The final Masters Tour event this year took place last weekend with over 300 players battling it out in an online tournament. In addition to a share of the prize money, the enticing prospect of getting invited to Hearthstone Grandmasters was on the line. You can re-live the action with our spoiler-free post below.


Top 8 Decklists

These were the players that survived the nine Swiss rounds and made it to the final day.

Top 8

Alutemu's Decks

-1 95609560 653 1
0 1726017260 510 0
0 95809580 440 0
0 61606160 459 0

batupaksoy's Decks

Gaby's Decks

0 47004700 522 0
0 94809480 826 0
0 85608560 414 0
0 1106011060 431 0

GivePLZ's Decks

0 95809580 560 0
0 1396013960 323 0
0 57805780 514 0

Hi3's Decks

0 61606160 349 0
0 94809480 320 0
0 92009200 391 0
0 1404014040 329 0

J4YOU's Decks

0 1106011060 375 0
0 45604560 497 0
0 95809580 410 0
0 1576015760 327 0

MM78's Decks

0 98809880 385 0
0 1106011060 385 0
0 74807480 396 0
0 61206120 348 0

XC's Decks

0 62006200 494 0
0 1106011060 451 0
0 1396013960 532 0
0 95809580 483 0


VoD

You can find the VoDs of the three days of competition below.

Day 1:

Day 1 Match VoDs
  • DeadDraw vs Kalaxz - Swiss Round 1 VoD
  • Swiss Round 1 VoD
  • Swiss Round 2 VoD
  • Swiss Round 3 VoD
  • s8ris vs NoHandsGamer - Swiss Round 4 VoD
  • Lucas vs che0nsu - Swiss Round 4 VoD
  • Zoltan vs Gaby - Swiss Round 5 VoD

Day 2:

Day 2 Match VoDs
  • Swiss Round 6 VoD
  • Swiss Round 7 VoD
  • Swiss Round 8 VoD
  • iGXc vs NikosFas - Swiss Round 9 VoD
  • GivePLZ vs MM78 - Swiss Round 9 VoD

Day 3:

Day 3 Match VoDs
  • Quarterfinal 1: iGXc vs Hi3 VoD
  • Quarterfinal 2: GivePLZ vs Gaby VoD
  • Quarterfinal 3: batupaksoy vs Alutemu VoD
  • Quarterfinal 4: J4YOU vs MM78 VoD
  • Semifinal 1 VoD
  • Semifinal 2 VoD
  • Final  VoD


Results

You can find out how the Top 8 single-elimination bracket played out within the spoiler below. The preceding Swiss results can be found here in full.

Top 8 Results


Recap

Following the Mage nerfs less than 24 hours before the tournament started, Demon Hunter and Priest rose to the most popular picks of this Masters Tour and backed up their support by finishing as the top 2 winrate classes as well according to Battlefy's stats. Mage and Warrior also continued to be a common sight, but their winrates ended up below 50%. Druid's winrate, a mere 45%, seems to suggest that the class flopped hard, but the number can partially be explained by the relatively high portion of anti-Bomb Warrior Heal Druids in the tournament, which causes unusually bad matchups against a lot of other meta decks. Warlock and Shaman were not in the players' favor, and their winrates seem to suggest that the mistrust was justified.

Result Discussion

GivePLZ was already vying for a GM spot before the tournament thanks to his consistent results from all Masters Tours this year, but he left nothing to chance as he finally reached the top 8 of a tournament and secured his well-deserved spot. While lambyseries was also able to hold on to his GM spot thanks to his semifinal appearance in Montreal, XiaoDai's quarterfinal finish from the same tournament was not enough for another Taiwanese promotion as Hi3's better record throughout the year guaranteed him the third spot just by reaching the top 8.

Thanks to the Europeans' previous performances (and Blizzard's weird promotion rules), the Grandmasters spots were not easily achievable in Europe, requiring nothing but winning the whole tournament from most players. Out of the four Europeans that reached the final day, only Gaby and J4YOU had the mathematical chance of reaching Frenetic, who was holding on to the third place in earnings. Both players ended up reaching the semifinals but to Frenetic's relief, were eliminated by XC and Alutemu, respectively, granting the Spaniard the third spot.

Americas had the most anti-climactic ending of all regions. The region had the most easily achievable Grandmasters spots going into this tournament due to having more open spots following ETC's retirement, and the lack of previous results from non-GM players. In the end, no Americas players were able to reach the top 8, nor could anyone already near the top finish high enough to overtake the frontrunners, leaving the pre-tournament leaders claiming the vacant spots.


The esports year concludes with World Championship in December. Don't forget to tune in!