Valve Accidentally Reveals Tournament Organizers for DPC 2023 Qualifiers in China, EEU and SEA

The 2022/2023 DPC season will begin in January but the Division II Open and Closed Qualifiers are set to begin on December 11 and December 19.

credit: DOTA 2
By Shubham Dalal | Dec 5, 2022 | 2 Min Read follow icon Follow Us

With the Division II Open and Closed qualifiers progressing slowly, there was little or no information about who would be the tournament organizer for the upcoming qualifiers. The 2022/2023 DPC (Dota Pro Circuit) season will begin in January, but the Division II Open and Closed Qualifiers are set to begin on December 11 and December 19, respectively.The first three companies that seem to have been announced by Valve in the Dota 2 game client have been involuntarily announced.While the three companies will only handle the qualifiers for now, many believe that these three companies will handle the regional DPC leagues for the upcoming season.If you need more information about Valve Accidentally Reveals Tournament Organizers for DPC 2023 Qualifiers in China, EEU and SEA then read carefully and share with your friends.

Valve Accidentally Reveals Tournament Organizers for DPC 2023 Qualifiers in China, EEU and SEA :

Three of six tournament organizers confirmed for Division II qualifiers ,As first reported by Escorenews.com, Valve has unceremoniously announced the first three tournament organizers that will run Division II for DPC 2023 in Eastern Europe (EEU), Southeast Asia (SEA) and China (CN). Will handle open and closed qualifiers.According to information appearing on the Dota 2 game client, the Division II open and closed qualifiers in SEA will be organized by Epulz, a Swedish company known for its expertise in tiered monthly online cups.

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In the Chinese region, Perfect World will continue its operations handling the region’s qualifiers for Division II. For those unfamiliar with the company, Perfect World is Valve’s Chinese partner that publishes Dota 2 in the region and is also a major tournament organizer for Chinese-based tournaments.

As far as the Eastern Europe region is concerned, this year’s qualifiers will be handled by newly established German-based company Paragon Events. Many were expecting well-known tournament organizer Beyond the Summit (BTS) to help out with the qualifiers, as it did this year. However, BTS co-founder David “LD” Gorman announced that the company would not be producing any DPC leagues for the upcoming season due to a lack of communication between the company and Valve.

Going by the rumors, many believed that the Paragon event was a new iteration of the Epic eSports events. However, Paragon Events CEO Aleksandar Zawolka dismissed the allegations on the Liquipedia Discord chat.As of now, it is believed that the above companies will be taking over their respective regional DPC leagues for the upcoming season. This premise is corroborated by Alexander’s statement above, which states that the company will “run the EEU DPC”.

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