Rogue – Snowball Esports [Legacy] https://legacy.snowballesports.com Oceanic Esports News & Content Thu, 03 Jan 2019 05:47:28 +0000 en-AU hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.1.1 https://legacy.snowballesports.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/03/cropped-sb-favicon-32x32.png Rogue – Snowball Esports [Legacy] https://legacy.snowballesports.com 32 32 Fish’s OPL Players to Watch https://legacy.snowballesports.com/2018/03/06/fishs-opl-players-to-watch/ Tue, 06 Mar 2018 01:10:45 +0000 https://snowballesports.com/?p=1200 Editor note: We are very fortunate to have former OPL and current LPL Play-by-Play shoutcaster Matthew “Fish” Stewart bring to us his squad of OPL players to watch. Despite what Fish will tell you, the opinions of a “play by play monkey” are really interesting because there’s so much more that goes into a league team than just how they click their buttons. As we have seen time and again in regions all over the world, roster composition, leadership, and team chemistry are so important and this is something any caster, not just the colour caster can draw on their observations, knowledge and experience to tell us about.


Full disclaimer, I am first and foremost a play-by-play monkey. I talk about all the things that happen when they happen. If you asked me how or why my first instinct would be to shout ‘Spawn! This guy has a question for smart people.’ (Never EGym though, that guy feeds in every solo Q game I get.) Since joining the LPL team, I have not been able to keep up with every game played in the OPL. But I have been able to watch quite a few matches before the LPL broadcasts.

Top: Brandon “Swip3rr” Holland
I had the pleasure of working with Big Swips during the League of Legends: State of Origin tournament. Well known for his tank play, the Armoured Titan has been able to show that he can play carry oriented champions too. With Gangplank nerfs and the resurgence of tanks like Sion in the top lane, Big Swips will be a force to be reckoned with in the Top Lane.

The man has an incredible work ethic. He is always looking to see how he can improve himself, on and off the rift.

Honourable Mention: Jackson “Pabu” Pavone
The young gun who was hyped up for a long time as a mechanical genius now has one full professional split under his belt. This will be an important split to track Pabu’s performance to see how much of the hype he had leading up to his professional career follows through.

 

Jungle: Brandon “Juves” Defina
While casting the OPL, Juves and Carbon stuck out as the ultimate ‘leaders’ for a team. Constantly looking to mentor younger players and constantly allowing them to grow. They always made sure to provide the emotional backbone, leadership and support their teams needed.

Carbon’s ‘old man hands’ as he likes to call them means we now see him sitting down on the couch – more talking about the OPL than actually playing. (I am upset that there is no VB in his hands when doing so.) This leaves Juves as the last of the two major leaders in the League.

His ability to mentor talent has a proven track record as the likes of FBI & Rogue started with SIN Gaming. Ryoma had a great split with the team before moving back to the Chiefs, where he came from as a substitute for Swiffer.

Split 1 2018 has been rough for SIN, especially in comparison to the multiple “Sinderella” Runs and Rift Rivals performance that we saw from the squad last year. All eyes will be on the veteran Juves to turn things around.

Honourable Mention: Leo “Babip” Romer
Every Legacy game last split, I would wonder “Is this the week we will see Babip step in for Carbon and start his professional career with Legacy?” Babip was mentored by Carbon and a star player for their OCS team. Now starting for the Chiefs rebuilt roster, it will be interesting to watch how much of an impact Babip provides in The Chiefs climb back to the top.

 

Mid: Stephen “Triple” Li and Tommy “Ryoma” Le
There is no honourable mention here; these are my players to watch in the Mid lane. They were the underdogs in 2017, in the shadows of the likes of Phantiks, Swiffer and Claire. Now it’s their time in the spotlight. Both have helped their team to the top of the table halfway through split one.

Triple has made his way to the Dire Wolves and had big shoes to fill. Phantiks finished 2017 as the best player in the OPL. So far, Triple has adapted to the Dire Wolves well and the pack has yet to drop a set in the OPL. One of the mean reasons Triple did not make an appearance at Origin was due to Ryoma being able to provide synergy with FBI.

Ryoma had a large impact in the performance that Sin had during 2017 as well as the 2nd place finish for NSW in Origin last year. He is quiet in comparison to other Mids in the league, often providing only crucial information to the team, but is attentive and listens to calls. He is flanked by the vocal Destiny and Swip3rR this split which will allow him to do what he does best, listen to the team, focus on the mid lane and destroy his opponents.

 

Bottom Lane: Victor “FBI” Huang & Jake “Rogue” Sharwood
Last split, I was very vocal in thinking that this was hands down the best bottom lane in the league. Which was a bold statement to make when the likes of Lost & Cupcake, Raes & EGym, Blinky & Jayke and King & Destiny were around in 2017. Their synergy is unmatched, both FBI and Rogue are incredibly skilled when it comes to mechanics and have been working together for a few splits now.

Although FBI made a few critical errors last split, he seems to have honed in on his decision making for 2018. Rogue just gets better and better with each split. It was a tough choice to not pick him up for Origin 2017, instead going for EGym for the synergy with Coach Jish and Swip3rR. (Big mistake, EGym’s Tahm Kench cost me 20 Elo. Should have benched him and let Tgun play.)

Order now sit top of the Table and have only dropped a single set. Impressive for an organisation’s first split in the OPL. A lot of their power comes from this bottom lane duo and I believe that will continue.

Honourable Mention: Myles “Blinky” Irvine & Jayke “Jayke” Paulsen
The Bash Bros are still at it and are the only other bottom lane pairing left from 2017. They started 2017 strong but didn’t end the year well. They have had a decent showing so far in 2018. Tracking their performance to see if they can reverse the trend from last year will definitely impact Avant’s performance.

These are the people I think will be interesting to watch in 2018. Why Snowball trusted a washed up dyslexic play-by-play shoutcaster from the LPL to write this? I don’t know. But at least I don’t feed in Solo Q.  Which EGym is great at.

 

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Pick 6: Brandon “Claire” Nguyen https://legacy.snowballesports.com/2018/02/15/pick-6-brandon-claire-nguyen/ Thu, 15 Feb 2018 02:38:41 +0000 https://snowballesports.com/?p=860

Pick 6 is our interview series where we ask a personality 6 questions relating to their experiences in esports.

This week I had the pleasure of talking with Brandon “Claire” Nguyen. Despite being a veteran to the region, Claire has only participated in the OPL for just over a year, and his full-time OPL debut in 2017 was highly anticipated. I was able to pick Claire’s brain on why he came back to the region, his experiences in Japan as well as his new role as Legacy’s Captain.

This year has seen you take the captaincy for Legacy, how has this transition been for you?

This year I’ve been much more vocal inside and outside of game. This is mostly because I gained a lot of experience from last year and I’ve used that to help the team out and tell them what to do in real life and in-game. Because of this, I was given the role of captain rather than me fulfilling the role as a captain after having been assigned it. The transition has been easy and I already felt the need to be a leading figure coming into 2018 with this new roster, it feels like it comes naturally.

How have you found being apart of a brand new roster this year?

Last year I was apart of pretty much a brand new roster and it was a refreshing feeling to have a clean slate and to learn how to play the game as a cohesive unit from the ground up. This year, I’m just repeating the process with a bunch of new and even less experienced players. It definitely has its upsides and downsides but I think in time we will be a roster capable of great heights.

How has Adelaide Football Club being involved with Legacy improved you as a player?

The AFC have helped bring Legacy up to a higher standard of performance and this means that we have much more out-of-game support than we did when we were just Legacy. We’ve moved to a new gaming house so that we can have better quality of life, we’ve been given more contacts and people to talk to in case we need support and there’s definitely going to be more improvements made over the year in regards to training and boot camping.

For the fans that might not been aware, you spent some time in Japan playing competitively, what was that like?

My experience in Japan was mostly positive, before I left Australia to go play there I definitely had my worries about whether or not this would be good for my league career and me as a person. I ended up going because even if I didn’t have a good time as a professional player, it would be an invaluable life experience. I ended up enjoying my time there and I had a lot of fun crushing the challenger series. The food was great, the country was great, playing Korean solo queue as well as competitive matches against a bunch of players I’d never played against before was amazing. I’d like to go overseas again to play in the future.

Were you ever considering staying in Japan instead of coming back home?

Towards the end of 2016, when I was starting to get offers from OPL teams, I was having a rough time deciding whether or not to stay in Japan. OPL in 2016 was purely online except for the LAN finals, so when I heard that OPL was moving to a LAN format as well as every team getting gaming houses and salaries going up across the region I was extremely interested to return home and play with the new knowledge I’d gained playing overseas. All of these factors led me to want to play in OCE again. (as well as the crushing defeat in the promotion tournament)

If you were to build a team around yourself with players you’ve played with or against in Oceania and Japan, what does your dream team look like?

In my opinion a dream team to build around me would probably look like:

I feel like Mimic has the highest potential as a top laner that I’ve played with and against so far.

Shernfire is the jungler I respect the most that doesn’t play in major regions.

Lost is the best mechanical ADC and least mistake making player I’ve ever played with.

Rogue for me is an extremely talented mechanical support and I think with this lineup that is what we’d need from our support player.

Watch Claire and the rest of Legacy take on Avant Garde and Tectonic this weekend in the OPL, you can follow his journey on his twitter @ClaireOCE.

Who would you like to see interviewed for Pick 6? Let us know on twitter @snowballesports.

Images courtesy of Riot Games/OPL
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Patch 8.2 shakes up Support Itemisation https://legacy.snowballesports.com/2018/02/01/patch-8-2-shakes-up-support-itemisation/ Thu, 01 Feb 2018 03:00:22 +0000 https://snowballesports.com/?p=753 The OPL moves to patch 8.2 this weekend, bringing some major changes – the likes of which we have never seen in an in-season patch.

One of these impacts the support role as a whole. As a refresher, here’s what has changed:

– Sightstone and all three tier 3 support items have been removed
– Tier 1 support items now gain the sightstone active once the quest has been completed (500g earned)
– Once quest is complete you get 1 ward charge immediately, then 3 ward charges every time you base
– 3 new tier 3 support items added, same stats as the old ones (Remnant of the Watchers, Remnant of the Ascended, Remnant of the Aspect) For the full patch details, head over to the official post.

I dislike the changes, it feels like a indirect nerf to my favourite champions
Jake “Rogue” Sharwood


This is without a doubt one of the largest changes to hit the support role of late.  It’s predominantly intended to do two things; stop other roles from building these support items (Relic Shield ADCs, Frost Queen Vladimir top lane), and free up the spending habits of supports.  Now supports can build impactful items much sooner than before, where there was an 800g Sightstone barrier to get around.

Reactions have been mixed however, which is understandable with the removal of 3 activatable items that supports had access to before.  I talked to some of our OPL supports to gauge their reaction.

Cuden from Sin is on board:  “I like the changes because I thought it was not fair when other roles were able to use support items more than supports. The items were designed for supports so when other roles use [them], it messes up the balance of the game.”

Order’s Rogue isn’t a fan.  Telling me “Personally I dislike the changes, it feels like a indirect nerf to my favourite champions. Having to focus on getting the warding upgrade when you’re playing Relic Shield Thresh is a pain and on champions that like to run ‘Future’s Market’ it nerfs your ability to get an early Sightstone + boots buy. Whilst at the same time buffing the boring playstyle of upgrading your support item and hitting creeps in lane.”

The items were designed for supports so when other roles use [them], it messes up the balance of the game.
Mike “Cuden” Le

Differing opinions always make for interesting games.  Personally I think this is a healthy change.  Losing the activatable items in Talisman of Ascension, Frost Queen’s Claim and Face of the Mountain is a sacrifice that seems well worth in the name of balancing the game.  I am looking forward to seeing how item prioritisation changes now that Sightstone is off the table – we might be in for some new builds.

Tune into the OPL this Saturday at 2pm AEDT to find out how this change and the others in patch 8.2 impact competitive play.

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Roster Reaction: ORDER – Command and Conquer https://legacy.snowballesports.com/2018/01/10/390/ Wed, 10 Jan 2018 07:31:43 +0000 https://snowballesports.com/?p=390 Newcomers to the OPL, ORDER have had an excellent off-season being able to pick up arguably the strongest players in each position – If they aren’t your number one, they will surely be your number two.. Since the inception of the OPL in 2015, success of new organisations has been limited, with the bottom end of the table being a tumultuous place that has frequently housed any new organisation, with SIN being the only exception to taste playoffs. ORDER will come into 2018 to not only seek to break the trend, but blow it out of the water with anything short of a finals appearance being a disappointment.

 

Leading ORDER, Simon “Swiffer” Papamarkos joins from long-time home at Chiefs Esports Club, where he forged his reputation as the “best player Oceania has ever produced”.

 Little needs to be said about the accolades he has received over the years – Winning 4 OPL titles; representing Australia on the global stage…he even solo killed Ambition at WCG 2013. A mainstay of Oceanic League of Legends, the value Swiffer can bring to a team can be highlighted by the difficulties the Chiefs had faced while Swiffer was overseas, with Cheese filling his position until return. The Split 1 ’16 Chiefs struggled to a 5-3 record, a major deal for the near unbeatable team of the past, Swiffer returning to lead Chiefs to the OPL title, spawning the now omnipresent phrase “No Swiffer, No Clue”. Coming into the OPL in 2018 Swiffer will be against fierce competition from his opponents if he is to hold onto his position as the best mid laner in Oceania.

 

Also joining from the Chiefs is long-time partner in the jungle, Samuel “Spookz” Broadley to unite with his mid laner once again. Having been together since 2013 under Exile 5, being able to bring these two players under the same banner is invaluable. Spookz like many junglers in the OPL comes in off the back of an inconsistent 2017. During the season Spookz made uncharacteristic mistakes and had been targeted as a hole in an otherwise strong Chiefs line up which had seen them not only break their streak of OPL titles at 4, but saw them not win a single OPL title in 2017. Spookz will no doubt be seeking to prove his doubters wrong moving in to 2018. Spookz is an emotional leader and when he on-song he leads from the front and rallies his whole team to his call when he gets vocal. With a match up against Dire Wolves being a juicy proposition as Spookz seeks to reclaim his throne as not only the best jungler in the region but as a 2018 OPL Split 1 champion. Along with Swiffer forming a strong base to build around, it is certainly a possibility.

 

Joining the long-time allies is one of their long-time rivals. Former Legacy sidelane specialist James “Tally” Shute fills the top lane position off the back of a lacklustre 2017. The former OPL MVP spent last season expanding on his craft, often being made to fill a tank position for the team. As a strong mechanical player, without a doubt Tally would’ve liked to have had a flashier 2017 and in 2018 one can only hope that he returns to filling a carry position on occasion that saw his now teammates tremble at PAX 2014. With the way the meta appears to be shaping Tally will be right at home, being able to fill a flexible position playing tanks and carries with equal ease, will look to regain some lost ground to re-establish himself as the strongest top in the region.

 

A relative newcomer, at least compared to his teammates is AD Carry Victor “FBI” Huang, who joins from SIN Gaming. After a successful debut year, FBI has solidified himself as one of the brightest talents in Oceania bringing himself into contention for the best ADC player in the region in his rookie year. Leaving what was an on-the-rise SIN Gaming, it is of little doubt that FBI joins looking to increase his chances of securing an OPL title. As with the other players on this roster, FBI defines flexibility, while being at home on supportive champions he can play carries to just as deadly of a level. While Oceania has many strong carry players in the position, FBI is by far the most versatile; being able to play supportive champions such as Ashe in particular to a level that far exceeds his peers. It is this fact that makes me certain that FBI will not only build upon his performance in 2017 but look to create a gap between himself and his opposing numbers.

 

Sticking with both his 2017 bot lane partner and arguably best buddy-cop-duo of 2017 is Jake “Rogue” Sharwood who also joins from the ranks of SIN Gaming. With the departure of EGym Ali God from the competition, Rogue is a perfect position to claim the support throne. The best play making support in the region, Rogue is a deadly and decisive when it comes to engaging. In 2018, it will be interesting to see how far Rogue diversifies from this status as on SIN Gaming he often found himself as the primary source of engage, and an ever versatile ORDER roster may be filling a defensive role from time to time. An interesting point of note is that Rogue also exceeds his peers when it comes to pushing a vision line forward, a job that many a team in the OPL struggled to fulfil. However, this is not without fault as this tendency to push vision could be punished upon resetting, leaving gaps in vision that force a more defensive style upon said reset. That being said, without a doubt Rogue will come into 2018 looking to solidify his position as the top support in the region, and alongside FBI, the best bot lane.

 

ORDER has without a doubt, been able to build one of the best rosters that the Oceanic region has ever seen. Building a roster from scratch can be a difficult task and with the securing of familiar pairings of Swiffer and Spookz, and FBI and Rogue has led to foundations having previously been built before the rift has even been taken.

 

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Roster Reaction: On a SIN And A Prayer? https://legacy.snowballesports.com/2018/01/03/roster-reaction-on-a-sin-and-a-prayer/ Wed, 03 Jan 2018 15:40:55 +0000 https://snowballesports.com/?p=104 The perennial dark horses of the OPL, SIN Gaming come into 2018 off the back of a somewhat successful 2017. Surprising many with their gauntlet runs that not only had you on the edge of your seat, but had you jumping out in awe. With a young roster, it seemed that SIN would be moving into 2018 all guns blazing, well in contention for their first finals appearance but with the departures of Dhokla, Ryoma, FBI and Rogue, their hopes are in shambles. With captain Juves the sole remainder, SIN has looked to rebuild bringing in some experienced and new faces.

 

It is only appropriate that we address the retention of Brandon “Juves” Defina. The life-blood of SIN gaming, Juves brings a wealth of experience, having been the sole remaining member from not only 2017 but, since the organisations inception at the beginning of 2015. The SIN captain has seen a myriad of players come and go in this time and with a rebuild on this scale, is possibly the most important member to be retained. While he may never be held in the discussion for best jungler in the OPL, by many he may even be regarded as one of the bottom players in OPL, he certainly has a knack for coming out of seemingly nowhere to secure influential leads – after all he outsmited Levi! His value truly comes from his experience, leadership and personality, not only for the players but for the organisation as a whole. Juves has the power to bring viewers in to watch SIN games, and is one of only a handful of players in OPL to be able to do this. I have absolutely no doubt that with Juves at the helm that SIN will be able to once again foster young talent into top OPL talent in due course.

 

Moving down the roster, we introduce a familiar face to the OPL with Mark “Praedyth” Lewis moving from TM Gaming to join SIN. Praedyth brings a style that can be directly compared with Dhokla, setting up for almost a seamless transition for Juves to be able to play around. Known for his ability to play split pushing carries, he joins a long line of former SIN gaming top laners that have been known for this exact ability. However, while being known for this ability he struggled to execute on a struggling TM roster that went through tumultuous changes in the first split, and lacked leadership in the second. One could argue that his struggles were due to a systematic issue within the team itself, as opposed to individual – with Juves guiding his hand, it is definitely possible we see significant improvement in this area. However the primary concerns lie in his poor sense of how to engage and when. With top lane often being the primary engage tool, inside of “tank meta” it should be expected that Praedyth struggle, unless SIN look to capitalise on counter pick opportunities to allow him to play his natural style. While not the best of the free agents, SIN have certainly done a good job in filling the hole left by Dhokla with a player in a similar mould.

 

Continuing to the mid lane, we see our first new face to the OPL, Dimitry “Bdoink” Botov. Coming off of his 3rd split in the OCS, Bdoink returns to the organisation that gave him his taste of competitive League of Legends having played for the SIN academy roster in 2016. Originally renowned as a Yasuo one trick, his champion pool has expanded over the years being able to play a myriad of champions. However, based off of his 2017 performance, you can only rate this as a significant downgrade from Ryoma and within the role that is filled with the most talent one can only expect him to struggle, entering the OPL as one of it’s weaker mid laners. However, in the past Bdoink has shown rapid improvement when he joined the OCS in 2016, yet stagnated somewhat in 2017. Fans of SIN gaming can only hope that upon joining the OPL, Bdoink is able to once again rapidly improve upon joining the top league in Oceania.

 

Another new face, Ronan “Dream” Swingler (formerly known as PVA) fills the void left by FBI. Dream comes into SIN Gaming having limited experience, playing only two games in the OCS under Lynx. While the overall performance was slightly above average, and with the limited sample size it is difficult to give a true gauge on how he will perform in the OPL. However FBI joined last year with even less, and proved to be a top 3 ADC in the region without a doubt. While the sample size is limited to solo q and the two games of Ashe played in OCS it would appear that Dream does not appear as comfortable as being as source of engage as FBI did, where due to how meta was tailored in 2017 and how SIN played, FBI was able to carry despite being in a utility position. Dream will have large shoes to fill in 2017, and I’m not entirely sure if he will be able to perform to an OPL level but is definitely worth giving him a crack given the parity a majority of OCS ADC’s have shown in 2017.

 

Lastly, Mike “Cuden” Le makes his return to the OPL having spent the most recent split with Abyss in the OCS. While Cuden may have three splits of OPL experience, he has never truly solidified his position in a team having changed teams in each of these splits, SIN will be his fourth. Cuden is often criticised for his lack of aggression, staying true to the player he was when he joined having been known for his Soraka. This is in stark contrast to the player Rogue was, being the aggressive playmaker and possibly the best playmaker from the support position in the OPL. Cuden will have big shoes to fill being paired with the rookie Dream, and having the experience of three splits in the OPL will definitely have to fulfil a primary engage role at some point given what we already know about Praedyth. In 2018 hopefully we witness a more aggressive Cuden.

 

All in all, SIN were in an exceptionally difficult position to fill the voids that they were left with, while they were largely left with the scraps they have been able to pull together a roster that has a good balance of experience and new faces. While in 2018 I have this roster falling towards the bottom, they have the tools to create some upsets.

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BREAKING: A New ORDER in Oceanic Esports! https://legacy.snowballesports.com/2017/12/14/breaking-a-new-order-in-oceanic-esports/ Thu, 14 Dec 2017 13:13:38 +0000 https://snowballesports.com/?p=55 As we mentioned in an early iteration of our 2018 Roster Tracker, the organisation formerly known as Regicide has disbanded and its place on the OPL Contract Database has remained blank for several weeks. Snowball Esports has learned that it will be replaced by a new organisation known as ORDER, led by Gerard Murphy, formerly with the AFL’s Richmond Tigers. ORDER have entered into the OPL with a truly frightening roster:

 

Top: James “Tally” Shute
Jungle: Samuel “Spookz” Broadley
Mid: Simon “Swiffer” Papamarkos
ADCarry: Victor “FBI” Huang
Support: Jake “Rogue” Sharwood

The roster comprises a who’s-who of the remaining OPL Free Agents. Make no mistake about it, this roster is stacked with top three players at every single position and becomes an instant threat to the Dire Wolves as title contenders. If ORDER can get it together on the rift, these five players have the ability to represent the best combination of players ever assembled in Oceania. Surrender at 20 recently placed the below logo into their 2018 Esports Logos and based on where it is in that post, it would seem that it is the logo they will debut with in Split 1 2018. The ORDER roster is an exciting time for the OPL, and the top-table clashes with the Chiefs and Dire Wolves should be exceptionally exciting.

 

Pictured: Rumoured ORDER logo, per 11/December Surrender@20 post.

 

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