How G2 Took Over The LEC: Unterschied zwischen den Versionen
Die Seite wurde neu angelegt: „<br>Illaoi is one of the most annoying champions to lane against in the top lane , and that's saying something. Her ability to spawn tentacles around her makes it so that the person she is planning against is always at a disadvantage in a fi<br><br> <br>After the whole Dardoch situation, many were left wondering just who TSM would announce as their starting jungler. The fan favorites turned in-house, deciding to promote Academy jungler Mingyi "Spica" Lu.…“ |
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<br> | <br>Dignitas went through even more inconsistency in the following Spring Split, benching their new jungler Jonathan "Grig" Armao in favor of Matthew "Akaadian" Higginbotham. After missing out on playoffs, Dignitas dropped Grig and acquired jungler Joshua "Dardoch" Hartnett and top laner Omran "V1per" Sho<br><br> <br>Sett is the more recent champion to be released on this list and at his release, he was probably one of the most banned champions in the entire game. This is because on top of his straight forward but really solidly made kit, he was just straight up overpowe<br><br> <br>G2's first game in the LCS was on January 14th, 2016. Following the departure of SmittyJ and Jesse, G2 added Kim "Trick" Gang-yun and Kim "Emperor" Jin-hyun to play in the jungle and bottom lane. Still led by Kikis and Perkz (although no longer with a capital "z"), the fresh young team faced off against Elements and former Gamers2 mid laner Eika, in their first LCS g<br><br> <br>Varus seemed to be the only champion to be a perma-ban for every team in the Mid-Season Cup. The few times he slipped through the banning phase, he'd be immediately first picked by the blue team, making the red team who didn't ban him regret<br><br> <br>This is a mid to late-game build that has Tahm Kench stepping in as a support when needed and acting as a one on one champion dueler when not needed. In the beginning of the game you’ll want to farm in Top Lane with most upgrades going to Tongue Lash and a few points spread across the other abilit<br><br> <br>Teemo, despite being the most hated character in the game, is still played by a lot of players, even at high levels so it makes sense why he has a fairly high ban rate of 12.33 percent. On top of that, he also has a pretty high win rate, that being 51.63 perc<br> <br>2017 was more of the same for G2, winning both the spring and summer splits, marking the organization's third and fourth consecutive titles, cementing them as a European dynasty. However, it wasn't all smooth sailing for the juggernauts. Following Zven and Mithy leaving Europe to play in North America for Team SoloMid, and the exits of Trick and Expect, G2 was left with a roster consisting solely of their superstar Perkz. The team built around their mid laner, signing Martin "Wunder" Nordahl Hansen, Marcin "Jankos" Jankowski, Kim "Wadid" Bae-in and Petter "Hjarnan" Freyschuss for the 2018 sea<br> <br>In the west, G2 Esports and Cloud9 look like two of the strongest teams to ever play in their respective regions. G2 just recently lost to FunPlus Phoenix in the 2019 World finals while a North American team has never made it out of the semi-finals. With the lack of international competition, the chaos caused by COVID-19, and the Asian teams just looking weaker than usual, this could be the west's chance to finally secure themselves a ti<br><br> <br>Knight, along with JackeyLove, 369, yuyanjia and jungler Hung "Karsa" Hao-Hsuan will have their eyes on Summer Split title, looking to get revenge on JD Gaming for beating them in the 2020 Spring fin<br><br> <br>G2 lost their first four games at MSI, ultimately coming in second to last place and missing the playoffs entirely. This was devastating not only to G2, but to Europe as a whole, as this placement meant that the region would miss out on a Pool 1 Seed at Worlds. In regards to their poor play, the organization hastily put out a statement halfway through day two of the event, explaining how the team had taken vacation time after a "rigorous Spring Split." SKT would go on to win MSI, with Faker receiving <br><br> <br>With Doublelift gone, Team Liquid have flipped their history book to a fresh, blank sheet, and they'll be turning to Edward "Tactical" Ra to help fill in the pages. Team Liquid had won four consecutive titles before Cloud9 won the 2020 Spring Finals, dominating North America for two straight ye<br><br> <br>Dignitas rejoined the LCS in 2020 after a two year hiatus by merging with Clutch Gaming. Before the merge, Clutch Gaming represented North America by competing internationally at Worlds 2019. After just one split, Dignitas has replaced every single member of that Clutch Gaming roster and missed out on the spring playo<br><br> <br>The 2020 [https://leagueoflegendsportal.com/ league of legends Builds] of Legends Spring Split has come and gone. Cloud9 won North America, G2 Esports won Europe's title, T1 took home the LCK Championship and JD Gaming won the honors in China's LPL. The split was a wild ride for fans and teams across the globe, from Konstantinos-Napoleon "FORG1VEN" Tzortziou controversially stepping down from FC Schalke 04 to Team Liquid benching Yiliang "Doublelift" Peng , to COVID-19 throwing a giant wrench into it <br><br> <br>The China native played Zoe twice, landing every sleepy trouble bubble imaginable, not dying a single time. He even switched from a carry role to a support-like role, playing Orianna against FPX in the finals, finishing with a KDA (kill/death/assist) of 2/2<br><br> <br>DIG came into the season with fairly high expectations, fielding a roster of grizzled veterans and up-and-coming rookie Johnson "Johnsun" Nguyen. After the team benched Grig ahead of week 7 , Dignitas finished the disappointing season with Akaadian as their jungler. They did well with him, going 4-4, just barely missing out on the playo<br> | ||
Version vom 11. März 2026, 21:18 Uhr
Dignitas went through even more inconsistency in the following Spring Split, benching their new jungler Jonathan "Grig" Armao in favor of Matthew "Akaadian" Higginbotham. After missing out on playoffs, Dignitas dropped Grig and acquired jungler Joshua "Dardoch" Hartnett and top laner Omran "V1per" Sho
Sett is the more recent champion to be released on this list and at his release, he was probably one of the most banned champions in the entire game. This is because on top of his straight forward but really solidly made kit, he was just straight up overpowe
G2's first game in the LCS was on January 14th, 2016. Following the departure of SmittyJ and Jesse, G2 added Kim "Trick" Gang-yun and Kim "Emperor" Jin-hyun to play in the jungle and bottom lane. Still led by Kikis and Perkz (although no longer with a capital "z"), the fresh young team faced off against Elements and former Gamers2 mid laner Eika, in their first LCS g
Varus seemed to be the only champion to be a perma-ban for every team in the Mid-Season Cup. The few times he slipped through the banning phase, he'd be immediately first picked by the blue team, making the red team who didn't ban him regret
This is a mid to late-game build that has Tahm Kench stepping in as a support when needed and acting as a one on one champion dueler when not needed. In the beginning of the game you’ll want to farm in Top Lane with most upgrades going to Tongue Lash and a few points spread across the other abilit
Teemo, despite being the most hated character in the game, is still played by a lot of players, even at high levels so it makes sense why he has a fairly high ban rate of 12.33 percent. On top of that, he also has a pretty high win rate, that being 51.63 perc
2017 was more of the same for G2, winning both the spring and summer splits, marking the organization's third and fourth consecutive titles, cementing them as a European dynasty. However, it wasn't all smooth sailing for the juggernauts. Following Zven and Mithy leaving Europe to play in North America for Team SoloMid, and the exits of Trick and Expect, G2 was left with a roster consisting solely of their superstar Perkz. The team built around their mid laner, signing Martin "Wunder" Nordahl Hansen, Marcin "Jankos" Jankowski, Kim "Wadid" Bae-in and Petter "Hjarnan" Freyschuss for the 2018 sea
In the west, G2 Esports and Cloud9 look like two of the strongest teams to ever play in their respective regions. G2 just recently lost to FunPlus Phoenix in the 2019 World finals while a North American team has never made it out of the semi-finals. With the lack of international competition, the chaos caused by COVID-19, and the Asian teams just looking weaker than usual, this could be the west's chance to finally secure themselves a ti
Knight, along with JackeyLove, 369, yuyanjia and jungler Hung "Karsa" Hao-Hsuan will have their eyes on Summer Split title, looking to get revenge on JD Gaming for beating them in the 2020 Spring fin
G2 lost their first four games at MSI, ultimately coming in second to last place and missing the playoffs entirely. This was devastating not only to G2, but to Europe as a whole, as this placement meant that the region would miss out on a Pool 1 Seed at Worlds. In regards to their poor play, the organization hastily put out a statement halfway through day two of the event, explaining how the team had taken vacation time after a "rigorous Spring Split." SKT would go on to win MSI, with Faker receiving
With Doublelift gone, Team Liquid have flipped their history book to a fresh, blank sheet, and they'll be turning to Edward "Tactical" Ra to help fill in the pages. Team Liquid had won four consecutive titles before Cloud9 won the 2020 Spring Finals, dominating North America for two straight ye
Dignitas rejoined the LCS in 2020 after a two year hiatus by merging with Clutch Gaming. Before the merge, Clutch Gaming represented North America by competing internationally at Worlds 2019. After just one split, Dignitas has replaced every single member of that Clutch Gaming roster and missed out on the spring playo
The 2020 league of legends Builds of Legends Spring Split has come and gone. Cloud9 won North America, G2 Esports won Europe's title, T1 took home the LCK Championship and JD Gaming won the honors in China's LPL. The split was a wild ride for fans and teams across the globe, from Konstantinos-Napoleon "FORG1VEN" Tzortziou controversially stepping down from FC Schalke 04 to Team Liquid benching Yiliang "Doublelift" Peng , to COVID-19 throwing a giant wrench into it
The China native played Zoe twice, landing every sleepy trouble bubble imaginable, not dying a single time. He even switched from a carry role to a support-like role, playing Orianna against FPX in the finals, finishing with a KDA (kill/death/assist) of 2/2
DIG came into the season with fairly high expectations, fielding a roster of grizzled veterans and up-and-coming rookie Johnson "Johnsun" Nguyen. After the team benched Grig ahead of week 7 , Dignitas finished the disappointing season with Akaadian as their jungler. They did well with him, going 4-4, just barely missing out on the playo