This weekend marks the 20th anniversary of the StarCraft franchise. A lot of folks have a lot of love for this series, and few more than the crew that have gathered in what appears to be a Blizzard backlot studio to host a celebration stream
A couch of StarCraft personalities Sean âDay9âł Plott, Nick âTastelessâ Plott, Daniel âArtosisâ Stemkoski, and Geoff âiNcontroLâ Robinson led the yesterdayâs festivities, while the same crew sans Sean is hosting the stream today. Names from throughout the seriesâ decades have shown up to play showmatches, including HuK, WhiteRa, Idra, and Ret.
The big finale yesterday was the three-on-three showmatch, which not only put TLO and Idra on the same teamâreviving the âunholy allianceâ of older StarCraft daysâbut threw six massive armies onto the same map. If youâve played an over-the-top custom game in StarCraft before, you already know what happens.
You can catch the full replay on the StarCraft Twitch archives, but honestly, the full six hours is very worth your time if youâre an older StarCraft head like me. Between StarCraft II and StarCraft: Remastered, thereâs plenty of great show matches with names youâll probably recognize if youâve followed two decades of competitive play.
Just seeing a lot of these players again is a trip down memory lane. Idra and Huk at the same event spurs up the infamous hallucination army GG, while old rivalries and drama get stirred up again years later. At one point, the two former teammates argue over a plate of stolen porkchops. The commentators get in on the fun too, commenting on Idraâs noticeably improved health and vitality after leaving the pro scene.
Part of the fun is the scaled-down production. There isnât a bunch of lights, pre-produced video segments, b-roll of each competitorâs hometown and past tournament wins. It kind of just bounces back and forth, between the game and the couch, with the occasional player chat. Itâs a nice setânicer today than yesterdayâbut itâs much more subdued than your average esports event.
Iâm not saying every tournament should be like this, but variety is the spice of life, and this is a variety you donât get as often nowadays. Itâs a LAN party atmosphere, with joking in all-chat and commentators cracking each other up with cheesy jokes. The history between the players and personalities at the event makes it feel like casual chatter rather than official interviews or professional commentary. Can Tastosis cast the hell out of a StarCraft match? You bet. But they also spend a lot of time imitating the voices of infested Terrans about to pop in a puff of confetti.
It isnât just jokes either. During todayâs games, the casters sat down with Idra during a one-on-one match to chat about how the scene has developed. Conversation went from Brood War replays to a very StarCraft issue, ladder anxiety.
As much as I love a good GSL match or big BlizzCon stage, itâs heartwarming to walk down old avenues in a toned-down, intimate setting. Itâs like seeing your favorite band in a small venue. There are more extravagant ways to celebrate two decades of competitive StarCraft, but I can think of few Iâd rather watch over a stream like this one.
Catch the rest of the stream over at the StarCraft Twitch channel
Compete is Deadspin and Kotakuâs joint site dedicated to competitive gaming.