Event | Pokémon Championships 2022-23 Philippines |
---|---|
Location | Online |
Date | 3 June 2023 |
Attendance | Unknown (64 qualified players) |
Videogame | Pokémon Scarlet and Pokémon Violet |
Season | 2023 Season – VGC Regulation Set C (before HOME ver. 3.0.0) |
Format | Bo1 single-elimination bracket with Bo3 finals Closed team lists until top 16 + Open team lists from top 8 |
Organizer | The Pokémon Company (TPC) in the Philippines |
Table of Contents
Teams and results
# | Swiss | Flag | Player | Prize | Team | List | Exp. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 12-2 | Abdullah Mohayyuddin (sempra) | 200 CP $3000 | ||||
2 | 11-3 | Ryan Loseto (SableyeVGC) | 160 CP $2000 | ||||
3 | 11-3 | Dylan Salvanera (Dylan) | 130 CP $1000 | ||||
4 | 11-3 | Aaron Zheng (CybertronVGC) | 130 CP $1000 | ||||
5 | 12-2 | Zackary Thornberg (Zack) | 100 CP $500 | ||||
6 | 11-3 | Neil Patel (Neil) | 100 CP $500 | ||||
7 | 11-3 | Gavin Michaels (HUH?!!) | 100 CP $500 | ||||
8 | 11-3 | Demitrios Kaguras (DEMITRI) | 100 CP $500 |
Check here to see the seeds for top cut from the Day 2 Swiss standings!
# | Swiss | Flag | Player | Prize | Team | TL | Exp. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
105 | 7-3 | Ian Roberts (76) | 40 CP |
Participating players
The 2023 Philippines National Championships is open only to the players that qualified through the following criteria:
- Top 64 players in the Philippines Nationals Qualifier
Qualified players need to sign up to an invite-only Online Competition (Poké Portal → Battle Stadium → Online competitions → Search for a competition) and as a form of team submission as per the indications sent to them by email (even though this event is not played as a ladder competition).
The deadline for this was initially announced as 1 June at 9 am PHT. Players were sent a second email on 30 May late evening stating this was a mistake and the actual deadline was 31 May at 9 am PHT. Due to the short notice, many players missed it, and later that day an extension was given until 1 June at 3 pm PHT. The same email banned the newly available items and Egg Moves, creating further uncertainty to players who locked their team between the Pokémon HOME update and the ban notification.
Platform and schedule
The tournament is held online, in your Pokémon Scarlet or Pokémon Violet game. The single-elimination bracket was coordinated by a previously unknown Online Competition mode that allowed an operator to pair the players. Communication with the organisers happened through a Discord server shared with Malaysia and Singapore National players.
Players must be ready on 3 June 2023 for the players meeting, and the single-elimination bracket will start thereafter.
All matches are played as best-of-one, except the finals, which are played as best-of-three. The event was announced to run using open team lists, but this was changed at the start of the tournament to use closed team lists until top 16, and open team lists from top 8 onwards.
NOTE: It was initially announced that the Philippines National Championships would be held as a ladder-based Online Competition on 21 May. However, it was announced on 12 May that the 21 May event would be the Qualifier to a new, online best-of-1 single-elimination competition with best-of-3 finals to be held on 3 June.
Prizes
This event is an official tournament and is part of the 2023 official circuit in the Philippines.
The highest-placed players earn invites to the 2023 World Championships.
Placement | Worlds | Other prizes |
---|---|---|
Champion | Worlds Day 2 invite + Travel Award | Champion shirt + 1st place trophy |
Finalist | Worlds Day 1 invite | 2nd place trophy |
Semifinalists | Worlds Day 1 invite | Top 4 trophy |
Overview
The Philippines National Championships is the most important VGC competition for players in the Philippines, where TPC is responsible for the circuit since 2020.
It is the second edition of the Philippines National Championships, always under TPC. See the previous editions:
- 2022, won by Patrick Elegado
The previous edition of the Philippines National Championships was open to everyone, and featured online best-of-1 Swiss rounds + a live event with the best-of-3 single-elimination top cut. This is the first time that a qualifying method has been implemented, the first time it is played in a pure single-elimination format and, alongside the Malaysia and Singapore Nationals, the first time any National-level event in VGC history is played completely online.
The ruleset is VGC Regulation Set C and is played with open team lists. Since players could lock their teams before the update of Pokémon HOME to version 3.0.0, it was announced on 31 May that the newly available items and moves are not allowed for this tournament.
A little bit of history
The Philippines has been one of the regions hosting an the official TPC circuit since June 2020, and it was part of the Oceania region of the official TPCI circuit before that. Since the TPC takeover, it has taken part in Asia online tournaments, such as the Asia Players Cup, and has hosted the first-ever live event in 2022, the National Championship. The Philippines’ greatest VGC success was Patrick Elegado‘s 2022 National Championship win.
The most recent tournament held in the Philippines was the 2022 Philippines National Championships, played online (Swiss rounds) and in Quezon City (top cut) with the Pokémon Sword & Pokémon Shield VGC Series 12 ruleset in May and June 2022. The finals saw Filipino Patrick Elegado defeat fellow countryman James Credo to be crowned as first-ever Philippines National Champion.
American James Evans, the 2018 Senior Division World Champion, defeated Brazilian Gabriel Agati in the NAIC finals.