Grand prix world: Download Grand Prix World (Windows)

Grand Prix World for Windows (1999)

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Description

Grand Prix World is the third game in the Microprose F1 management series. In GPW the player can take control of one of eleven available Formula One teams and attempt to win the Formula One Constructor’s World Championship. The game starts in the 1998 season and the player has a 10 year career as team boss.

In that time the player is faced with a whole host of tasks. Hire and fire the best personnel in the business, from commercial managers to chief mechanics. Mediate angry drivers. Arrange sponsorship deals that can gain (and lose) your team millions. Use hospitality functions to attract technical suppliers. Design the revolutionary car that will win the championship, following a real-world process from plans to computational fluid dynamics to final design and wind-tunnel testing. Set-up your team’s cars for sixteen racetracks from around the world that each have their own characteristics.

Once at the circuit the player can either watch all the action on four photo-realistic TV monitors, or view race information and statistics. Give driver orders, risk overtaking maneuvers, and plan pit strategy.

All in a day’s work in Grand Prix World.

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Part of the Following Groups

  • Formula 1 licensees
  • Formula 1 racing games
  • Genre: Motorsport management
  • MicroProse Grand Prix series

User Reviews

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Critic Reviews

RealGamer (Benelux) Jan, 2000 8.5 out of 10 85
PC Games (Germany) Mar, 2000 80 out of 100 80
Power Unlimited Apr, 2000 7. 9 out of 10 79
PC Action (Germany) Mar, 2000 79 out of 100 79
Power Play Mar, 2000 71 out of 100 71
PC Player (Germany) Mar, 2000 70 out of 100 70
Absolute Games (AG.ru) Mar 23, 2000 70 out of 100 70
GameStar (Germany) Mar, 2000 60 out of 100 60
Gamesmania.de 1999 58 out of 100 58
Jeuxvideo.com Mar 15, 2002 10 out of 20 50

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Trivia

Drivers

As with many other Formula One games, the driver Jacques Villeneuve does not appear. He is replaced by a driver named «John Newhouse» which is an approximate English translation of the name.

Graphics

The «race» section of the game features animated cars superimposed on actual photos of each turn (since all the tracks exist in real life). However, at some of the turns the developers have mistaken the angle at which the photo was taken, and the animated cars drive through the turn in the wrong direction!

Adam McMillan (198) added Grand Prix World (Windows) on Jul 22, 2005

Grand Prix World Download | GameFabrique





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Click the «Install Game» button to initiate the free file download and get compact download launcher. Locate the executable file in your local folder and begin the launcher to install your desired game.






a game by Edward Grabowski Communications Ltd.
Platform:
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User Rating:
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View all 19 Grand Prix World Screenshots

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Formula One is an odd sport. Granted, next to spending all night playing Planescape: Tomament it’s the best reason for staying up until 5am on a Sunday. But let’s not kid ourselves into thinking that we’re watching it for any reason other than the hope of witnessing a massive Carmageddon-style pile-up.

Anyhow, Grand Prix World concerns itself with managing an F1 team rather than driving for one, putting it in a field of exactly, er, one game. Sure, most of the driving sims allow you to tinker with the set-up of your car, but how many let you decide which catering firm to use at each race?

I Wish I Could Drive

The first thing that hits you is how weird the music is. It sounds like Phillip Glass having a mystical love child with Jean Michel Jarre (during Jarre’s early ’80s period). While it wouldn’t have been out of place in some WomeworW-style space exploration epic, it has as much to do with F1 as the ‘music’ of Keith Harris has with Oasis.

On the licensing side of things, it’s odd we have to start with
the 1998 season, as people like sports sims to be up-to-date. On the plus side it means we’ve still got the likes ofToranosuke Takagi hanging around (good for comedy value).

On the negative side Jacques Villeneuve is still being arsey and refusing to let MicroProse use his name, hence ‘John Newhouse’ driving for Williams (presumably with his Aussie singer girlfriend Donni Minnow hanging around the pit lane). And the Stewart team (one of my personal favourites) is still stuck with Ford with no sign of Jaguar in the game.

Losing Track

Another problem is the lack of CM3-style accessibility or cross-referencing that’s vital in games of this nature. You get an email from your design team telling you they’ve completed work on the new automatic braking system, let’s say. But rather than giving you an instant link to the necessary data, you have to click on the engineering section, open the design team page and then search for the driving aids section, and so on. It’d be OK if you were only checking one or two things between each race, but you have to micro-manage everything in the game, from tyre wear to the staff levels of your official fan club. There can be something like 50 emails coming in each month and it’s far too easy to lose track of where you are and what needs to be done.

Race days are oddly presented too. There are plenty of ways to view the race (the pseudo-3D TV views are strange at first, although you do get used to them) but there’s a surprising lack of telemetry data for you to analyse. Consequently you’ve no real way of knowing what’s going on with your cars other than watching the bits fall off.

That Said

K Despite its problems, you do find yourself warming to GPW after a while. Most of the faults are more to do with the cumbersome nature of the presentation than actual flaws with the programming and if you can live with them, then there’s a fairly nice game underneath.

I say fairly nice as a lot of the time it does feel as though you’re just going through the motions rather than actually making strategic decisions about your team. But I guess it’s safe to say that in a field of one, GPW reigns supreme (and guess which part of that sentence will be used in the adverts).

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Windows XP/Vista/7/8/10

System requirements:
  • PC compatible
  • Operating systems: Windows 10/Windows 8/Windows 7/2000/Vista/WinXP



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the most important thing about Sema Uno, Mai Mihara and other senior and junior series champions

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Uno, Mihara, Shimada and more — tell you everything you need to know about the winners of the ISU Grand Prix series

On December 10, the ISU Grand Prix Figure Skating series of the 2022/2023 season ended in Turin. Among the winners of the adult final are Sema Uno , Mai Mihara , Riku Miura — Ryuichi Kihara , and Piper Gilles — Paul Poirier . Representatives of Japan performed most successfully in the final, winning 4 out of 8 gold medals, three of them in adult finals.

Scroll down below to find out everything you need to know about the best senior and junior skaters in the series.

BY TOPIC:

  • Figure Skating Grand Prix Final 2022: full results
  • Hanyu Yuzuru, Yong Ah Kim, Sui-Han and Virtue-Moir: legendary junior world champions who won the Olympic Games

Adults | 2022 Grand Prix Final Winners

Sema Uno (Japan) | Men | 2022 ISU Grand Prix Series Final Winner

The reigning world champion Japanese Sema Uno , after two silver and two bronze medals, finally added the missing title to his piggy bank — a victory in the Grand Prix series final. Now up to Grand Slam Figure Skating World Champion 2022, Grand Prix Series Winner 2022 and Four Continents Champion 2019the only thing missing is the gold of the Olympic Games. In the final, Uno won both segments, and his main competitor Ilya Malinin did not cope with the short program. An arbitrary with a crown quadruple axel and a blot on the cascade of jumps helped Malinin to rise only to the third step of the podium.

Men | ISU

Grand Prix Series Final Results

  1. 🏅 Sema Uno (Japan) — 304.46
  2. 🥈 Sota Yamamoto (Japan) — 274.35
  3. 🥉 Ilya Malinin (USA) — 271.94
  4. Shun Sato (Japan) — 250.16
  5. Kao Miura (Japan) — 245.74
  6. Daniel Grassl (Italy) — 244.97

Mai Mihara (Japan) sensationally won the Grand Prix Final in Women’s Singles. December 10, 2022, Turin.

Mai Mihara (Japan) | Women | 2022 ISU Grand Prix Final Winner

Japan’s Mai Mihara won the women’s singles competition in a sensational fashion after a dramatic free skate. The two-time champion of four continents was the only figure skater who made it to the final with two stage victories, but her teammate, the current world champion, was considered the main favorite Kaori Sakamoto . However, it was Mihara who turned out to be more stable than her rivals at the final start of the series — second place in the short and first in the free, and as a result — gold in the debut final of the Grand Prix series in her career. And Sakamoto, after an unsuccessful free program, became only fifth.

Women | ISU

Grand Prix Series Final Results

  1. 🥇 Mai Mihara (Japan) — 208.17
  2. 🥈 Isabeau Levito (USA) — 197.23
  3. 🥉 Luna Hendrix (Belgium) — 196.35
  4. Rinka Watanabe (Japan) — 196.01
  5. Kaori Sakamoto (Japan) — 192.56
  6. Yelim Kim (South Korea) — 180.58

Riku Miura — Ryuchi Kihara won the historical gold of the Grand Prix Final for Japan. December 9, 2022, Turin. (© International Skating Union (ISU))

Riku Miura vs. Ryuichi Kihara (Japan) | Couples | 2022 ISU Grand Prix Series Final Winners

Riku Miura — Ryuichi Kihara continue to inscribe their name in the history of figure skating in Japan. Last season, Miura-Kihara won silver at the World Championships, becoming only the second couple in their country’s history to climb the podium at the World Championships. And now the Japanese duo not only won the first Japanese «pair» gold of the Grand Prix finals, but also the first medal of the finals in principle. At the same time, it cannot be said that the victory was given to the Japanese easily — both in the short and in the free program Miura — Kihara just slightly surpassed the result of the second place — the reigning world champions representing the United States, Alexa Knierim — Brandon Fraser.

Couples, adults | ISU

Grand Prix Series Final Results

  1. 🥇 Riku Miura — Ryuichi Kihara (Japan) — 214. 58
  2. 🥈 Alexa Knierim — Brandon Fraser (USA) — 213.28
  3. 🥉 Sarah Conti — Niccolo Macchi (Italy) — 187.02
  4. Dina Stellato-Dudek — Maxime Deschamps (Canada) — 184.28
  5. Rebecca Gilardi — Filippo Ambrosini (Italy) — 180.39
  6. Emily Chan — Spencer Akira Howe (USA) — 162.91

Dancers Piper Gilles — Paul Poirier won the first major international title in their career. December 10, 2022, Turin. (© International Skating Union (ISU))

Piper Gilles vs. Paul Poirier (Canada) | Ice dancing | 2022 ISU Grand Prix Series Final Winners

Canadian duo Piper Gilles — Paul Poirier finally won the first major title of their career by winning the Grand Prix Series Final. Prior to that, they had the bronze of the 2021 World Championship, as well as bronze and silver from four continents. Gilles — Poirier outperformed both the rhythm dance and the free dance of last year’s World Championship bronze medalists — American duet Madison Chock — Evan Bates who finished second.

Ice dancing, adults | ISU

Grand Prix Series Final Results

  1. 🥇 Piper Gilles — Paul Poirier (Canada) — 215.64
  2. 🥈 Madison Chock — Evan Bates (USA) — 211.94
  3. 🥈 Charlene Guignard — Marco Fabbri (Italy) — 206.84
  4. Lila Fir — Lewis Gibson (Great Britain) — 200.9
  5. Caitlin Hawayek — Jean-Luc Baker (USA) — 198.06
  6. Laurence Fournier-Baudry — Nicolai Sorensen (Canada) — 196.15

Nikolai Memola for the first time since 1998 brought Italy a gold medal in the junior Grand Prix final. December 10, 2022, Turin. (© International Skating Union (ISU))

Juniors | 2022 Grand Prix Final Winners

Nikolay Memola (Italy) | Boys | 2022 ISU Grand Prix Series Final Winner

Italian Nikolai Memola made a real feast for the home audience, winning the free program among boys, and as a result, first Italian gold in the junior finals of the Grand Prix series since 1998. Memola does not perform quadruple jumps, but three clean triple Axels in the short and free program, as well as the absence of serious errors, brought him a well-deserved victory.

Boys | ISU

Grand Prix Series Final Results

  1. 🥇 Nikolay Memola (Italy) — 230.5
  2. 🥈 Lucas Broussard (USA) — 220.43
  3. 🥉 Nozomu Yoshioka (Japan) — 208.01
  4. Shunsuke Nakamura (Japan) — 198.64
  5. Robert Yampolsky (USA) — 198.02
  6. Takeru Amine Katise (Japan) — 182.49

The namesake of the famous Asada — Mao Shimada (Japan) won the competition among juniors, December 9, 2022, Turin. (© International Skating Union (ISU))

Mao Shimada (Japan) | Girls | 2022 ISU Grand Prix Final Winner

Japanese woman Mao Shimada follows in the footsteps of her legendary namesake Mao Asada and wins the Junior Grand Prix Series Final. Asada became the champion of the series among juniors in 2005. 14-year-old Shimada has already successfully completed the triple Axel and is also close to completing the quadruple toe loop. In the final of the series, Mao also tried to perform the elements of «ultra-si», but the attempts were not entirely successful — the Japanese woman unsuccessfully landed the axel and did not twist the sheepskin coat. However, even with these mistakes, she kept the lead, albeit without such a comfortable advantage with which she won her stages of the series.

Girls | ISU

Grand Prix Series Final Results

  1. 🥇 Mao Shimada (Japan) — 205.54
  2. 🥈 Ji Ah Sin (Republic of Korea) — 200.32
  3. 🥉 Chae-Yong Kim (Republic of Korea) — 190.36
  4. Ami Nakai (Japan) — 189.23
  5. Minseol Kwon (Republic of Korea) — 175.43
  6. Hana Yoshida (Japan) — 158.3

Anastasia Golubeva — Hector Giotopoulos Moore (Australia) had no equal in the free dance. December 10, 2022, Turin. (© International Skating Union (ISU))

Anastasia Golubeva — Hector Giotopoulos Moore (Australia) | Couples | 2022 ISU Grand Prix Series Final Winners

The reigning junior world vice-champions from Australia Anastasia Golubeva — Hector Giotopoulos Moore were the pairs final favorites and their second place after the short program was a surprise. However, the Australians won the free skate by a solid margin and gave Australia the second ever Junior Grand Prix Final title among sports couples. In 2017, the gold medal of the Grand Prix Final among juniors was won by Ekaterina Alexandrovskaya — Harley Windsor .

Pairs, juniors | ISU

Grand Prix Series Final Results

  1. 🥇 Anastasia Golubeva — Hector Giotopoulos Moore (Australia) — 181.37
  2. 🥈 Sofia Baram — Daniel Tyumentsev (USA) — 176.78
  3. 🥉 Kayla Smith — Andy Dang (USA) — 150. 51
  4. Haruna Murakami — Sumitada Moriguchi (Japan) — 149.03
  5. Violetta Serova — Ivan Hobta (Ukraine) — 143.06
  6. Chloe Panetta — Kieran Thrasher (Canada) — 130.89

Nadya Bashinskaya — Peter Beaumont won Canada’s Junior Grand Prix Final gold for the first time since 2005. December 10, 2022, Turin. (© International Skating Union (ISU))

Nadya Bashinskaya vs. Peter Beaumont (Canada) | Ice dancing | 2022 ISU Grand Prix Series Final Winners

As in the adult finals, the Canadian duo became the best in ice dancing and among juniors. Nadya Bashinskaya — Peter Beaumont — Junior World Championship bronze medalists — became the first Canadians to win the Junior Grand Prix Series Final title since the 2005/2006 season, when the legendary duo won the title Tessa Virtue Scott Moir . Like Gilles-Poirier, Bashinskaya-Biemont won both segments with a comfortable margin and deservedly climbed to the first step of the podium.

Ice Dancing Junior | ISU

Grand Prix Series Final Results

  1. 🥇 Nadia Bashinskaya — Peter Beaumont (Canada) — 167.26
  2. 🥈 Hanna Lim — Ye Kuan (Republic of Korea) — 162.53
  3. 🥉 Katerina Mrazkova — Daniel Mrazek (Czech Republic) — 161.54
  4. Phoebe Becker — James Hernandez (UK) — 156.97
  5. Daria Grimm — Mikhail Savitsky (Germany) — 152.01
  6. Selina Fraggi — Jean-Hans Fourno (France) — 140.71
📆 Figure Skating Season Calendar 2022/2023
⛸ 2022 ISU Grand Prix Series | Adults | Juniors
🏆 World ranking for the season 2021/2022

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Figure Skating Grand Prix Series 2022/2023: Competitors, Schedule & Rules

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Stage Schedule, Competitors and Finals Qualification Rules — Olympics reveals the highlights of the 2022/2023 ISU Grand Prix Figure Skating Series

(Photo © 2022 © International Skating Union (ISU))

ISU Grand Prix Series in figure skating is an annual series of six tournaments and a final that invites the world’s top skaters to participate. In 2022, the ISU Grand Prix series starts 21 October at Norwood, USA and ends with the final in Turin, Italy, which will be held 8-11 December . It is noteworthy that it was Turin that hosted the Grand Prix final in 2019, the winners of which are still the reigning champions of the series — the final was not held for the past two years due to the coronavirus pandemic.

CURRENT RATING AND POSITION OF SKATING PLAYERS ON THE RESULTS OF THE PAST STAGES OF THE SERIES.

RELATED :

  • 2022 ISU Junior Grand Prix Schedule
  • Results, rating and finalists. Juniors | 2022/2023 ISU Grand Prix Figure Skating Series

Olympics brings you all the highlights of the series for the 2022/2023 season. Scroll below to find information about the selection criteria, the prize pool, as well as a complete list of participants in all stages of the series.

Broadcast

In countries where broadcast rights have not been purchased by local rights holders, the competition can be viewed on the ISF YouTube channel.

Schedule and results of the 2022/2023 ISU Grand Prix series

  • 🇺🇸 Stage 1, October 21-23, . Norwood, USA | Preview | Results
  • 🇨🇦 2nd stage, October 28–30, . Mississauga, Canada | Preview | Results
  • 🇫🇷 Stage 3, November 4–6. Angers, France | Preview | Results
  • 🇬🇧 4th stage, November 11-13, . Sheffield, UK | Preview | Results
  • 🇯🇵 Stage 5, November 18–20, . Sapporo, Japan | Preview | Results
  • 🇫🇮 Stage 6, November 25–27, . Espoo, Finland
  • 🇮🇹 Final, 8–11 December . Turin, Italy

Beijing 2022 | Sakamoto Kaori. Free Skating, Women’s Singles

Eligibility Criteria

A total of 48 single skaters , 47 single skaters , 26 sports couples and 36 dance duets, representing 29 national federations will compete in the series this year. Skaters are invited to participate in the stages based on the results of last year’s World Championships:

  • Skaters ranked 1st to 6th in their disciplines will receive invitations to two stages and will be “seeded”—i.e. as far as possible, they will be separated in different stages.
  • Skaters ranked 7th to 12th will also receive invitations to two stages.
  • Skaters who are in the top 24 in their disciplines in the 2021/2022 season, as well as those who are in the top 24 in the 2022 World Championships, can receive an invitation to participate in the series.
  • Winners of the 2022 World Junior Championships may also be invited.

In addition, to participate in the series, skaters must score a minimum qualifying amount of points in the 2021/2022 (past) or 2022/2023 (current) season at the championships held under the auspices of the International Skating Federation (ISU), at the stages of the Grand Prix series or at ISU Challenger series tournaments. The exception is skaters who have received an invitation to the home stage; skaters who were previously included in the ISU rating; and representatives of disbanded sports couples or dance duets that were included in the ISU rating, performing with new partners.

The minimum threshold for the total amount to participate in the series is ⅗ of the highest amount scored at last year’s World Championship in this discipline. For the 2022/2023 season, these thresholds are:

  • Women: 141.65
  • Men: 187.49
  • Pairs: 132. 65
  • Dancing on Ice: 137.89.

In the new season, the threshold amounts were calculated based on the results of the reigning world champions — Kaori Sakomoto (women), Sema Uno (men) , Alexa Knierim — Brandon Fraser (sport couples), Gabriela Papadakis — Guillaume Sizeron (ice dancing).

In connection with the conflict in Ukraine, representatives of the Russian Figure Skating Federation and the Belarusian Skating Union have been suspended for an indefinite period from participation in competitions held under the auspices of the ISU.

Tournament scheme and scoring rules

There are six stages in total. At each stage, no more than 9 can perform0007 12 men, 12 women, 8 sports couples and 10 dance duets . At one stage in each discipline from one country only three participants can speak.

Based on the placed places, the skaters receive points. The six best representatives in each discipline by the sum of points go to the final of the series, where the winner is determined.

  • 1st place — 15 points
  • 2nd place — 13 points
  • 3rd place — 11 points
  • 4th place — 9 points
  • 5th place — 7 points
  • 6th place — 5 points
  • 7th place — 4 points (single skating only)
  • 8th place — 3 points (single skating only)

In the event of a tie — if more than six competitors qualify for the final on points in a discipline — additional tie-breaks are applied.

Prize fund

Skaters receive prize money both at the stages and in the final. If at the stages only 1-5 places get into the “prizes”, then in the final all six participants in each discipline are rewarded. In pair skating and ice dancing, the prize money is divided into duets.

Stage prize fund:

  • 1st place — $18,000
  • 2nd place — $13,000
  • 3rd place — $9000
  • 4th place — $3,000
  • 5th place — $2000

Final prize fund:

  • 1st place — $25,000
  • 2nd place — $18,000
  • 3rd place — $12,000
  • 4th place — $6,000
  • 5th place — $4000
  • 6th place — $3000

Beijing 2022 | Sema Uno. Short program, team tournament

2022/2023 ISU Grand Prix participants

🇺🇸 1st stage, October 21-23. Norwood, USA
  • Men : Wesley Chu (Canada), Roman Sadovsky (Canada), Mikhail Selevko (Estonia), Daniel Grassl (Italy), Kao Miura (Japan), Sena Miyake (Japan), Koshiro Shimada (Japan), Junhwan Chha (South Korea), Donovan Carrillo (Mexico), Liam Kapeikis (USA), Ilya Malinin (USA), Dinh Tran (USA).
  • Women : Marilena Kitromilis (Cyprus), Eliska Brzezinova (Czech Republic), Nicole Schott (Germany), Rino Matsuike (Japan), Kaori Sakamoto (Japan), Hae In Lee (South Korea), Young Jong Park (South Korea) , Asun Yun (South Korea), Ekaterina Kurakova (Poland), Amber Glenn (USA), Gracie Gold (USA), Isabeau Levito (USA).
  • Sports couples : Kelly Ann Laurin — Lucas Ethier (Canada), Dina Stellato-Dudek — Maxime Deschamps (Canada), Laetitia Rocher — Luis Schuster (Germany), Anna Valesi — Manuel Piazza (Italy), Greta Crawford — John Crawford (Sweden), Alexa Knirim — Brandon Fraser (USA), Valentina Plazas — Maximiliano Fernandez (USA), Maria Mokhova — Ivan Mokhov (USA).
  • Dance duets : Holly Harris — Jason Chan (Australia), Marie-Jade Lauriaud — Roman Le Gac (Canada), Caroline Susis — Shane Firus (Canada), Louisia Demoge — Theo le Mercier (Canada), Jennifer Janse van Rensburg — Benjamin Steffan (Germany), Kana Muramoto — Daisuke Takahashi (Japan), Maria Golubtsova — Kirill Belobrov (Ukraine), Madison Chalk — Evan Bates (USA), Caitlin Hawayek — Jean-Luc Baker (USA), Lorraine McNamara — Anton Spiridonov (USA).

🇨🇦 Stage 2, October 28-30. Mississauga, Canada

  • Men: Steven Gogolev (Canada), Keegan Messing (Canada), Konrad Orzel (Canada), Alexander Selevko (Estonia), Matteo Rizzo (Italy), Kao Miura (Japan), Sema Uno (Japan), Denis Vasiliev (Latvia), Lukas Brichgi (Switzerland), Jimmy Ma (USA), Camden Pulkinen (USA).
  • Women: Gabriel Daleman (Canada), Madeleine Skizas (Canada), Eliska Brzezinova (Czech Republic), Nina Petrykina (Estonia), Rika Kihira (Japan), Rinka Watanabe (Japan), Yuhana Yokoi (Japan), Yu Yong ( South Korea), Lindsay van Zundert (Netherlands), Starr Andrews (USA), Lindsay Thorngren (USA), Ava Marie Ziegler (USA).
  • Sports couples: Kelly Ann Laurin — Lucas Ethier (Canada), Brooke McIntosh — Benjamin Mimar (Canada), Elizaveta Zhukova — Martin Bidarge (Czech Republic), Alisa Efimova — Ruben Blommaert (Germany), Sarah Conti — Niccolo Macchi (Italy) ), Riku Miura — Ryuichi Kihara (Japan), Emily Chan — Spencer Akira Howe (USA), Valentina Plazas — Maximiliano Fernandez (USA).
  • Dance duets: Holly Harris — Jason Chan (Australia), Piper Gilles — Paul Poirier (Canada), Marjorie Lajoie — Zachary Laga (Canada), Marie-Jade Lauriaud — Roman Le Gac (Canada), Laila Fir — Lewis Gibson (Great Britain), Maria Nosovitskaya — Mikhail Nosovitsky (Israel), Misato Komatsubara — Tim Koleto (Japan), Emily Bratti — Ian Somerville (USA), Molly Chesanek — Egor Egorov (USA), Caroline Green — Michael Parsons (USA).
🇫🇷 Stage 3, November 4–6. Angers, France
  • Men: Wesley Chu (Canada), Mikhail Selevko (Estonia), Landry le Mai (France), Luc Economides (France), Adam Xiao Him Fa (France), Nika Egadze (Georgia), Sena Miyake (Japan) , Kazuki Tomono (Japan), Sota Yamamoto (Japan), Si Hyun Lee (South Korea), Lucas Brichgi (Switzerland), Ivan Shmuratko (Ukraine).
  • Women: Olga Mikutina (Austria), Luna Hendrix (Belgium), Maya Mazzara (France), Mahé-Berenice Meite (France), Lea Serna (France), Mana Kawabe (Japan), Rino Matsuike (Japan), Rion Sumiyoshi (Japan), Yelim Kim (South Korea), Hae In Lee (South Korea), Lindsay van Zundert (Netherlands), Audrey Shin (USA).
  • Sports couples: Dina Stellato-Dudek — Maxime Deschamps (Canada), Camilla Kovalev — Pavel Kovalev (France), Ocean Piega — Denis Strekalin (France), Karina Safina — Luka Berulava (Georgia), Annika Hokke — Robert Kunkel ( Germany), Rebecca Gilardi — Filippo Ambrosini (Italy), Maria Mokhova — Ivan Mokhov (USA)
  • Dance duets: Laurence Fournier-Baudry — Nikolai Sorensen (Canada), Molly Lanagan — Dmitry Razgulyaev (Canada), Julia Turkkila — Matthias Versluys (Finland), Louisia Demoge — Theo le Mercier (Canada), Marie Dupayage — Thomas Nabes (France), Evgenia Lopareva — Joffre Brissot (France), Maria Kazakova — Georgy Revia (Georgia), Charlene Gignard — Marco Fabbri (Italy), Eva Pate — Logan Bai (USA), Katarina Vulfkostin — Jeffrey Chen (USA).
🇬🇧 Stage 4, November 11-13. Sheffield, UK
  • Men: Corey Circelli (Canada), Roman Sadovsky (Canada), Edward Appleby (Great Britain), Graham Newberry (Great Britain), Maurice Kvitelashvili (Georgia), Daniel Grassl (Italy), Shun Sato (Japan), Koshiro Shimada (Japan), Tatsuya Tsuboi (Japan), Denis Vasiliev (Latvia), Tomoki Hivatashi (USA), Jimmy Ma (USA).
  • Women: Gabrielle Daleman (Canada), Natasha McKay (Great Britain), Anastasia Gubanova (Georgia), Nicole Schott (Germany), Mai Mihara (Japan), Yoo Yong (South Korea), Ekaterina Kurakova (Poland), Julia Sauter (Romania), Alexia Paganini (Switzerland), Gabriella Izzo (USA), Isabeau Levito (USA), Brady Tennell (USA).
  • Sports couples: Anastasia Vaypan-Low — Luke Digby (Great Britain), Anastasia Metelkina — Daniil Parkman (Georgia), Letizia Roscher — Louis Schuster (Germany), Irma Caldara — Riccardo Maglio (Italy), Sarah Conti — Niccolo Macchi ( Italy), Alexa Knierim — Brandon Fraser (USA), Katie Macbeth — Nathan Bartholomew (USA).
  • Dance duets: Alicia Fabbri — Paul Ayer (Canada), Marjorie Lajoie — Zachary Laga (Canada), Haley Sales — Nicholas Wumsticker (Canada), Natalie Tashlerova — Philip Tasler (Czech Republic), Laila Fir — Lewis Gibson (UK) , Maria Kazakova — George Revia (Georgia), Charlene Gignard — Marco Fabbri (Italy), Maria Golubtsova — Kirill Belobrov (Ukraine), Una Brown — Gage Brown (USA), Christina Carreira — Anthony Ponomarenko (USA).
🇯🇵 Stage 5, November 18–20. Sapporo, Japan
  • Men: Maurizio Zandron (Austria), Stephen Gogolev (Canada), Konrad Orzel (Canada), Adam Xiao Him Fa (France), Nika Egadze (Georgia), Gabriele Frangipani (Italy), Matteo Rizzo (Italy), Kazuki Tomono (Japan), Sema Uno (Japan), Sota Yamamoto (Japan), Junhwan Cha (South Korea), Tomoki Hivatashi (USA).
  • Women: Olga Mikutina (Austria), Eva-Lotta Kiibus (Estonia), Nina Petrykina (Estonia), Kaori Sakamoto (Japan), Rion Sumiyoshi (Japan), Rinka Watanabe (Japan), Seo Yong Ji (South Korea) , Yelim Kim (South Korea), Seo Yong Wi (South Korea), Starr Andrews (USA), Amber Glenn (USA), Audrey Shin (USA).
  • Sports couples: Brooke McIntosh — Benjamin Mimar (Canada), Camilla Kovalev — Pavel Kovalev (France), Irma Caldara — Riccardo Maglio (Italy), Riku Miura — Ryuichi Kihara (Japan), Daria Danilova — Michelle Ciba (Netherlands) , Emily Chan — Spencer Akira Howe (USA).
  • Dance duets: Laurence Fournier-Baudry — Nikolai Serensen (Canada), Shiyue Wang — Xinyu Liu (China), Yuka Orihara — Yuho Pirinen (Finland), Evgenia Lopareva — Geoffre Brissot (France), Kana Muramoto — Daisuke Takahashi ( Japan), Misato Komatsubara — Tim Koleto (Japan), Allison Reed — Saulius Ambrulevicius (Lithuania), Madison Chock — Evan Bates (USA), Caroline Greene — Michael Parsons (USA), Katarina Vulfkostin — Jeffrey Chen (USA).
🇫🇮 Stage 6, November 25-27. Espoo, Finland
  • Men : Keegan Messing (Canada), Arlet Levandi (Estonia), Alexander Selevko (Estonia), Valtter Wirtanen (Finland), Kevin Amose (France), Maurice Kvitelashvili (Georgia), Lucas Tsuyoshi Honda (Japan), Xiong Sato (Japan), Tatsuya Tsuboi (Japan), Nikolai Mayorov (Sweden), Ilya Malinin (USA), Camden Pulkinen (USA).
  • Women : Luna Hendrix (Belgium), Madeleine Skizas (Canada), Eva-Lotta Kiibus (Estonia), Linnea Seder (Finland), Janna Jirkinen (Finland), Jenny Saarinen (Finland), Anastasia Gubanova (Georgia), Mana Kawabe (Japan), Rika Kihira (Japan), Mai Mihara (Japan), Brady Tennell (USA), Lindsey Thorngren (USA).