With BKB in hand for Sven, Beastcoast launched what appeared to be an ill advised, five man highground siege of EgoBoy’s base at 21 minutes despite trailing in Net Worth by 7k and being down 7-21 in kills. Beastcoast would only pick off EgoBoy’s Position 4 Clockwerk before losing three heroes themselves. Somehow, someway, Beastcoast sensed weakness in EgoBoys from this engagement and looked to fight every chance they got. This constant fighting managed to drag the game out for Beastcoast and slowly, but surely they grew a Net Worth lead in the Sven vs. Monkey King Hard Carry matchup before winning a pivotal team fight around 40 minutes in the Rosh Pit to secure the Aegis. EgoBoys would GG out of Game 1 a few minutes later.
After a back and forth Game 1, Beastcoast came alive in Game 2 and showed this roster’s true TI level potential. It was a last pick Lina for Beastcoast’s Mid Laner Chris Luck that would seal EgoBoy’s fate in their first matchup of the SA DPC. Given one of his signature heroes in Lina, Chris Luck (one of the top Mid Laners in SA), popped off going 26-3-8 as he powered his team to an assertive 31 minute victory in Game 2.
After this beatdown by Beastcoast, EgoBoys are already seeing their chances for a Top 2 finish in SA fading. As of this moment (only halfway through Week 1), it seems we have a three way race in SA for the two Major Tournament qualifying spots with Beastcoast, Infamous, and ThunderPredator all in the mix.
Other Mid-Week 1 Results - #27 Arkosh Gaming upset #21 Team DogChamp (2-0) (NA)
- #24 Hokori upset #19 Incubus Club (2-0) (SA)
- #26 The Cut upset #22 Electronic Boys (2-0) (NA)
- #10 SG e-sports defeated #11 NoPing e-sports (2-1) (NA)
- #15 simply TOOBASED defeated #28 Byzantine Raiders (2-0) (NA)
- #6 Undying defeated #18 A-Team (2-0) (NA)
- #9 Black N Yellow defeated #14 5ManMidas (2-1) (NA)
- #20 Infinity Esports defeated #30 Mad Kings (formerly “blood for blood”) (2-0) (SA)
- #29 Gorillaz-Pride upset #25 Crewmates (2-0) (SA)
Midweek Meta Tempo, tempo, tempo. If one thing is clear from the matches played so far in Week 1, it’s that the team that can capitalize on tempo plays coming out of the Laning Stage, will be in the driver's seat (see
Team Liquid vs. Vikin.gg for a perfect example,
Undying vs. A-Team is another). The team that struck first with strong rotations from mobile heroes with lockdown ability often put opponents on the backfoot.
It should be no surprise Puck and Nyx Assassin are the two most picked or banned heroes in the NA/SA Super Region, with both having high win rates in the games they are not banned. Interestingly, Keeper of the Light (KotL) is undefeated when drafted by teams in NA and SA, but seems to not be a preferred hero for most SA support players as KotL was only picked or banned in 2 of the games played so far in SA this week.
What’s Next? Week 1 of the NA/SA DPC is far from over. If Evil Geniuses vs. 4Zoomers on January 19 was NA’s early season case for being worth watching in 2021, then it’s SA’s turn to showcase it’s talent as #5 Infamous looks to upset #3 ThunderPredator on January 22nd. You can read more about this matchup between two of SA’s best teams
here. In addition to SA’s epic clash,
Evil Geniuses are back in action on January 24th against (former Evil Geniuses TI winners) ppd and Fear’s Sadboys squad. Quincy Crew, the most decorated team in NA/SA’s 2020 season, also kickoff their DPC run with a matchup against a surprisingly stout 5ManMidas as part of the NA doubleheader on January 24th to close out Week 1.
What did you think of the Evil Geniuses vs. 4Zoomers matchup? Who do you think will win the Infamous vs. ThunderPredator matchup? What games are you looking forward to most as we closeout Week 1 of the NA/SA DPC? Let us know in the comments! submitted by First |
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Next “Well I’ve got to try
something. I think Tenna’s going to try to face off against that robot and if she does it’s going to kill her unless I can convince it not to. I think she’s trying to work up the nerve. You saw her smoke that canne’ka stuff.”
Sylnya gestured for Draevin to follow. “Let’s walk.” The pair headed off in a direction Draevin quickly realized was aiming for the betting cages. Though he knew where they were, Draevin tended to avoid that section of the arena. “Don’t you think it would be easier to talk Tenna out of fighting?” Sylnya asked.
Draevin shook his head firmly. “I don’t think that would work. This is her first time making it to the second round and I know that’s a big deal for her. If I try to push her to drop out all I’m going to do is spoil our friendship.”
Sylnya gave Draevin a sideways look. “That’s… surprisingly perceptive of you.” She reached out a hand and smacked him on the forehead.
“Hey!”
“Just making sure you’re not one of Peter’s illusions.”
“What? You don’t think I know what it’s like to have veteran contestants doubting you when you’re still new?”
“I just didn’t realize you knew how to put yourself in someone else’s shoes is all.”
They reached the edge of the mass of people surrounding the betting cages. It was truly the most eclectic mix of races anywhere around. Lizard-kin, dwarves, elves, eldrin, orcs… even a few humans were milling about! And on closer inspection Draevin saw a few gnomes flitting around in the gaps several heads lower to the ground then others. Sylnya was the only dryad. Beyond the crowd was a long section of wall with a window of metal caging separating the crowd from the Guild bookies. The atmosphere was always frantic and loud and today was no exception.
A tall orc stood on a platform among the crowd where he could cast a series of lithomancy spells to keep the board of numbers above the windows updated. As they approached someone from behind the window shouted something at him and he moved his hands in a practiced motion and Draevin saw the numbers next to his own name change. “They’re already taking bets on my match with Gro’shak? So soon? I just defeated Anise barely an hour ago.”
Sylnya shrugged. “Then they’ve probably been taking bets for at least that long. But don’t worry. The odds are in your favor and climbing.”
“Is that supposed to help me somehow?”
“Well you can bet on yourself. If you buy in now you can probably get a better pay-out than they’ll be offering tomorrow.”
Draevin wrinkled his nose. “That’s in bad taste.”
“Suit yourself.” Sylnya waved an arm up high and one of the bookies behind the window gave her a friendly wave. It was the only dryad working behind the counter, and she shooed away the customers in front of her to make room for Sylnya. Compared to Sylnya’s stringy vines, this dryad’s hair was a spiky cluster of what looked like grass. “Hey, Nim!”
“Syl! I saw your bet on that human go through this morning and I almost didn’t believe it!” The bookie, Nim apparently, reached her hands through the bar and Sylnya grabbed hers back and they started jumping up and down excitedly.
“Isn’t it great?” Sylnya said with a huge grin. “That kid is smart as a whip, I just
knew he was gonna come up with something for that werebeast!” Nim pulled her hands back through the bars and gave Draevin a questioning look. “You know Draevin, right Nim? He’s just tagging along.”
“We haven’t been formally introduced, but I know of him, yeah.”
Draevin gave an awkward smile. “Consider yourself introduced.”
Sylnya put her ticket on the counter and Nim quickly snatched it up. “Right,” the slender grassy dryad said. “Let’s get you paid.” She studied the ticket for a moment and frowned. “Hmmm. It seems you’ve exceeded the cash limit.”
“Wow! Really? I haven’t done that in
ages!”
In a moment Nim’s eyes went from the flat seriousness of business to wide with emotion. “Exciting, right? You can withdraw up to the cash limit now if you like and we can transfer the difference to your bank. We still have your account information on file from last time.”
Sylnya shook her head. “That won’t be necessary—”
“Betting on yourself?” Nim finished. Sylnya didn’t even look upset at the presumption.
“You know it! I can chat more after my match, but Drae and I have one more errand to run before then.”
Nim gave Sylnya a smile as she quickly filled out another ticket and handed it over. “Don’t worry about it, I know you’re busy.” She bobbed her head at Draevin. “Nice meeting you, Drae. Good luck on your match, Syl.” Without any further farewell Sylnya led Draevin in stepping away from the window and a seedy-looking dwarf quickly pushed forward to take their spot. “Weg!” Draevin heard Nim saying just as warmly as she had to them, “I heard about your bet on…”
“I don’t like that girl,” Draevin grumbled as he pushed their way out of the betting crowd. “She’s too nice.”
“Too nice?” Sylnya asked. “Really? Is that why you like me so much? Because I’m rude to you all the time?”
“At least you’re honest about it.”
They reached the edge of the crowd and Sylnya brought them to a stop. “They’re going to be calling my match soon; do you still want to go see that robot?”
Draevin lowered his brow and pushed past Sylnya. It was time for him to lead now. “Of course I am. What made you think I was going to change my mind in the last five minutes?”
“Hope?” he heard her say questioningly from behind while he forged ahead without her. “How do you even know you can have a conversation with that thing? You know it doesn’t have a handler, right?”
Draevin headed into the main arena. He’d seen Unit-17 resting on top of some storage boxes right above the service tunnel the contestants used. It’d been there every day without fail observing the matches and so far he hadn’t seen anyone approach it. It was perched in an area not used for crowd seating but even the Guild had apparently not wanted to move the shiny robot. “Well if it doesn’t work it doesn’t work,” Draevin hedged as he walked down the steps to the quiet corner the robot was sitting in. “I hardly think it will hurt just to ask.”
Sure enough, Unit-17 was sitting right where he’d expected to find it. It wasn’t floating like it normally did, but its single glass eye was glowing with a dim inner red light. The robot was an unremarkable roundish shape with thick plates of metal fixed to the surface all around to hide whatever was inside. It did seem to have a decent view of the grounds from where it had chosen to perch itself. Draevin approached the machine and cleared his throat. He waited what he thought was a polite amount of time but it did not react to his presence at all.
“Unit-17, I would like to discuss something with you,” he tried instead. He wasn’t sure if it even cared about politeness, but he decided to play it safe.
The red light behind its singular eye brightened a hair. “This unit will not discuss any classified information,” a hollow synthesized voice echoed out from within the machine. “Are these terms acceptable, contestant Draevin?”
Draevin pulled his neck back a bit in surprise. “You already know my name?”
“Are these terms acceptable, contestant Draevin?” the robot repeated.
“Yeah,” Sylnya muttered in Draevin’s ear, “I can tell this conversation is going to be reeeeal productive.” She jerked her thumb behind her. “I’ll be close by, come get me when you’re done.”
Draevin nodded his agreement and answered Unit-17’s question. “Yes, those terms are acceptable.”
The red light in the robot’s eye flickered briefly. “Contestant Draevin has been given level zero access,” it announced. Draevin wasn’t really sure what that meant but it didn’t sound like a bad thing. “You may now proceed. What is your inquiry, contestant Draevin?”
“I was hoping we could make a deal.”
The robot slowly turned until its eye was looking right at Draevin before responding. “This unit is prepared to make any deals that increase its probability of success,” it finally said in its synthesized monotone.
“Are you familiar with the concept of Mutual Assurance?” Draevin asked the robot.
“Mutual Assurance: An agreement between dueling wizards to inflict non-lethal injuries on each other—sometimes insured through extra punitive measures by the Wizard’s Guild. This unit is familiar with the concept of Mutual Assurance.”
“Great,” Draevin said. “So I want to make a Mutual Assurance pact between you and—”
“Declined,” Unit-17 interrupted. “This unit calculates that a Mutual Assurance with contestant Draevin will reduce the probability of victory in the tournament by zero point three two percent.”
Draevin scowled at the machine but got no reaction. “You didn’t let me finish. I wasn’t trying to arrange a Mutual Assurance pact with
me.”
The robot’s eye briefly flickered. “This unit is prepared to make any deals that increase its probability of success. What is your inquiry, contestant Draevin?”
Draevin sighed. “Like talking to a brick wall. Uhh… will ‘this unit’ accept a Mutual Assurance Pact with contestant Tenna?”
“Declined,” Unit-17 replied. “This unit calculates that a Mutual Assurance with contestant Tenna will reduce the probability of victory in the tournament by zero point one three percent.”
Draevin rubbed his temple. His plan didn’t seem to be working. “You do realize that if Tenna agrees to this she’ll have to pull her punches against
you, right? Wouldn’t that maybe
increase your chances of winning?”
The robot’s eyes flickered again before answering. “This unit’s assessment of contestant Tenna is classified. This unit calculates that a Mutual Assurance Pact with contestant Tenna—”
“Yeah, yeah,” Draevin interrupted it right back. “I heard you the first time. Is there anything I could offer that
would make you agree to a pact?”
That got the robot thinking. The red eye flicked off and on for a long moment before it finally responded. “This unit has calculated that matching against contestant Gro’shak in round four will increase the probability of victory in the tournament by fifteen point six nine percent. If contestant Draevin will agree to concede his match against contestant Gro’shak this unit will agree to a Mutual Assurance Pact with contestant Tenna.”
Draevin’s jaw almost dropped open. Was it really that easy? Did this robot not realize that it would face Tenna before he faced Gro’shak and that it had no way of enforcing an idiotic deal like that? “Uhh, yeah, sure. I can agree to that.”
The robot’s eye flickered again while he considered his response. “What is your name?”
“Draevin Getano.”
“Do you desire victory in this tournament?”
Draevin almost answered automatically before realizing the robot must be trying to size him up. “No,” he said cautiously.
“Will you concede your match against contestant Gro’shak in exchange for this agreement?”
Hell no. Not in a million years. “Yes.”
“Will you verbally state your intention to concede before this unit faces contestant Tenna?”
It had him there. “You know I can’t do that. How will I know you’ll hold up your end after you get what you want? Wouldn’t it ‘increase your probability’ to lie to me?”
The robot paused to think for a bit. It was really nothing like holding a normal conversation. Draevin glanced longingly Sylnya’s way and saw her lounging in a nearby seat scratching her shadow stalker behind the ears. “This unit has calculated there is a four point one percent chance that contestant Draevin will comply with the terms of this agreement. This will increase the probability of victory in the tournament by zero point six five percent.”
Draevin scratched his chin. Apparently it thought there was like a ninety-five percent chance Draevin was lying about conceding to Gro’shak yet it was
still willing to make a deal. That suited Draevin just fine. He just wouldn’t have to feel guilty about not conceding to Gro’shak. “So you said accepting Mutual Assurance with Tenna reduced your chances of winning by point one three right? Point six five is bigger. Does that mean you’ll agree to the pact?”
“Confirmed. This agreement will produce a net increase in this unit’s probability of victory in the tournament by zero point five one percent. This unit will agree to a Mutual Assurance Pact with contestant Tenna in exchange for a promise from contestant Draevin to concede his match against contestant Gro’shak.”
Draevin couldn’t believe it was that simple. “Does that mean… the deal is set?”
“Confirmed. This unit has agreed to—”
“Cool, got it,” Draevin interrupted. He had no desire to hear the damn thing repeat itself endlessly. “See you later then.” He turned back to Sylnya and made a walking gesture with two fingers. She raised an eyebrow and popped out of her seat.
“Finally got sick of trying to talk to that thing?” Sylnya asked as she joined Draevin in climbing back up the stairs to the main hall. “You know, I heard the Guild sent a dozen wizards to try to move that robot from where it’s sitting but it just kept going on about how having a good view would increase its probability of victory and they finally just caved and left it alone. I could have told you it was a waste of time.” Sylnya tapped her chin dramatically. “In
fact, I’m pretty sure I did just that.”
“What are you on about?” Draevin said with a shit-eating grin. “We reached an agreement. The robot agreed not to kill Tenna.”
Sylnya actually stopped walking. “What? No way! How’d you get it to agree to that?”
Draevin shrugged his shoulders. “All I had to do is lie and promise to concede my match against Gro’shak. Apparently it would much rather fight that old mystic than me, so it must think I’m the bigger threat.”
The pair reached the main hall and it looked like the crowd had thinned out considerably. That had to mean the intermission was coming to a close. Just on time, Maeve’s announcement came. “
Ladies and gentlemen. Please make your way to your seats, the next match between Shea and Sylnya will begin shortly.”
“Oh, Syl! We never talked about your match! Did you have a plan? I seem to recall you beat Shea last time you fought but she didn’t have the Conch then, that’s a powerful item.”
Sylnya sneered. “Don’t even get me started. The damn thing uses
sea water! I can’t just drink it up like last time.”
“So… you
don’t have a plan?”
They reached the Guild guards at the entrance to the service tunnel and Sylnya stopped there. “Of course I have a plan. Peter and I talked strategy this morning. Haven’t you noticed how shiny my skin is? Wax. It should keep me from wilting too badly, but I’m still not looking forward to getting that taste in my mouth.”
As soon as she pointed it out Draevin could see there was a shiny gloss to Sylnya’s bright green skin that he hadn’t noticed. It was such a simple way to protect against salt water. “Glad to hear it. Good luck then.”
Instead of gripping Draevin in a hug like she normally did Sylnya reached up to her ear and pulled off some kind of green bud. “Oh hey, can you hold this for me until I get out? I don’t want it to set off the wards on the fighter’s box.”
Draevin held out his hand. “A magical item? What is it?” Once she’d pulled it out Draevin saw that it was a little ball of green the same color as her skin with a metal needle sticking out the back. He hadn’t even noticed it was there before she’d taken it off.
“A Screecher. What else? You didn’t think I was going to walk around with no mental protections after what Tomrha did to me, did you?”
Draevin looked again at the little earring. “But Screechers are pink crystals. Is this some kind of custom job?”
Sylnya just chuckled. “Not really. Peter just covered it in green paint. He matched my skin tone perfectly. You basically can’t even notice it’s there!”
“Paint?” It was so unsophisticated, but as soon as Draevin thought about it he realized it was actually pretty clever. If a cerebromancer didn’t realize she was wearing a Screecher they might unknowingly expose themselves when they tried to peek into her mind. Everywhere he looked Draevin kept seeing Peter’s influence.
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