Xeph Profile Joined September 2004 Korea (South) 191 Posts Last Edited: 2011-01-14 13:25:13 #1







On Battle.net ladder matches, he paused the matchs as soon as it started, then suggested opponent to decide winner by rock-paper-scissors. According to choyafOu's match history, he gained over 20 points when he won but lost only 2 points when he lost. With this ladder point system, playing many matches as possible is good. Of course, some of his recent matches had very short playing time like less than a minute. choyafOu is not the only progamer who did this thing.



choyafOu and his coach InsomniafOu admitted this and apologized on PlayXP.





UPDATED 1 on 16:24 KST

GSL accnounced disciplinary action for choyafOu.



Reason: Ladder abusing(confirmed that was not for his ladder point)

Disciplinary action: 1. Disqualified from entering GSTL on Feb 2. Disqualified from entering GSL if he do this again.

Expiration date: 2011 12 31

Link:



UPDATED 2 on 19:46 KST

Jung-Won Chae, the director of Gretech E-Sports Operations and GSL commentator, personally commented to progamers: "Think before you act"











Plexa(Administrator) added below quote



On January 13 2011 17:48 Liquid`Nazgul wrote:

Despite ladder not being as prestigious as it could be, there is still prestige involved in laddering, and sometimes it is even used for tournament related things such as qualifiers. What if someone on Europe did this and applied for the spot in the



Bottom line is any player should avoid abuse at all times. He may think it's funny but it's hard to make a difference in what motivates a player to do something (funny playing around, or GomTV house qualifier, Blizzcon selection process or Code-B qualifiers). If White-Ra (picking the person least likely to do this!) did this and made it into the GomTV house, then claimed he was just playing around like Choya, who's to say he wasn't? Or what if nobody ever found out, are you allowed to 'play around' and cheat your way into the GomTV house?



What if it is used to get into



What if it is used to get into Blizzcon (Blizzard picked Huk and Select from the ladder)?



Don't let it come to a situation where you need to judge someones motivation on why he abused the ladder. You will never be able to prove it.



Now I'm not asking you to think Choya is evil because realistically this is relatively innocent. But don't say who cares or what does ladder even matter, because next time it happens and it does have influence on a bigger event you will have to bite your tongue. And you will realize that the attitude of saying ladder abuse is fine because it doesn't matter is what caused all the larger problems to begin. If Blizzard is smart they give him some sort of penalty to let everyone know this is simply not allowed. If they don't it's giving people permission to do the same in preparation for their Code B qualifiers.

Despite ladder not being as prestigious as it could be, there is still prestige involved in laddering, and sometimes it is even used for tournament related things such as qualifiers. What if someone on Europe did this and applied for the spot in the GomTV house . You'd all be freaking out calling him a cheater and abuser.Bottom line is any player should avoid abuse at all times. He may think it's funny but it's hard to make a difference in what motivates a player to do something (funny playing around, or GomTV house qualifier, Blizzcon selection process or Code-B qualifiers). If White-Ra (picking the person least likely to do this!) did this and made it into the GomTV house, then claimed he was just playing around like Choya, who's to say he wasn't? Or what if nobody ever found out, are you allowed to 'play around' and cheat your way into the GomTV house?What if it is used to get into Code B qualifiers What if it is used to get into Blizzcon (Blizzard picked Huk and Select from the ladder)?Don't let it come to a situation where you need to judge someones motivation on why he abused the ladder. You will never be able to prove it.Now I'm not asking you to think Choya is evil because realistically this is relatively innocent. But don't say who cares or what does ladder even matter, because next time it happens and it does have influence on a bigger event you will have to bite your tongue. And you will realize that the attitude of saying ladder abuse is fine because it doesn't matter is what caused all the larger problems to begin. If Blizzard is smart they give him some sort of penalty to let everyone know this is simply not allowed. If they don't it's giving people permission to do the same in preparation for their Code B qualifiers.



UPDATE

1. GSL accnounced disciplinary action for choyafOu.

2. Jung-Won Chae's comment.

Now GSL Code S progamer 'choyafOu' is center of rock-paper-scissors scandal.On Battle.net ladder matches, he paused the matchs as soon as it started, then suggested opponent to decide winner by rock-paper-scissors. According to choyafOu's match history, he gained over 20 points when he won but lost only 2 points when he lost. With this ladder point system, playing many matches as possible is good. Of course, some of his recent matches had very short playing time like less than a minute. choyafOu is not the only progamer who did this thing.choyafOu and his coach InsomniafOu admitted this and apologized on PlayXP.GSL accnounced disciplinary action for choyafOu.Reason: Ladder abusing(confirmed that was not for his ladder point)Disciplinary action: 1. Disqualified from entering GSTL on Feb 2. Disqualified from entering GSL if he do this again.Expiration date: 2011 12 31Link: http://esports.gomtv.com/gsl/community/view.gom?mbid=2&msgid=5788&p=1 Jung-Won Chae, the director of Gretech E-Sports Operations and GSL commentator, personally commented to progamers: "Think before you act"Plexa(Administrator) added below quote Persistent Pursuit of Perfection