ALGS Year 3
The 2022–23 Apex Legends Global Series season or ALGS Year 3 was the third season of ALGS play. The series is organized by the game's publisher and developer, Electronic Arts and Respawn Entertainment, respectively.
The season ran from preseason qualifiers in October 2022 through the 2023 ALGS Championship in September 2023. The tournament encompassed five regions: North America, South America, Asia–Pacific North, Asia–Pacific South, and Europe, the Middle East, and Africa.
Game background and meta
The series features players competing in the Battle Royale mode of Apex Legends. "Storm Point" and "World's Edge" are the two maps utilized in ALGS play. The maps feature several points of interest, which teams select to land at prior to games. As such, other teams know the landing locations of their opponents; this convention is in place so that teams can practice their rotations and looting routes. Teams that land nearby each other often contest each other early in a match. As a match goes on, the map closes in on a fixed point, or "final circle", with this game element being referred to as the "ring closing".Rosters are made up of three players each selecting a character in the game, called "Legends". Patches to the game in the forms of buffs and nerfs to characters cause changes in their selection rates, thus impacting team compositions and the game's meta. ALGS games were noted to be played a patch or two off of the game's most recent patch update. Though teams usually play in-line with the current meta of the game, some teams opt to play "off meta" and incorporate unorthodox playstyles.
Changes to the game's meta also occur when new seasons of Apex Legends are released by EA. ALGS Year 3 saw play during Seasons 14–18 of Apex; the season began toward the end of Season 14. Season 15 was introduced on November 1, 2022, at the precipice of Split 1 Pro League play, and ended shortly after the Split 1 Playoffs. Season 16 ran from February 14–May 9, 2023, which included a portion of the Split 2 Pro League. Season 17 was seen during the Split 2 Playoffs, having run from May 9–August 8. Finally, Season 18 was introduced on August 8, and was the setting of the 2023 ALGS Championship in September.
Players are often described as filling one of three roles for their teams: in-game leader, fragger, or anchor, though an IGL can also function as a team's anchor. Examples of Year 3 IGLs included TSM's ImperialHal and DarkZero Esports' Zer0, with the two often considered among the best players in Apex. Fraggers are tasked with providing their teams the most damage output and kills and as such are expected to have excellent aiming skills. Due to this, they often use controllers, benefiting from the aim assist. An example of a fragger during Year 3 was Miron "Effect" Novikov of Alliance. Anchor is considered a more passive role and effective when played on appropriate characters. Alliance's "Vaifs", who stepped away from competing shortly prior to the season's initial Pro League play, is an example of an anchor player.
Players choose their own gaming inputs from one of two options: mouse and keyboard or a controller. The latter became the more dominant input in November 2022, toward the beginning of ALGS Year 3. Players have been noted to argue that those who use the opposite input have an advantage, such as controller players having an aim assist. Some patches during the season effectively nerfed how some characters are played on controller.
In competitive Apex, tournaments are categorized by tiers ranging from S-tier to D-tier, with level of competition, competitor skill, and prize pools being factors in the tiers. A USD$5 million prize pool was won over the course of the Year 3 season. The ALGS LAN tournaments are S-tier competitions, while the Last Chance Qualifiers and Challenger Circuits are B-tier and C-tier competitions. Teams also play unofficial matches against each other called scrimmages, or "scrims".
Schedule and format
The ALGS season was divided into two series of events, called "Splits". After Split 2, a Championship concluded the season. Each Split featured regional Pro Leagues competed by 30 teams in each region. For Split 1, the ALGS' organizers invited 22 teams per region to compete in regional Pro Leagues, with the remaining eight slots competed for during the Preseason Qualifiers.The 2022–23 season began with Preseason Qualifiers in October 2022. Meanwhile, each region's Pro League began in November. Additionally, the winning team from each Challenger Circuit tournament also automatically qualified for the Split 2 Pro League Qualifier or the LCQ for the ALGS Championship.
The season also saw three in-person LAN events: the finals for the Split 1 and Split 2 Playoffs, as well as the ALGS Championship held in September 2023. It was the first season to have these three LAN events, as ALGS Years 1 and 2 were disrupted by the COVID-19 pandemic, causing plans for LAN events to adjust and forcing tournaments to be held online. Each LAN event was played under a match point format. In the format, any team that crossed the match point threshold of 50 points would clinch an overall tournament victory by then winning a game. Any team that won a game after reaching match point would then be named a LAN tournament winner, regardless of total score, though remaining teams would still be ranked by total score. Aside from the cash prize at the Split 1 and 2 Playoff finals, teams also competed for playoff points counting toward qualification for the ALGS Championship. The number of playoff slots were also decided by each region's performance at LAN events. An individual player was also selected as the MVP of each tournament, with the award sponsored by Monster Energy.
A team's score after a match is determined by a combination of their kill points and placement points; teams earn one point for each kill. The standard placement points are 12 points for the first-place team, nine for second, seven for third, five for fourth, four for fifth, three each for sixth and seventh, two each for eighth through tenth, one point each for 11th through 15th, and zero points for the 16th- through 20th-placed teams.
Split 2
For the Split 2 Pro League format, 30 teams from each of the five regions are seeded into three groups of ten each, with seeding based on the Split 1 ALGS Playoffs and Split 2 Qualifiers. These teams then compete in a double round-robin format, playing each other group three times in series of six games; the Pro League regular season consisted of 36 total games running from March 11 through May 7.Split 1 Pro League
won the EMEA Regional Pro League and also placed second in the region's Pro League Finals. Fire Beavers won the Finals in seven games.Over in North America, Sentinels struggled, being relegated from the Pro League meaning they had to compete for their place in the Split 2 Pro League through the Challenger's Circuit. They would drop their entire roster and sign former Spacestation Gaming players.
Split 1 Playoffs
The Split 1 Playoffs were held from February 2–5 at the Copper Box Arena in London. 40 teams qualified for the LAN tournament, which had a US$1 million prize pool. The 40 teams were placed into four groups of ten teams each; these groups were snake seeded based on their regional pro league finishes. After the group stage, teams were placed into either a winners' bracket or an elimination bracket. The top ten finishing teams of the winners' bracket clinched spots in the finals. Meanwhile, the top ten finishing teams of the elimination bracket would find their way into another bracket alongside the bottom ten teams of the winners' bracket. These 20 teams would compete for the final ten slots of the finals.Three teams encountered visa issues and had to miss the tournament; their players were from Belarus, Indonesia, and Russia. They were replaced by Horizon Union, DreamFire, and Passion. Alliance also encountered visa issues, resulting in Effect missing the tournament and the team playing with a substitute player.
EA set up COVID isolation booths for this LAN, allowing affected players to still compete with their teams, though not on the main stage. XSET's in-game leader and captain Nocturnal was noted to use an isolation booth. His team had a strong performance during the LAN's opening day. Fnatic also performed well on opening day.
TSM was the top performing team in the group stage, finishing with 153 total points. During the bracket stage of the event, they started slowly but had a late resurgence and ultimately won the Split 1 Finals, winning the grand prize of US$300,000. On the final day of the tournament, they won three of eight rounds, including the decisive final match. Their roster consisted of Phillip "ImperialHal" Dosen, Jordan "Reps" Wolfe, and Evan "Verhulst" Verhulst, as well as "Raven", their coach. ImperialHal served as their IGL and was named the MVP of the tournament. With the victory, TSM became the first org to surpass US$1 million in total competitive Apex winnings. NRG finished in second, with Acend and XSET having also reached match point.
Justin-Ivan Labilles of Dot Esports wrote that in the time between the 2022 ALGS Championship and the 2023 Split 1 Playoffs, "old defensive staples phased out in favor of new aggressive playstyles and compositions that totaled more than half of Apexs playable characters". Valkyrie was the most-selected character during the tournament. She was featured along with Bangalore and Seer in the most popular team composition of the Playoffs.
Following the Split 1 Playoffs, Shawn "Unit" Pellerin, the CEO of SSG, announced the team would be exiting the Apex scene. Unit expressed that "without a fair share partnership", it would be unsustainable for the team to compete.
Group stage
| Rank | Team | Points | Results |
| 1 | TSM | 153 | Advanced to Winner's Bracket |
| 2 | Northempton | 152 | Advanced to Winner's Bracket |
| 3 | EXO Clan | 147 | Advanced to Winner's Bracket |
| 4 | NRG | 147 | Advanced to Winner's Bracket |
| 5 | XSET | 136 | Advanced to Winner's Bracket |
| 6 | JLINGZ Esports | 133 | Advanced to Winner's Bracket |
| 7 | Spacestation | 131 | Advanced to Winner's Bracket |
| 8 | Fnatic | 129 | Advanced to Winner's Bracket |
| 9 | Esports Arena | 128 | Advanced to Winner's Bracket |
| 10 | Acend | 127 | Advanced to Winner's Bracket |
| 11 | 100 Thieves | 123 | Advanced to Winner's Bracket |
| 12 | The Guard | 121 | Advanced to Winner's Bracket |
| 13 | DarkZero | 117 | Advanced to Winner's Bracket |
| 14 | Moist Esports | 116 | Advanced to Winner's Bracket |
| 15 | Element 6 | 114 | Advanced to Winner's Bracket |
| 16 | fun123 | 113 | Advanced to Winner's Bracket |
| 17 | Luminosity | 109 | Advanced to Winner's Bracket |
| 18 | Enter Force.36 | 107 | Advanced to Winner's Bracket |
| 19 | Alliance | 106 | Advanced to Winner's Bracket |
| 20 | Pulverex | 100 | Advanced to Winner's Bracket |
| 21 | DreamFire | 99 | Relegated to Loser's Bracket |
| 22 | IronBloodGaming | 95 | Relegated to Loser's Bracket |
| 23 | FC destroy | 95 | Relegated to Loser's Bracket |
| 24 | ONIC Esports | 95 | Relegated to Loser's Bracket |
| 25 | Team Singularity | 94 | Relegated to Loser's Bracket |
| 26 | GHS Professional | 86 | Relegated to Loser's Bracket |
| 27 | Crazy Raccoon | 86 | Relegated to Loser's Bracket |
| 28 | Ganbare Otousan | 84 | Relegated to Loser's Bracket |
| 29 | GameWard | 82 | Relegated to Loser's Bracket |
| 30 | iG.International | 80 | Relegated to Loser's Bracket |
| 31 | Pioneers | 79 | Relegated to Loser's Bracket |
| 32 | Vexed Gaming | 69 | Relegated to Loser's Bracket |
| 33 | Flora | 67 | Relegated to Loser's Bracket |
| 34 | Oxygen Esports | 59 | Relegated to Loser's Bracket |
| 35 | Passion | 53 | Relegated to Loser's Bracket |
| 36 | Horizon Union | 49 | Relegated to Loser's Bracket |
| 37 | Gødfire | 42 | Relegated to Loser's Bracket |
| 38 | NorCal Esports | 41 | Relegated to Loser's Bracket |
| 39 | LeaveNoWitness | 40 | Relegated to Loser's Bracket |
| 40 | K1CK | 37 | Relegated to Loser's Bracket |