2024 Japan National Championships

EventPokémon Japan Championships 2024 Finals
(ポケモンジャパンチャンピオンシップス2024 決勝)
LocationJPN Yokohama, Japan
Date1–2 June 2024
Capacity192 qualified players (64 MA, 64 SR, 64 JR)
VideogamePokémon Scarlet and Pokémon Violet
Season2024 Season – VGC Regulation Set G
FormatDouble-elimination bracket, Bo1 before Top 8, Bo3 from Top 8 onwards
OrganizerThe Pokémon Company (TPC)

Table of Contents

Participating players

The live Finals stage of the 2024 Japan National Championships is open only to the players that qualified through the following criteria:

This tournament is also invite-only: players needed to qualify to it by placing top 150 amongst the players in Japan in Japan Nationals Qualifiers #1#2 or #3 (known as Global Challenges outside Japan).

Streaming

The event is expected to be broadcast live. More details will be known soon.

Venue and schedule

The tournament is held in Exhibition Halls B, C and D of the following location:

PACIFICO Yokohama
パシフィコ横浜

1-chōme-1-1 Minatomirai, Nishi Ward, Yokohama, Kanagawa 220-0012
〒220-0012 神奈川県横浜市西区みなとみらい1丁目1−1

Players must be in the venue by 1 June 2024 at 9:00 JST (00:00 UTC) for the players meeting.

Players will be seeded in a 64-player best-of-1 double-elimination bracket, which will start thereafter. All rounds will be played until only 8 players remain (this is after winners’ round 5 and losers’ round 8).

The 8 remaining players will then face in a fresh new best-of-3 double-elimination bracket.

Day 2 players must be in the venue by 2 June 2024 at 8:30 JST (10 June at 23:30 UTC) for Junior players, and at 9:00 JST (00:00 UTC) for Senior and Masters players.

Prizes

This event is an official tournament and is part of the 2024 official circuit in Japan.

All participating players earn invites to the 2024 World Championships, with the highest-placed players earning byes and Travel Awards.

PlacementPrize
1st to 4thWorlds invite + Round 1 bye + Travel Award
5th to 8thWorlds invite + Round 1 bye
9th to 64thWorlds invite

Overview

The Japan National Championships is the most important VGC competition for players in Japan, where TPC is responsible for the circuit, and is the only tournament through which players in Japan can earn invites to the World Championships.

It is the 14th edition of the Japan National Championships since its inception in 2009. It has been celebrated every year except in 2011 (due to the Fukushima disaster) and 2020 (due to the COVID-19 pandemics). See the previous editions:

Previous editions of the Japan Nationals have featured different formats and qualifying systems. In the last few years qualification has been through in-game ladder qualifiers. Last year’s edition featured a first main stage online, also as an in-game ladder competition, before the final, live stage. As in 2023, the live stage is played as a double-elimination bracket. As a novelty for 2024, all matches from top 8 onwards are played as best-of-3 (only the grand finals was played as best-of-3 in 2023).

The ruleset is VGC Regulation Set G.

A little bit of history

Japan has been a part of the official TPC circuit since its inception. It has hosted multiple major events, including old-era Regionals and National Championships, and is particularly successful in the online competitions. As the most successful country in VGC, Japan’s greatest trophies have been brought home by 5 World Champions (Kazuyuki Tsuji in 2009, Shoma Honami in 2015, Ryota Otsubo in 2017, Naoto Mizobuchi in 2019, and Shohei Kimura in 2023), as well as the 2008 VGS Champion (Izuru Yoshimura) and other 9 in the Senior and Junior divisions throughout the years.

The most recent tournament held in Japan was the 2023 World Championships, played in Yokohama, Japan with the VGC Regulation Set D in August 2023. The finals saw 2017 Japan National finalist Shohei Kimura defeat German newcomer Michael Kelsch to win the title of World Champion!

The last time the Japan National Championships was held was the 2023 edition, with the finals hosted in Chiba, Japan, and played with the VGC Regulation Set C in June 2023. The finals saw Japanese Kaito Arii defeat fellow countryman Hodaka Hatakeyama to win his first major title!

American James Evans, the 2018 Senior Division World Champion, defeated Brazilian Gabriel Agati in the NAIC finals.

Victory Road