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Capcom Cup

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Capcom Cup
GameFighting games
Ultra Street Fighter IV
Street Fighter V
Street Fighter 6
Founded2013
FounderCapcom
CountryUnited States
Most recent
champion(s)
Wang "UMA" Yuan-hao
QualificationCapcom Pro Tour
Official websitecapcomcup.com

The Capcom Cup is an annual fighting game tournament specifically focused on the Street Fighter series. The event's first incarnation was in 2013 which featured Super Street Fighter IV: Arcade Edition version 2012, Ultimate Marvel vs. Capcom 3, and Street Fighter X Tekken version 2013 as the three main games each with 8 qualifiers.[1] In 2014, Capcom Cup was an Ultra Street Fighter IV exclusive tournament with 16 qualifiers. The 2015 Capcom Cup was doubled to a 32-man format and was later increased to a 48-man format beginning with Capcom Cup IX in 2022–23. The series of qualifying events for the tournament are known as the Capcom Pro Tour and include many of the largest, most prestigious pre-existing fighting game tournaments such as Evolution Championship Series and DreamHack.

History

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2010s

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2013

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In 2013, Capcom started the Capcom Cup right after EVO 2013, with Ho "Xian" Kun Xian receiving a special invitation.[2] Capcom released qualifier dates to determine the seven remaining qualifiers.[3] Capcom created a poll to decide which players would make it into the Ultimate Marvel vs. Capcom 3 tournament, with Nemo, Justin Wong, KaneBlueRiver, IFC Yipes, Abegen, NYChrisG, Filipino Champ, and MarlinPie being voted in.[4] For their Street Fighter X Tekken tournament, Capcom also gave special invites to Infiltration, Justin Wong, Alex Valle, and NuckleDu. The other four players were determined by two respective PlayStation Network and Xbox Live tournaments.[5]

Capcom Cup 2013 was hosted at the Hyatt Regency San Francisco Airport in Burlingame, California on December 14, 2013. There was some controversy regarding the EVO 2013 Ultimate Marvel vs. Capcom 3 champion Job "Flocker" Figueroa being cut from the player lineup. In response, Capcom set up a First-To-Five exhibition match between EVO Champ Flocker, and the Capcom Cup 2013 champion. The victor of the Ultimate Marvel vs. Capcom 3 tournament, NYChrisG faced off against Flocker and defeated him. There was also two exhibition matches for an early build of Ultra Street Fighter IV; the first being Eduardo "PR Balrog" Perez-Frangie against Alex Valle, and the second being Infiltration vs. Filipino Champ.[6]

Capcom Cup 2013 tournament results
Super Street Fighter IV: Arcade Edition v2012
Place Player Alias Character(s) Qualification
1st Japan Naoto Sako HORI|Sako Evil Ryu Treta Aftermath
2nd Singapore Kun Xian Ho DM.MCZ|Xian Gen Special Invite for winning EVO 2013
3rd Japan Keita Ai RZR|Fuudo Fei Long Capcom Cup Asia Finals
4th Japan Tatsuya Haitani Haitani Makoto Tokyo Game Show 2013
5th Japan Hajime Taniguchi MCZ|Tokido Akuma Shadowloo Showdown 2013
5th Singapore Ghim Kee Eng DM.MCZ|Gackt Fei Long Capcom Cup Asia Finals
7th United States Christopher Gonzalez AGE|NYChrisG Sakura The Fall Classic 2013
7th France Alioune Camara BCN-esports|Alioune Cammy Play Expo 2013
Ultimate Marvel vs. Capcom 3
Place Player Alias Character(s)
1st United States Christopher Gonzalez AGE|NYChrisG Morrigan/Doctor Doom/Vergil
2nd United States Michael Mendoza EMP|IFC Yipes Spencer/Vergil/Hawkeye, Dante/Vergil/Magneto, Wesker/Dante/Spencer
3rd United States Ryan Ramirez coL|Filipino Champ Magneto/Doctor Doom/Phoenix, Magneto/Dormammu/Doctor Doom
4th Japan Naoki Nemoto BE|Nemo Nova/Doctor Strange/Spencer
5th United States Justin Wong EG|Justin Wong Wolverine/Storm/Akuma, Wolverine/Spencer/Frank West
5th Japan Genki Abe BE|Abegen Tron/Thor/She-Hulk
7th United States Kyohei Lehr BT|MarlinPie C. Viper/Doctor Doom/Amaterasu
7th Chile Nicolás González BE|KaneBlueRiver Hulk/Haggar/Sentinel
Street Fighter X Tekken v2013
Place Player Alias Character(s) Qualification
1st South Korea Seon-Woo Lee Infiltration Jin/Alisa Special Invite
2nd United States Dexter James EMP|Tampa Bison M. Bison/Rolento Online Qualifier
3rd United States Justin Wong EG|Justin Wong Hwoarang/Chun-Li Special Invite
4th United States Alex Valle LU|Alex Valle Yoshimitsu/Lars Special Invite
5th United States Du Dang DSC.EMP|NuckleDu Guile/Zangief Special Invite
5th United States Alexander Ramos KS|Ramos Vega/Cammy Online Qualifier
7th United States Garrett Palmer THEZOMBIEDRIVER Hwoarang/Nina Online Qualifier
7th United States Sareth Sok KS.CORN|Sethlolol Law/Kuma Online Qualifier

2014

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In 2014, Twitch and Capcom partnered up to create an Ultra Street Fighter IV circuit known as the Capcom Pro Tour.[7] Ten players would automatically qualify into the tournament and the other six would garner points. The Capcom Pro Tour featured a point system divided into four tiers. Tier 3 consists of six Online Tournaments, which are the lowest earning tournaments in the circuit. Tier 2 is for Ranking Tournaments, which are international tournaments that are mainly composed of players in a certain region. Tier 1 consists of nine Premier Tournaments. A player would automatically qualify upon winning the tournament or being the highest player who hasn't qualified. Evolution Tier consists of the Evolution Championship Series, which grants the player four times the points of a Premier Tournament and also gives the winner an automatic spot in the Capcom Cup. Capcom has removed Tier 3 (Online Tournaments) from the 2015 Capcom Pro Tour circuit.[8]

Capcom Cup 2014 was the conclusion of the Capcom Pro Tour in 2014. Capcom Cup 2014 was held at The Warfield in San Francisco, California on December 13, 2014. One notable appearance in the Capcom Cup was a Brazilian player named Eric "ChuChu" Moreira Silva, who qualified by garnering majority of his points from the online tournaments.[9] Another notable moment was Momochi's dominant performance; taking a set off of Snake Eyez, losing a set to Ryan Hart, then completely dominated everyone in the tournament.[10] There were also two exhibition matches for the Ultra Street Fighter IV Omega Mode, a mode which changes how every character plays. The main exhibition was Alex Valle vs. Ryan "Filipino Champ" Ramirez, and the secondary exhibition was Kelvin Jeon going up against Hooman "Hoodaman" Ghahremani.[11] Capcom also showed the first ever match of their upcoming game Street Fighter V with Twitch's Mike Ross using Ryu going up against Capcom's Peter "Combofiend" Rosas using Chun-Li.[12]

2015

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Capcom Cup 2015 was announced by Yoshinori Ono at Capcom Cup 2014. The tournament will use the same ruleset as the previous year. Capcom Pro Tour 2015 has a total pot bonus of $500,000 thanks to a partnership between Sony Computer Entertainment and Capcom.[13] The tournament has also been doubled from 16 qualifiers to 32. One of the spots was reserved for 2014's Capcom Cup champion, Yusuke Momochi.[14] In May, Capcom announced a new rule for the Capcom Pro Tour Premier events, stating that if the Top 4 players in a Capcom Pro Tour premier event have all qualified, Capcom will remove the automatic qualifying spot and add a new qualifying slot to the CPT Leaderboards.[15]

Capcom Cup 2015 was held December 6 at Moscone Center in San Francisco, California, coinciding with the PlayStation Experience conference.[16]

2016

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Capcom Cup 2016 is to be held in December 2016. 32 players will qualify for the tournament by winning one of the eleven Capcom Pro Tour Global Premier Events, Evo 2016, one of the four regional events, or by scoring high on the Points Leaderboards. Street Fighter V was released shortly before the start of the 2016 Capcom Pro Tour and has replaced Ultra Street Fighter IV during this season.

Capcom Cup 2016 was held over December 2 and 3 of that year. The top 32 to top 8 portion of the tournament was held on December 2 at the esports Arena in Santa Ana, California, while the top 8 portion was held on December 3 at that year's PlayStation Experience at the Anaheim Convention Center in Anaheim, California. The tournament was eventually won by NuckleDu, defeating Ricki Ortiz in the finale.

2017

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Capcom moved away from auto-qualification spots in Capcom Pro Tour 2017. This was done to simplify the Pro Tour, as confusion arose around the Global and Regional Leaderboards throughout the 2016 season. Capcom's Neidel "Haunts" Crisan also noted in November 2016 that CPT 2017 may host fewer events than the 2016 season.[17]

Saúl Antonio Mena "MenaRD" from the Dominican Republic, with only 17 years old, won the Capcom Cup 2017. He won 3-1 to Tokido from Japan. In his road to confront Tokido, he beat famous pro-player as Daigo The Beast, Nemo, Itazan and the previous Capcom Cup winner Xian.[18]

2018

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Capcom Cup 2018 was held in the Esports Arena in Las Vegas on December 14–16. The tournament began with a "Last Chance Qualifier" event, which filled the final spot of the 32-person Capcom Cup bracket.[19] The tournament's first prize was set to $250,000 USD. Capcom Cup 2018 was won by Kanamori "Gachikun" Tsunehiro, defeating Hiromiki "Itabashi Zangief" Kumada in the grand finals. No. 1 seed and Evo 2017 champion Taniguchi "Tokido" Hajime dropped out early during the tournament, alongside various other high-seeded players.[20]

2019

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Capcom Cup 2019 was held at The Novo in Los Angeles, California from December 13–15, 2019. Similar to the 2018 edition, the event began with a Last Chance Qualifier before going into tournament proper. The tournament was won by Derek "iDom" Ruffin after defeating Victor "Punk" Woodley in the grand finals.[21]

2020s

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COVID-19 suspension

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The COVID-19 pandemic brought a suspension to all offline events for the Capcom Pro Tours of 2020 and 2021.[22] All events during both seasons were held online and their respective Capcom Cups were cancelled and replaced by an online Season Final tournament in both seasons.

Capcom Cup IX (2022–23)

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After over three years, the Capcom Cup made its return with Capcom Cup IX, the culmination of the Capcom Pro Tour 2022. The tournament took place at Avalon Hollywood in Los Angeles from February 14–19, 2023. The first prize for this tournament was decreased to $120,000. The tournament was won by Saul Leonardo "MenaRD" Mena II.[23]

Capcom Cup X (2023–24)

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The Capcom Cup X, much like IX, was held at Avalon Hollywood from February 21–25, 2024 as the culmination of the Capcom Pro Tour 2023. It was the first edition to be played in Street Fighter 6 and featured a prize pool worth over $2,000,000. It was preceded by the Last Chance Qualifier to fill in the final spot of the 48-person bracket. Capcom Cup X was won by Wang "UMA" Yuan-hao, who won the first prize of $1,000,000, the largest ever for a fighting game tournament.[24][25]

Capcom Cup 11 (2024–25)

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Capcom Cup 11 will be held sometime in 2025 and will take place at the Ryōgoku Kokugikan in Tokyo, Japan. The first prize is set to remain at $1,000,000.[26]

References

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  1. ^ "Capcom Cup 2013". Capcom Cup. Archived from the original on 2015-02-05. Retrieved 2015-01-29.
  2. ^ Ian Walker (2013-07-13). "Capcom Announces Capcom Cup at Evo Panel; Eight Best AE 2012 and UMvC3 Players, Evo 2013 to Act as First Qualifier". Shoryuken. Retrieved 2015-01-29.
  3. ^ Staff (2013-09-17). "Capcom releases Capcom Cup global qualifier dates". GameSpot. Retrieved 2015-01-29.
  4. ^ Steven Chavez (2013-11-06). "Nemo, IFC Yipes, Justin Wong, KaneBlueRiver and more to compete at Capcom Cup - Capcom's official UMvC3 poll results and invite list". EventHubs. Retrieved 2015-01-29.
  5. ^ "Street Fighter x Tekken". CapcomCup. Archived from the original on 2015-02-05. Retrieved 2015-01-29.
  6. ^ USD (2014-12-14). "Capcom Cup 2013 Results". Shoryuken. Retrieved 2015-01-29.
  7. ^ Vince Ingenito (2014-03-10). "Capcom and Twitch Join Forces to Create the Capcom Pro Tour". IGN. Retrieved 2015-01-29.
  8. ^ "Capcom Pro Tour Rules". Capcom Pro Tour. Retrieved 2015-01-29.
  9. ^ Ian Walker (2014-10-28). "ChuChu, Capcom Cup 2014, and the Legitimacy of Online Qualifiers". Shoryuken. Retrieved 2015-01-29.
  10. ^ Migliacio, Michael. "SHINRYUKEN! The Street Fighter Champ Speaks Out!". Evil Geniuses. Retrieved 2016-08-12.
  11. ^ USD (2014-12-13). "Capcom Cup 2014 Results". Shoryuken. Archived from the original on 2018-09-11. Retrieved 2015-01-29.
  12. ^ Yin-Poole, Wesley (15 December 2014). "First Ever Street Fighter V Match". Eurogamer.net. Eurogamer. Retrieved May 24, 2015.
  13. ^ Nicholas Taylor (2014-12-13). "Next year's Capcom Pro Tour will have a total prize pool of $500,000 thanks to partnership with Sony, Yoshinori Ono confirms". EventHubs. Retrieved 2015-01-29.
  14. ^ "Announcing Capcom Pro Tour 2015". Capcom Pro Tour. Retrieved 2015-03-12.
  15. ^ "Capcom adds new rule regarding Capcom Pro Tour Premier Events". capcomprotour.com. Capcom Pro Tour. Retrieved June 4, 2015.
  16. ^ Martin, Michael (14 August 2015). "Capcom Announces Dates for Capcom Cup 2015". ca.ign.com. IGN. Retrieved August 25, 2015.
  17. ^ Martin, Michael (2016-11-10). "Capcom considering removing auto-qualifying for Capcom Cup 2017". Yahoo! esports.
  18. ^ "MenaRD, campeón de la Capcom Cup". 11 December 2017.
  19. ^ White, Lucas (2018-09-14). "Capcom Cup 2018 Will Be Held in Las Vegas". PlayStation LifeStyle.
  20. ^ Newell, Adam (2018-12-16). "Gachikun is the 2018 Capcom Cup champion". Dot Esports.
  21. ^ Zalamea, Nigel (2019-12-17). "iDom pulls off an incredible comeback to win the Capcom Cup | ONE Esports". www.oneesports.gg. Retrieved 2024-09-14.
  22. ^ Zalamea, Nigel (2020-06-01). "Every esports event disrupted by the COVID-19 coronavirus outbreak (updated) | ONE Esports". www.oneesports.gg. Retrieved 2024-09-14.
  23. ^ ""This is just the beginning": MenaRD wins second Capcom Cup after intense run". esports.gg. 2024-09-04. Retrieved 2024-09-14.
  24. ^ "Street Fighter 6 Capcom Cup X: Schedule, prize pool, players". Dexerto. 2024-02-26. Retrieved 2024-02-28.
  25. ^ "Capcom Cup X Grand Finals: Dark horse Juri player Uma becomes a millionaire". Esports.gg. 2024-01-13. Retrieved 2024-02-28.
  26. ^ Jones, Lee (2024-04-30). "Street Fighter's Capcom Cup 11 heads to Japan". Esports Insider. Retrieved 2024-09-15.
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