{"id":3546,"date":"2020-03-26T07:09:17","date_gmt":"2020-03-26T07:09:17","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.ginx.tv\/starcraft-2-super-tournament-top-4-gsl"},"modified":"2024-07-19T14:08:47","modified_gmt":"2024-07-19T14:08:47","slug":"starcraft-2-super-tournament-top-4-gsl","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.ginx.tv\/en\/starcraft-2\/starcraft-2-super-tournament-top-4-gsl","title":{"rendered":"StarCraft 2 GSL Super Tournament Top 4"},"content":{"rendered":"
Although the last couple of years we’ve seen “foreigner” StarCraft 2 players showing skills and results like never before, there’s simply something in the South Korean StarCraft 2 scene that elevates the level of play and enjoyment to another level.<\/p>\n
That’s why fans still love to watch GSL series, and that’s why it was hard this first few months without it. But GSL is soon coming back, and these days, we’re already enjoying top Korean StarCraft 2 thanks to GSL Super Tournament. After two postpones due to coronavirus corncerns, it finally aired, but without a live audience, only broadcasted on AfreecaTV and Youtube.<\/p>\n
Round 16 saw some surprisingly clean 3-0 swipes, but yesterday in Top 8 we had some quite intense games.<\/p>\n
In the first match of the game, Zest was defeated by Trap, in PvP standoff. In the previous round, Zest beat TY quite quickly, but it looks like it wasn’t his day against Trap. Trap was in controlling position in most of the games, dictating tempo and map presence, while Zest has made some sloppy mistakes, which in the end resulted with 3-1 win for Trap.<\/p>\n