COD - Call of Duty League

COD - Call of Duty League

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DateRHome v Away-
07/29 23:30 - Toronto Ultra v LA Thieves View
07/29 22:00 - Atlanta FaZe v Minnesota RØKKR View
07/25 21:30 - Toronto Ultra v Dallas Empire 1-2
07/25 21:30 - New York Subliners v Atlanta FaZe 0-2
07/25 19:00 - Seattle Surge v LA Guerrillas 2-0
07/24 22:30 - LA Thieves v OpTic Chicago 2-2
07/24 20:45 - Florida Mutineers v Minnesota RØKKR 0-2
07/24 19:20 - London Royal Ravens v パリ リージョン 3-2
07/23 20:30 - Seattle Surge v Dallas Empire 0-2
07/23 19:00 - Florida Mutineers v Toronto Ultra 1-2
07/22 20:45 - London Royal Ravens v OpTic Chicago 0-2
07/22 19:00 - パリ リージョン v New York Subliners 2-2
07/18 22:00 - Minnesota RØKKR v Dallas Empire 1-2
07/18 20:30 - OpTic Chicago v Atlanta FaZe 2-2
07/18 19:00 - パリ リージョン v LA Thieves 2-1
07/17 22:15 - Seattle Surge v Toronto Ultra 0-2
07/17 20:45 - LA Guerrillas v Florida Mutineers 1-2
07/17 19:00 - London Royal Ravens v New York Subliners 3-2
07/16 20:30 - LA Thieves v Atlanta FaZe 1-2
07/16 19:00 - Florida Mutineers v Dallas Empire 2-1
07/15 20:15 - Seattle Surge v Minnesota RØKKR 0-2
07/15 19:00 - LA Guerrillas v Toronto Ultra 0-2
07/11 22:00 - New York Subliners v OpTic Chicago 0-2
07/11 20:30 - Minnesota RØKKR v Toronto Ultra 1-2
07/11 19:00 - London Royal Ravens v LA Thieves 1-3
07/10 21:45 - LA Guerrillas v Dallas Empire 0-2
07/10 20:15 - Seattle Surge v Florida Mutineers 1-2
07/10 19:00 - パリ リージョン v Atlanta FaZe 0-2
07/09 20:30 - LA Thieves v New York Subliners 2-2
07/09 19:00 - LA Guerrillas v Minnesota RØKKR 1-2

Wikipedia - Call of Duty League

The Call of Duty League (CDL) is a professional esports league for the video game series Call of Duty, produced by its publisher Activision. The Call of Duty League follows the model of the Overwatch League as well as other traditional North American professional sporting leagues by using a set of permanent, city-based teams backed by separate ownership groups. In addition, the league plays in a tournament point system and playoffs format rather than the use of promotion and relegation used commonly in other esports and non-North American leagues, with players on the roster being assured a minimum annual salary, benefits, and a portion of winnings and revenue-sharing based on how that team performs. The League was announced in 2019 with its inaugural season starting in 2020.

History

In February 2019, Activision Blizzard officially confirmed their intention to launch a city-based, franchised league for Call of Duty, marking their second such organization following the Overwatch League, founded in 2017. To prepare for establishing the League, Activision terminated both the Call of Duty Pro League and Call of Duty World League in mid-2019.

The first five teams to purchase a spot for the league was announced in May 2019; the companies – OverActive Media, Atlanta Esports Ventures, Envy Gaming, c0ntact Gaming LLC, and Sterling.VC – were also parent companies for teams in Activision Blizzard's other franchised league, the Overwatch League. All twelve franchises were finalized in October 2019, with a majority of the franchised having never professionally competed in Call of Duty. The Washington Post estimated that the franchise cost was US$25 million.

Initially, the CDL announced that they would be running a regular season format culminating in postseason playoffs. However, after criticism from the Call of Duty esports community, the league elected to switch to a tournament system, which was officially announced in January 2020.

In the days prior to the launch of the inaugural season, Activision announced it had made a multiyear deal with Google for all of its esports content, including the CDL, to be exclusively shown through YouTube. Prior Activision esports, particularly OWL, had used Twitch. Activision also announced other official sponsors of the league on eve of the first season: On March 9, Activision announced partnerships with both Twitter and the United States Army.

Effects of the COVID-19 pandemic

On March 13, 2020, the Call of Duty League released a statement entailing that all live home series events were cancelled due to concerns over the novel COVID-19 Coronavirus outbreak, to which they said that upcoming events will be done via online play and possibly return to live events if logistically and feasibly possible. On May 19, 2020, the Call of Duty League announced changes to the 2020 Call of Duty League Championship. Instead of 8 teams making it to the Championship weekend all 12 teams would now compete for the Championship in a double-elimination tournament. A US$4.6 million prize pool was announced, with the winning team taking home US$2 million.

On July 5, 2020, the Call of Duty league announced that the postseason would also be played online as a result of the pandemic. Additional measures to further protect the competitive integrity of the league were also announced. All competitors are to be provided with a universal camera which will need to be activated throughout all matches with the camera providing league officials visibility each competitor's console, controller and monitor.

Department of Justice lawsuit and settlement

On April 3, 2023 the United States Department of Justice filed a lawsuit and Activision Blizzard agreed to settle the suit on the same day, with provisions that would prohibit it from implementing a salary cap or luxury tax, or any other measure that would unfairly depress player salaries in the Overwatch League, the Call of Duty League, or any other esports league.

「COD - Call of Duty League」は、世界中のプロゲーマーが参加するeスポーツトーナメントです。このトーナメントは、人気のあるゲーム「Call of Duty」のプレイヤーたちが競い合い、優勝を目指します。プレイヤーたちはチームを組み、戦略を練りながら激しいバトルを繰り広げます。トーナメントは複数のラウンドで構成され、各ラウンドの勝者が次のラウンドに進出します。最終的に、優勝チームが栄光を手にすることができます。このトーナメントは、プロゲーマーたちの腕前やチームワークを競うだけでなく、観客にも迫力あるバトルを提供します。プレイヤーたちは高度な戦術を駆使し、銃撃戦や戦略的なポジショニングを通じて勝利を目指します。観客は、プレイヤーたちのプレイを見ながら熱狂し、彼らの技術や戦略に感銘を受けることでしょう。「COD - Call of Duty League」は、eスポーツファンにとって見逃せないトーナメントです。