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December 15, 2021 · 4 min read · Elias Teubner
#beat-saber #esports #personal

Beat Saber World Cup 2021 — Representing Austria

I represented Austria at the Beat Saber World Cup 2021. International stage. National team. The kind of thing that sounds insane when you describe it at a dinner table — "I play VR rhythm games at a world-class level" — and then you just live with the fact that it's true.

How the World Cup Works

The Beat Saber World Cup is the biggest international team competition in the game. National teams qualify through a grueling process, and then face off in a knockout bracket. The seeding system works like most tournaments — seed 1 plays the last seed, seed 2 plays the second-to-last, and so on.

Austria qualified for the 2021 edition. Sadly, that was also the last time we made it. But we were there — and that's the credential that doesn't expire.

Round 1: USA — The Serial Champions

As the last seed, we drew the first seed: the USA. The serial champions, stacked with some of the best players on the planet.

We didn't take a single point from them. Not one. They were operating at a level you can recognize but haven't reached yet — the kind of gap that isn't demoralizing, it's instructive. You file it away. The losers bracket was still open.

Round 2: Finland — The Real Match

Dropping into the losers bracket, we drew Finland. Completely different story.

Finland had Tseska — one of the best players in the world at the time. On paper, we were underdogs again. What happened was anything but predictable.

Map after map, we traded blows. We'd take a point, they'd take one back. The momentum swung back and forth until the score read 3:3. Tied. Tiebreaks.

The Tiebreak

If you've never experienced a tiebreak in competitive Beat Saber, it's pure adrenaline. Every note matters. Every swing counts. One missed block, one bad cut angle, and it's over.

We pushed. They pushed back. Finland took it in the end. We were out. It stung — a 3:3 against a team with a world-class player, decided in tiebreaks. That's the kind of margin that lives in your head for a while.

What It Meant

This was one of my first real moments on an international stage. Representing your country, competing against the world's best, going map-for-map with a team that had no business being threatened by us on paper — that recalibrates your understanding of what you're capable of.

2021 was the last time Austria qualified for the World Cup. I was glad to be part of the run that made it. We didn't get a fairy-tale ending. But we made Finland earn every single point. The scoreboard said we lost. The tape says we belonged there.

— Elias

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