The International 2019 (TI9) was the ninth iteration of The International, an annual Dota 2 world championship esports tournament. Hosted by Valve, the game's developer, the tournament followed a year-long series of awarding qualifying points, known as the Dota Pro Circuit (DPC), with the top 12 ranking teams being directly invited to the tournament, which took place in August 2019 at the Mercedes-Benz Arena in Shanghai. In addition, six more teams earned invites through regional qualifiers played in July 2019. The grand finals took place between Team Liquid and OG, who had respectively won the International's 2017 and 2018 events. There, OG defeated Team Liquid 3–1 in the best-of-five series to become the first-ever repeat champion of an International.

As with every International from 2013 onwards, the prize pool was crowdfunded by the Dota 2 community via its battle pass feature, with the total at over US$34 million. In addition, various related activities were also held during the event, such as an all-star game and cosplay and submitted short film contests. The event had over a million concurrent viewers during the grand finals on the livestreaming platform Twitch.

Background

Dota 2 is a 2013 multiplayer online battle arena (MOBA) video game developed by Valve. In it, two teams of five players compete by selecting characters known as "heroes", each team has a unique set of talents and powers, and cooperate together to be the first to destroy the base of the other team, which ends the match. The game is played from a top-down perspective, and the player sees a segment of the game's map near their character as well as mini-map that shows their allies, with any enemies revealed outside the fog of war. The game's map has three roughly symmetric "lanes" between each base, with a number of defensive towers protecting each side. Periodically, the team's base spawns a group of weak CPU-controlled creatures, called "creeps", that march down each of the three lanes towards the opponents' base, fighting any enemy hero, creep, or structure they encounter. If a hero character is killed, that character respawns back at their base after a delay period, which gets progressively longer the farther into the match.

As with previous years of the tournament, a corresponding battle pass for Dota 2 was released in May 2019, allowing the prize pool to be crowdfunded by players of the game. 25% of revenue made by it was sent directly towards the tournament's prize pool. In July 2019, the prize pool had reached over US$30 million. At the time of event, Dota 2 featured 117 playable characters, called "heroes". Prior to each game in the tournament, a draft is held between the opposing team captains to select which heroes their teams use, going back and forth until each side has banned six and selected five heroes. Once a hero is picked, it cannot be selected by any other player that match, so teams used the draft to strategically plan ahead and deny the opponents' heroes that may be good counters or would be able to take advantage of weaknesses to their current lineup.

Format and teams

The main event was hosted at the Mercedes-Benz Arena in Shanghai

The International 2019 featured a series of pre-qualifying tournaments running from October 2018 until June 2019, known as the Dota Pro Circuit (DPC), with the top 12 ranking teams receiving direct invitations. In addition, six single-elimination qualifying playoff brackets were held in July 2019, with the winners from the regions of China, Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS), Europe, North America, South America, and Southeast Asia earning invites to the main event, bringing the total number of participating teams up to 18.

To seed the elimination bracket for the main event, round robin group stages featuring two groups of nine teams were played from August 15–18, 2019. In it, each of the teams played each other within their group in a two-game series. The top four placing teams of each group advanced to the upper bracket of the main event, while fifth through eighth advanced to the lower bracket. The lowest placed team from both groups were eliminated from the competition. The main event was held at the Mercedes-Benz Arena in Shanghai from August 20–25, making it the first International to take place in China. An all-star game, featuring the top 10 players based on their fantasy points during the group stage, was also played during the event.

Direct invitation (DPC) Team Secret Virtus.pro Vici Gaming Evil Geniuses Team Liquid PSG.LGD Fnatic Ninjas in Pyjamas TNC Predator OG Alliance Keen GamingRegional qualifier winners China: Royal Never Give Up CIS: Natus Vincere Europe: Chaos Esports Club North America: Newbee South America: Infamous Southeast Asia: Mineski

Results

Inside the Mercedes-Benz Arena

Group stage

Group A
PosTeamWL
1PSG.LGD133Advanced to the upper bracket
2Team Secret115
3TNC Predator97
4Newbee97
5Alliance88Advanced to the lower bracket
6Mineski88
7Team Liquid610
8Keen Gaming511
9Chaos Esports Club313Eliminated
Group B
PosTeamWL
1OG142Advanced to the upper bracket
2Vici Gaming115
3Evil Geniuses97
4Virtus.pro88
5Infamous79Advanced to the lower bracket
6Fnatic79
7Natus Vincere79
8Royal Never Give Up610
9Ninjas in Pyjamas313Eliminated

Main event

Bracket

Upper round 1Upper round 2Upper finalGrand Finals
PSG.LGD2
Virtus.pro0
PSG.LGD2
Vici Gaming0
Vici Gaming2
TNC Predator1
PSG.LGD1
OG2
OG2
Newbee0
OG2
Evil Geniuses1
Team Secret1
Evil Geniuses2
OG3
Team Liquid1
Lower round 1Lower round 2Lower round 3Lower round 4Lower round 5Lower final
Virtus.pro0
Evil Geniuses0
Alliance0Royal Never Give Up2
Royal Never Give Up0Team Liquid2
Royal Never Give Up1
Team Liquid2PSG.LGD1
TNC Predator0
Team Liquid2Team Liquid2
Fnatic0Team Liquid2
Team Secret0
Team Liquid1
Newbee1
Vici Gaming0
Infamous1Infamous2
Infamous0Team Secret2
Keen Gaming0
Team Secret2
Team Secret2
Mineski1Mineski1
Natus Vincere0

Winnings

Note: Prizes are in USD

PlaceTeamPrize money
1stOG$15,620,181
2ndTeam Liquid$4,462,909
3rdPSG.LGD$3,089,706
4thTeam Secret$2,059,804
5th–6thEvil Geniuses$1,201,552
Vici Gaming
7th–8thInfamous$858,252
Royal Never Give Up
9th–12thMineski$686,601
Newbee
TNC Predator
Virtus.pro
13th–16thAlliance$514,951
Fnatic
Keen Gaming
Natus Vincere
17th–18thChaos Esports Club$85,825
Ninjas in Pyjamas

Legacy

The International 2019 set a crowdfunded esport prize pool record by eclipsing the previous years' record, finalizing at US$34,330,068. The tournament was the most watched Dota 2 event ever on the livestreaming platform Twitch, with a peak of over 1.1 million viewers during the grand finals. Other related events took place during the tournament, such as a cosplay and submitted short film contest with their own independent prize pools, as well as two new hero announcements for the game itself. An episode of True Sight, Valve's documentary film series on the professional Dota 2 scene, was filmed during the event. It followed OG and Team Liquid during the grand finals, documenting a number of behind the scenes moments for both teams before and after matches. It was released online for free on January 28, 2020, and also premiered to a live audience at the Kino Babylon in Berlin.

Footnotes

Notes

References

External links