Back in 2014 he wanted to quit Starcraft, now he is the most successful player in the world. Meet Jens ‚Snute‘ Aasgaard, the new number 1 of our Starcraft 2 World Ranking. Weiterlesen
Back in 2014 he wanted to quit Starcraft, now he is the most successful player in the world. Meet Jens ‚Snute‘ Aasgaard, the new number 1 of our Starcraft 2 World Ranking. Weiterlesen
He was one of the first korean progamers to join a foreign team to be able to travel a lot but misses his teammates when doing so. He visits MC for lunch and DongRaeGu once bought him new shoes: Kim ‚Oz‘ Hak Soo is one of the friendliest progamers in the world and so we all should congratulate him very dearly on his 25th birthday today. Though he never won an important tournament, Oz belongs to the best players in the World – and the next World Ranking will reflect that.
When asked about the importance of prize money in an interview once, [oz] replied: „Being on a finals stage is more important to me than money.“ And he has been on countless final stages since, but he never was able to hold the winners trophy in the air. That is if you don’t count his success at 2012 Ritmix Russian StarCraft II League Season 3 – which was an online tournament. But Oz involuntarily prefers the position of the runner-up: He was second in GSL Code A of October 2011, at the MLG vs Proleague Invitational 2012, at IEM Shanghai 2013 and most recently at WCS America 2014.
Though this seems like continuos efforts, Oz fell in a whole skill-wise from 2012 to 2013, event though he had called it his „most important year as a progamer“. But after a fifth place in GSL May he dropped and dropped and dropped – even out of GSL completely by October. A rather unknown [hwangsin] beat him at MLG in November, [slivko] knocked him out in the group phase of IEM Singapore and in the GSL Team League he ended up as the 57th best player of 68 contestants.
This had a reason though: Oz proved to be too ambitious. As one of the first korean players he participated at MLG in 2011 – his second tournament in his career – and joined Fnatic in 2012 to be able to travel to tournaments all over the world. A mistake as Oz later recalled: „I attended a lot of foreign tournaments so I couldn’t maintain my health very well so my condition affected my results.“
All got better when Oz changed a few things: He started streaming his ladder games in December 2012 even though he felt to be too bad of a player to do so and switched teams in March 2013, signing with Evil Geniuses, moving to their team house and participating at WCS America. Newly motivated he started practicing on his old schedule again which involves around 30 to 40 games a day – less when losing, more when winning. The effects kicked in during summer: Fourth best player at Proleague Round 6, second at IEM Shanghai and Ro8 at WCS America – Oz‘ best results for more than a year. Since then he improves constantly: The third WCS season ended on rank 3, the first of 2014 took him to the finals so for the new season… you get the hint. Even without winning WCS, [oz] will climb into the Top20 in the May update of the World Ranking next week – setting him on an even level with players like [hero], [life] and [parting].
That is e
ven more deserved as Oz is one of the friendliest progamers out there. One that needs a team like a family. When he parted with fOu in 2011 and joined FXO he felt sad about leaving his old teammates behind until they were signed by FXO too – just to miss them again when traveling abroad for tournaments. When [nestea] stated in an interview that he would choose [oz] for his upcoming GSL group (back then players could choose their opponents) the latter called him and joked around: „Hopefully he makes the right decision and doesn’t choose me“. In February 2012, [dongraegu] eliminated Oz in the MLG Pro Circuit Winter Arena. Oz was so sad about it, that DongRaeGu promised to buy him new shoes from the prize money he had won.
Just recently [oz] joined a new team, Planetkey Dynamics, after being teamless for about four months. With the german organisation he is hoping to get back „more of a family atmosphere. I think that was kind of lacking in EG and Fnatic.“ His only teammate is the young german talent [gungfubanda] – so maybe it’s Oz‘ turn to buy a present from his WCS prize money this time.
Broken contracts, tournament expulsions and great victories pave their ways: Ilyes ‚Stephano‘ Satouri and Johan ‚NaNiwa‘ Luccesi are two of the greatest foreign players of all time – and two of the most controversial. This week they both celebrate their birthdays: [stephano] turns 21 today while [naniwa] turns 24 on Friday. Happy Birthday!
Let me first off tell two short stories: A few years ago i was hosting online tournaments of Warcraft 3 on a german website (Fit4Gaming.de, it still exists if you are up for some Wc3). There were weekly cups with a monthly final, just like Zotac cup nowadays. In March 2009 a young frenchman playing for the german team NoWayOut qualified for the final and made it to the round of 4, where he faced [hasuobs]. The German was at that time as well known in Warcraft as he is now in Starcraft. He played Undead, the french played Human and beat him surprisingly 2:1. In the final he was up against [bly], another well-known Undead-player at that time. But the Ukranian had no chance, the 16-year-old French beat him 3:0 using kind of a new strategy in the matchup for which Bly was totally unprepared.
This is how i got to know [stephano].
A few years earlier, Good Friday of 2006, there was one of the weekly tournaments. A well-known german player at that time, Lash, had missed the checkin of the tourney and asked politely if i could put him on one of the free spots in round 1. The tournament had just started so it was no problem. I chose the first free spot at the top of the brackets, setting him up against a young swedish player i had never heard of before. Lash won easily and the Swede got very angry with me in a private chat because i had allowed Lash to play even though he missed the checkin. No explanation would calm him down, in the end he not even declared never to play in any of my tournaments again (of course he did) but even to discredit my project among other players and even get my site hacked. (Sitenote: A few months later the site got hacked eventually, but i doubt there was any connection).
This is how i got to know [naniwa].
The stories show the extremes: Stephano and Naniwa are extremely talented players on the one hand but always up for some controversial actions on the other.
When purely seen as players, hardly anyone can deny that they are anything less than genius. [stephano] is the only Non-Korean who won a Global Tournament (with more than $100.000 prize money) – and he did it twice: In October 2011 he beats [violet], [inori], [thestc] and [lucky] on his way to the top of IGN ProLeague Season 3. Next sommer he dominates North American Star League 3, winning against [hero2], [mc] and [alicia]. It’s these triumphs that make him the first and to date only non-korean player on the top of the World Ranking in October 2012 – only three more foreigners even make it into the Top10.
[naniwa] is none of them but he is close: From December 2011 to February 2012 the left-handed player is on #11 of the World Ranking. It’s the time when he is runner-up at 2011 MLG Providence behind [leenock]. No other foreigner ever reaches the final of a tournament as big as this besides him and [stephano]. For Naniwa, the success is the ticket to Korea: He qualifies for Code A, later for Code S and he does brilliant: Twice in a row he qualifies for the quarter-finals of Code S, is among the best 8 players in Korea.
He was successful, but not loved in Korea, because prior to his first Code-S-season he upset the asian community: In a game that was meaningless for the outcome of the tournament, [naniwa] had to play [nestea] in the 2011 GSL Blizzard Cup. Nestea was his big rival since MLG Providence. Naniwa had called him an idiot in an interview and later apologized, Nestea was quoted as to be ready to „destroy Naniwa“. Fans were excited for their match even though both were already eliminated from the tournament. And what did the Swede do? He took his initial six probes and rushed the Korean, who defended easily – Naniwa left the game. The incident spawned a great controversy: Koreans including top-players like [mc] called Naniwa respectless, western viewers defended him calling the game meaningless. But in the end, GSL decided to revoke Naniwas invitation to Code S.
It was not the first time that the now 24-year-old got kicked out of a league: In 2010 he was playing for Meet Your Makers, living in their teamhouse in Leipzig, Germany. This was necessary so [naniwa] and his teammate [cloud] could compete in the german ESL Pro Series. But the former never finished the season. He accumulated so many penalty points that he was kicked out before the end even though he was on third place at that time. The same happened in Intel Extreme Masters V a few months later where ESL kicked him out due to too many penalty points.
He even got in trouble with his teams: In roughly three and a half years of Starcraft, [naniwa] has been in nine different teams, sometimes only for a few days like when he joined PowerGaming in November 2010 only to leave them four days later for russian Empire Gaming, supposedly breaching a contract he signed with PowerGaming, though Naniwa states he did not.
[stephano] only switched teams once in his career – or twice, some would say, because the French also was suspected to have breached a legal contract: In September 2011, when with french team Millenium, he declared to dedicate a full year to professional gaming. The then 18-year-old had just finished High School and delayed his way to university for the sake of Starcraft. On September 18th, american team Complexity announced Stephano as their new player. One day later, officials of Millenium posted a statement saying there was no legal contract and Stephano had decided to stay with the french team. The following controversy held for two days. In the end both teams agreed that the player stayed in France but would have to pay a fine for breaching his contract with Complexity. He instead signed a contract with Millenium.
On the one hand he made his new and old team proud by increasingly good results in his pro-gaming-year. On the other hand he was always up to embarass Millenium for example by forfeiting matches in online-tournaments, even when organised by Millenium itself like he did in MSI Pro Cup in March 2012 where he went offline during the tournament to have dinner. So in September 2012 bot sides agreed not to renew the contract and Stephano got signed by Evil Geniuses. It only took a month until the next incident: In October 2012 Stephano was suspended by his team because of rape jokes he made on a stream. And just like Naniwa he offended korean Starcraft-culture when he first came to the country in 2013. In a televised match he wrote „gl hf“ (Good Luck, Have Fun) to his opponent [hero] – official rules only allow players to type „gg“ (Good Game) or ask for a pause. After some discussion, Stephano was excused though.
His career ended without any other incident in August 2013 when he was eliminated in WCS Season 2. He had won $236.180, more than any other Foreigner in Starcraft 2. Though he played HomeStory Cup VIII in last November but will not return to professional gaming and instead studying at the University of Luxembourg. [naniwa] however will spend his 24th birthday on Friday in polish Katowice – he is the only Foreigner qualified for the main bracket of the IEM World Championship so far.