Valve emailed us to let us know they're going to be running an Artifact Preview Tournament this month to show off their built-in tournament feature using their new streaming service.
The event will be running on November 10-11, both days will start at 9AM PST/5PM UTC. It will have 128 players competing over a $10K prize-pool and so it should be quite the show.
The all-draft event will feature a 7-round Swiss bracket on Saturday. A top 8 single-elimination bracket will decide the winner on Sunday. The tournament will be run entirely through an in-client tournament system which will be available for everyone to use on launch day, November 28th.
Also, Valve announced it's going to be run on their Steam.TV streaming service.
If you missed it, Valve confirmed to me recently that Artifact itself will see launch-day support for Linux so no one will be missing out which is awesome. Very keen to play it.
You can follow it on Steam.
Quoting: lijuThats a good news. Hopefully they can run it under Linux and give a hint about it to the audience ( ;If you mean run the tournament under Linux I doubt it. I'd love to see that but they don't really do it. Just look at DotA 2 TI. That is run on Windows 10. The machines that are played on are Windows 10, the machines that run OBS for the streams run Windows 10. I just don't see them using Linux for artifact.
Quoting: Scooptai didn't know this... bad :(Quoting: lijuThats a good news. Hopefully they can run it under Linux and give a hint about it to the audience ( ;If you mean run the tournament under Linux I doubt it. I'd love to see that but they don't really do it. Just look at DotA 2 TI. That is run on Windows 10. The machines that are played on are Windows 10, the machines that run OBS for the streams run Windows 10. I just don't see them using Linux for artifact.
Quoting: prueba_holaI also was not aware about this. Valve is commited to Linux, Linux is capable more than ever to run such tournament. Looks to me like just some kind of miscommunication or oversight inside Valve. It would be really good promotion and expression of their dedication to Linux if they switch.Quoting: Scooptai didn't know this... bad :(Quoting: lijuThats a good news. Hopefully they can run it under Linux and give a hint about it to the audience ( ;If you mean run the tournament under Linux I doubt it. I'd love to see that but they don't really do it. Just look at DotA 2 TI. That is run on Windows 10. The machines that are played on are Windows 10, the machines that run OBS for the streams run Windows 10. I just don't see them using Linux for artifact.
Quoting: lijuYeah it is rather unfortunate. I only know this because watching the streams you can occasionally get a glimpse of the monitors before the game is launched. That and they accidentally tabbed to the desktop on the streaming machine once.Quoting: prueba_holaI also was not aware about this. Valve is commited to Linux, Linux is capable more than ever to run such tournament. Looks to me like just some kind of miscommunication or oversight inside Valve. It would be really good promotion and expression of their dedication to Linux if they switch.Quoting: Scooptai didn't know this... bad :(Quoting: lijuThats a good news. Hopefully they can run it under Linux and give a hint about it to the audience ( ;If you mean run the tournament under Linux I doubt it. I'd love to see that but they don't really do it. Just look at DotA 2 TI. That is run on Windows 10. The machines that are played on are Windows 10, the machines that run OBS for the streams run Windows 10. I just don't see them using Linux for artifact.
Quoting: lijuQuoting: prueba_holaI also was not aware about this. Valve is commited to Linux, Linux is capable more than ever to run such tournament. Looks to me like just some kind of miscommunication or oversight inside Valve. It would be really good promotion and expression of their dedication to Linux if they switch.Quoting: Scooptai didn't know this... bad :(Quoting: lijuThats a good news. Hopefully they can run it under Linux and give a hint about it to the audience ( ;If you mean run the tournament under Linux I doubt it. I'd love to see that but they don't really do it. Just look at DotA 2 TI. That is run on Windows 10. The machines that are played on are Windows 10, the machines that run OBS for the streams run Windows 10. I just don't see them using Linux for artifact.
For Dota and CSGO I can understand because players intensively rely on their keyboard and mouse configurations and you want their setup to be as close as what they play 12 hours a day on. These guys are like pro athlete in terms of muscle memory.
That being said, for a card game no one cares about APM.
Quoting: RoluQuoting: lijuQuoting: prueba_holaI also was not aware about this. Valve is commited to Linux, Linux is capable more than ever to run such tournament. Looks to me like just some kind of miscommunication or oversight inside Valve. It would be really good promotion and expression of their dedication to Linux if they switch.Quoting: Scooptai didn't know this... bad :(Quoting: lijuThats a good news. Hopefully they can run it under Linux and give a hint about it to the audience ( ;If you mean run the tournament under Linux I doubt it. I'd love to see that but they don't really do it. Just look at DotA 2 TI. That is run on Windows 10. The machines that are played on are Windows 10, the machines that run OBS for the streams run Windows 10. I just don't see them using Linux for artifact.
For Dota and CSGO I can understand because players intensively rely on their keyboard and mouse configurations and you want their setup to be as close as what they play 12 hours a day on. These guys are like pro athlete in terms of muscle memory.
That being said, for a card game no one cares about APM.
Well, lets hope Gabe reads our comments ;)
Quoting: RoluI still think they should use Linux. A lot of mice can have stuff like their DPI saved to their firmware and I can't imagine macros are allowed so I can't think of any other config the players would need outside of the physical hardware itself. The other thing Valve could do is push the players to use Linux on their practice PCs but honestly I don't think the OS should matter that much.Quoting: lijuQuoting: prueba_holaI also was not aware about this. Valve is commited to Linux, Linux is capable more than ever to run such tournament. Looks to me like just some kind of miscommunication or oversight inside Valve. It would be really good promotion and expression of their dedication to Linux if they switch.Quoting: Scooptai didn't know this... bad :(Quoting: lijuThats a good news. Hopefully they can run it under Linux and give a hint about it to the audience ( ;If you mean run the tournament under Linux I doubt it. I'd love to see that but they don't really do it. Just look at DotA 2 TI. That is run on Windows 10. The machines that are played on are Windows 10, the machines that run OBS for the streams run Windows 10. I just don't see them using Linux for artifact.
For Dota and CSGO I can understand because players intensively rely on their keyboard and mouse configurations and you want their setup to be as close as what they play 12 hours a day on. These guys are like pro athlete in terms of muscle memory.
That being said, for a card game no one cares about APM.
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