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Warzone Tournaments on Repeat: Important Updates & Scoring Changes

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Warzone tournaments on Repeat

Warzone Tournaments on Repeat are so close to coming back! We have some exciting plans for the future we want to share with you.

We know you are itching to have Warzone tournaments back! We are doing everything we can to bring them back and we have great plans for the future to give you even more of a reason to play Warzone tournaments on Repeat.

What have we done with our tournaments

We’ve seen the community’s passion for Warzone 2 tournaments to be introduced on Repeat, we’ve been hard at work making sure we follow all community guidelines while in talks with Activision and and plan to have tournaments ready to come within the new year!

When Warzone 2 tournaments do come back, we do not plan to support Warzone Caldera as the community seems to have moved on.

With the pace of play in the current iteration of Warzone 2, we’ve added more points for kills and wins while also reducing the penalty for deaths. As future updates come out we of course plan to amend scoring to ensure competitive integrity.

What are we going to do with our tournaments

We have several exciting changes in mind for the Warzone 2 release, such as cross platform/ platform based tournaments, adding Warzone Mobile, and increasing daily, weekly and monthly tournament prize pools.

We are also looking at doing pro-am/grass-root live production tournaments in 2023 for Warzone 2 with creators and invited professionals.

Any updates within the game

Season 1 of Warzone 2 will end Wednesday, February 1, 2023. There are plans of a mid season drop around December 14th but we aren’t sure what is in store for it yet.

Acknowledging user issues

We know everyone is extremely excited for the return, just as we are, we thank you for your continued patience and support while we ensure we do this the proper way. We’re ready to do bigger and better things, stay tuned. 

Closing Statement/Quote from Game Admin

I am still committed to continually providing the best user experience I can. I feel the same passion many of you do for Warzone to return to Repeat and share that same love for the game. In the New Year we will be ready to provide the best tournament experience possible. Bigger tournaments, more money, live productions, the potential is limitless. I personally thank you for the love and passion you all show and we’re so excited to share what is in stor

Countries That Made the Most Money in Esports in 2022

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Most Money in Esports

These are the countries that made the most money in esports in 2022, and the top countries on the list are those you probably expect.

Esports and the gaming industry as a whole is a massively profitable venture. Many aspiring esports professionals are rising, hoping to gain the attention of esports organizations for a comfortable offer. Like athletes, esports professionals will dedicate endless hours of their youth to this dream.

When a country recognizes that esports is a lucrative venture, its support goes a long way to foster more talent. Pro-competitive gaming countries may offer benefits and training like esports as an academic course, or make it easier for players to acquire visas to compete abroad. This list highlights the countries that made the most money in esports, some of the highest-earning players, and the most successful games.

Who Made The Most Money in Esports in 2022?

Continue reading to see how these countries made the top 10!

most money in esports

France

France has reportedly earned $$4,240,013 with 834 active players. The country’s top-earning player is a dominant Rocket League player Monkey Moon. Representing Team BDS, he won the Rocket League World Champion alongside his teammates Extra and Seikoo. France also competes in Rainbow Six Siege, CS: GO, and Starcraft II.

Thailand

Thailand has earned $4,539,710 from its 611 active players. PUBG Mobile is the most popular game for competitive esports professionals, with Stoned earning the highest esports income in the country. Thailand is also fond of other mobile games like Free Fire and Arena of Valor.

United Kingdom

The United Kingdom lands top 8 for countries in esports earnings, getting $4,582,032 in 2022. UK esports professionals make most of their income from Fortnite, Rocket League, various Call of Duty titles, CS:GO, and Smite. Fortnite player Veno is the highest-earning British e-athlete, with a notable Fortnite Champion Series: Chapter 3 Season 2 – Grand Finals: Europe.

Japan

The 582 active players in Japan were able to earn $4,672,878 in 2022. Japanese player Naoto had the most esports earnings for competing in PUBG mobile. Players are also finding success in the fast-paced battle royale, Apex Legends, and the strategic card-game Shadowverse. Japan is also competitive in fighting games like Street Fighter, Tekken, and Dragon Ball FighterZ.

Germany

Germany is the sixth highest earning country in esports, with $5,522,596 accumulated by all 746 players. Team Tundra’s Dota 2 mid-player Nine made up most of Germany’s earnings when he won the eleventh International. The Germans also compete in FIFA, Fortnite, Starcraft II, and CS: GO.

Brazil

Brazil is the fifth highest country in esports earnings, with $7,874,772 collected by over 1052 pro players. Caard, CaioTG1, and yanxnz tie for the highest earners as they’re teammates in Rocket League. Team LOUD also finds great success in Valorant, winning the VALORANT Champions 2022 tournament.

Russian Federation

Russian has earned $8,622,252 from its 633 active esports players. The most financially successful player in 2022 is Fortnite player Malibuca, taking first place in Gamers8 2022 with American teammate EpikWhale. Team Spirit members Miposhka, TORONTOTOKYO, and Collapse kept up their earnings in Dota 2. PUBG and PUBG Mobile is also a popular competitive game in Russia.

South Korea

South Korea is the third-highest country in esports earnings, gathering $10,858,313 from its 872 talented players. The top eight highest earners were all Overwatch 2’s Dallas Fuel members, who were the Overwatch League 2022 winners. The top three placers from the League of Legends 2022 World Champion were also dominated by Korean teams, with DRX ultimately winning the competition.

United States

The United States has the most professional esports players. The total income of 2985 players is $24,961,117 in 2022. Sneyking is the highest-earning American player, famous for his first-pick Mirana, during Team Tundra’s run. America has many competitive esports organizations, with Call of Duty finding the most success overall.

China

China is the highest country in esports earnings in 2022, as 1561 players rack up an impressive $33,537,904. Most of these esports earnings came from Dota 2, as many Chinese teams consistently score high in major tournaments. PSG.LGD is the team which made the most money in esports, particularly Faith_bian. China also competes for huge prize pools in PUBG Mobile.

Repeat League of Legends Tournaments Update Inlcudes HUGE Cash Prizes

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Repeat league of legends

Repeat League of Legends tournaments have long been just coins, but now we have added cash prizes and increased the prize pools!

Welcome back to another League of Legends tournaments update! We are so excited to announce who we’ve been working with and the AMAZING news of our cash prize pools.

What have we done with our tournaments

Since our last League of Legends’ digest, we have worked with Vars and ElOjoNinja to promote our League of Legends tournaments. We have also worked with ??? to create a special extra League of Legends tournament, congratulations to ??? for winning the first prize of XXXXX coins!

Be sure to check out Vars’ video on Control Mages, and ElOjoNinja’s gameplay video of an.. Interesting Bel’Veth game. 

We have also added something that League of Legends players have long been requesting, cash tournaments! We will not only be running cash tournaments, but we will also be increasing the number of weekly and monthly tournaments we run for League of Legends, every month.

What are we going to do with our tournaments

We are currently working on tournaments with Rank Restrictions, to make the pool of players in each of our tournaments fairer, we are hoping this will be a step forward toward helping high rank players win our tournaments, without being shoved down by the chaos of lower ranks. Some of our most active users will likely know that this idea was meant to come a while ago, unfortunately we had to put executing this idea on a pause for a while, but we’re back to working on it.

Additionally, we are still working on pushing our scoring changes forward.

Any updates within the game worth talking about

New ping options, jungle companions, chemtech drake’s return, general jungle changes, new items… old items (welcome back Rod of Ages, we missed you!). There’s a lot to explore in the typical chaos of pre-season, if you want to keep up with it or share your thoughts and ideas for this pre-season, be sure to join our discord and discuss all the changes that came with this preseason with the rest of the Repeat.gg community. 

Promotions 

Be sure to not miss our special $5,000 prize pool Fall tournament, you can find it at https://rpt.gg/fallclassic!

Closing Statement/Quote from Game Admin

You can find me on our Discord under the nickname of Vannish. Just leave a message in #general or #lol-general and I’ll give you the best help I can.

Esports Teams that Won the Most Money in 2022

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Esports Teams Won The Most Money

Esports is a rapidly growing industry as evidenced by the esports teams that won the most money in 2022.

The gaming industry has seen a massive upward trend, with statistics valuing a whopping $178.2 billion in market revenue last 2021. Even if you’re not a developer, there are so many ways to get a huge bite of success by making money in gaming. Streamers, casters, content creators, and other professionals share to entertain and enrich the gaming landscape.

Esports, or competitive gaming, is reserved for the best of the best within the gaming space. The team who dominates the most also earns the most, so these players train rigorously to be better than their competition. This list contains the top 5 esports teams which won the most money in 2022.

FaZe Clan

FaZe Clan is owned by Thomas “Temperrr” Oliveira. Known mostly for their top-tier teams in shooting games, FaZe Clan has proved themselves in Call of Duty, Warzone, CS: GO, FIFA, Fortnite, Halo, Overwatch, Rainbow Six: Siege, PUBG, Rocket League, and more.

FaZe Clan’s CS:GO team is on a hot streak for winning many tournaments in 2022, including winning $500,000 from the PGL Major Antwerp 2022. Their successful CS:GO performances makes them one of the esports teams team that won the most money in 2022.

Of course, FaZe Clan is most famous for its Call of Duty roster. They are strong competitors in CoD: Vanguard and Warzone. And that continues with the newly released Modern Warfare 2, as their roster won the CODAgent $3,000 4v4 Search & Destroy on October 28, 2022. FaZe Clan reportedly earned over $3 million USD in 2022. With the newest Call of Duty out, expect FaZe Clan to be one of the esports teams which continue to win big.

Team Secret

Founded by Estonian Clement Ivanov (Puppey), Team Secret has teams in Dota 2, League of Legends, PUBG Mobile, Rainbow Six Siege, Rocket League, Valorant, and Wild Rift. Team Secret’s biggest win of 2022 was a second-place finish in The International, taking home 13% or $2.4 million USD from the overall prize pool.

Team Secret is finding decent success with its two Philippine rosters playing in Valorant and Wild Rift. They finished in the top five of the six tournaments they joined in 2022, even winning the VCT 2022: Philippines Stage 2 Challengers competition.

Team Liquid

Team Liquid is the most active esports organization on this list based on the number of tournaments they entered. Their most financially successful games for 2022 are Dota 2, CS: GO, StarCraft II, Rainbow Six Siege, and League of Legends. Team Liquid’s Dota 2 team took third place in The International, winning 9% or $1.7 million USD of the prize pool.

Team Liquid’s Counter-Strike roster is a dominant force in the professional scene. They placed first in three CS:GO tournaments in 2022, including the Intel Extreme Masters XVII – Dallas: North American Qualifier.

Nova eSports

Based in Hong Kong, Nova eSports is a professional esports organization that mostly competes in popular mobile games. Nova eSports has players in PUBG Mobile, Lol Wildrift, Call of Duty Mobile, Clash Royale, Brawl Stars, FIFA online, Arena of Valor, Honor of Kings, and more. The organization also has representatives outside of mobile games, like Overwatch, PUBG, and League of Legends.

Their Chinese PUBG Mobile team is wildly successful; they won the PUBG Mobile Global Championship 2021: Grand Finals and grabbed second place in the Peacekeeper Elite League Summer 2022. Nova eSports has gained nearly $3.8 million this year.

Tundra Esports

Tundra Esports has reportedly earned over $9 million USD in 2022. Most of their earnings come from winning Dota 2’s eleventh The International grand tournament. The International is famous for having absurdly high prize pools, like boasting $40 million last 2021 or $34 million in 2019. The International 2022 had a total prize pool of nearly $19 million; Team Tundra brought back 45% or $8.5 million USD.

Team Tundra was also in several other tournaments this year. They won the DPC WEU 2021/2022 Tour 3: Division I. As an esports organization, Team Tundra also has representatives competing in FIFA, Rocket League, and Fortnite tournaments.

Repeat Fortnite Update: New Modes, FNCS Winners & Rocket League Collab

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Repeat Fortnite

The most recent Repeat Fortnite update includes some new modes, who won the FNCS, and a cool collab with a Rocket League car.

Welcome back to the latest update for Repeat Fortnite in November! There has been a ton of cool stuff happening on the Fortnite Esports scene and many things happening behind the scenes for Fortnite Tournaments on Repeat.

Unfortunately, we don’t have a ton to share as far as getting more tournaments on a daily, weekly and monthly basis, but we are working with Epic to comply with their requests and get those back as soon as we can.

However, there are still fun things worth talking about! Let’s get right into it.

What we have done with our tournaments

Shoutout Cozmos and LaterFN who worked with us on some Fortnite activations! Check out their videos below and be sure to subscribe to all their channels.

Updates in Fortnite

In the most recent Patch notes, we see that Fortnite added the Rocket League Octane car to the game and introduced 40-vs-40 Zero Build mode.

Fans have also noticed today that World Cup skins were added given that the biggest sporting event in the world begins next week.

Rocket League Octane car has rocket boosters, supersonic speed, jump, dodge, and can drive on walls. The new Grapple Glider can be found during gameplay as well.

In the update at the beginning of November, we saw Star wars items come back into the game and that included E-11 Blaster and Luke’s lightsaber. They also added the sideways rifle, which can be charged up and stays in a powerful state for longer, as well as the combat pistol.

What’s happening in Fortnite Esports

Fortnite ran their first lan event in over a year and it was truly a spectacular event with some of the best gameplay we’ve seen. Life just seems better when Fortnite is running live events.

Congratulations to the winners who took home portions of a MASSIVE $1 million prize pool:

FNCS Invitational Leaderboard

Message from our Fortnite Game Admin

With Fortnite tournaments going up to $2,000 a weekend its my job to make sure that things are being run fairly and is fun for all users to please make sure to leave suggestions in our discord for things that you would like to see. You guys can always find me on Discord in #Fortnite.

The International 2022: Best Games, Contested Heroes, and How Tundra Esports Won

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the international 2022 dota 2

The International 2022 featured 20 of the best Dota 2 players in the world. Here is how they faired, who won the most and more.

The International 2022 was the eleventh annual concluding tournament of the Dota Pro Circuit. Set in Singapore and organized by PGL, twenty of the best Dota 2 teams represented their organizations and regions to win it all and claim the Aegis.

While the production value of this grand tournament could have been better, especially compared to the stellar ones of the past, most games were amazing and worth watching. We’ll quickly recap the event, memorializing the important highlights and stats of the tournament.

The International 2022 Prize Pool Distribution

The International has always been one of the highest prize pools in esports. And that trend continues, with TI11 giving away a whopping $18,930,775. While it’s still an unbelievably huge sum of money, the amount dwarfs in comparison to The International 2021’s prize pool of $40,018,195, or even The International 2019’s $34,330,068.

Team Tundra wins 45% of the share, taking home $8,518,822. Their opponent in the grand finals, Team Secret, gets 13% or $2,461,033 from the pool. At third place, Team Liquid gets $1,703,810 or 9% of the prize pool. Finally, Team Aster gets 6% or $1,135,835 for their respectable fourth place finish.

The Group Stages and Main Event

Fan favorite Evil Geniuses dominated the group stages, ending with an impressive match record of seven wins and two losses. Meanwhile, Tundra Esports come out on top of Group B, winning five matches and drawing four. Soniqs (Quincy Crew), BetBoom Team, Talon Esports, and TSM FTX didn’t make the cut and fell off the group stages.

Rising stars Boom Esports eliminated The International 2021 winner Team Spirit from the tournament, upsetting fans who wanted to see Team Spirit in a rematch with PSG.LGD.

Another highlight from the lower bracket is Entity winning the longest game in the history of TI against Royal Never Give Up after 107 minutes.

Team Liquid and Thunder Awakening deliver impressive performances in their nail-bitingly close series. Their third game is the best match in the entire tournament and definitely one of the best games of professional Dota 2.

While these teams play incredibly well, luck played a huge factor for both teams. For example, during Team Liquid’s phenomenal high-ground defense, Sacred’s Enigma, unfortunately, blinked right on top Matthew’s Marci, immediately getting bashed and losing the opportunity to Black Hole Liquid’s core. 

A few moments later, Matumbaman only afforded the buyback because he gained assist gold from his Desolator. Ultimately, the game was decided by Matumbaman’s patience and skill as he infested and saved Micke from literally one HP, letting them turn the game around to grab an unlikely comeback.

Meanwhile, in the upper bracket, Tundra Esports and Team Secret faced off with a close series that was more exhilarating than their rematch in the grand finals. After dropping to the lower bracket, Team Secret pushes out Team Liquid, letting them once again fight Tundra Esports in the last series of the The International 2022.

The Flawless Run of Tundra Esports

Tundra Esports convincingly beat Team Secret, winning the grand finals with three straight wins. The only other team to achieve such a feat is Team Liquid against Newbee in The International 2017.

While Tundra Esports dropped four individual games throughout the tournament, they didn’t lose any of their series, which means they also achieved a flawless run. Before TI11, Tundra Esports’ last competitive appearance was the Arlington Major, where they bottomed out without a single win. So how did they do it?

Tundra Esports consistently stacked damage reduction items during the tournament to protect their team. Purge gave a perfect breakdown of their significant team fight advantage when they combined Wraith Pack, Pipe of Insight, and Mage Slayer. Their knowledge of recognizing and stacking damage mitigation is why they give powerful heroes like Leshrac to their opponents because they can counter their draft with items, not heroes. 

Tundra loves drafting aura carriers for their offlane 33, which is why he often plays heroes like Visage and Tidehunter. Sometimes, one of their supports, usually Saksa, holds the aura item during the rare occasions 33 can’t.

Another important aspect of Tundra Esports’ game plan is their superior vision game. Tundra tends to draft heroes that could win them vision and, therefore, information, letting them know to attack and retreat with confidence. The perfect example of this concept is Tundra repeatedly first picking Mirana. In a patch where heroes like Marci are considered too strong, it’s telling that Tundra would prefer Mirana over the meta pick.

Tundra used Mirana’s ultimate, Moonlight Shadow, to its fullest. Using it often to ambush their opponents, increasing their advantage with each fight won. Additionally, Mirana’s level fifteen talent grants her whole team evasion while under her ultimate’s effect, which gives them an additional layer of damage reduction.

Tundra also often picked up Broodmother for her spiders, Visage for its familiars, and Beastmaster for his hawk. They would follow up on their superior vision with heroes who could go in for a quick pick and dip out as soon as their opponents start teleporting to help. Saksa is usually on Tiny, a support who can force pick-offs with a fast toss back or blinking and stunning the whole team. 

Furthermore, compared to other mid laners, Nine avoids carry heroes like Ember Spirit. He picks heroes who love to rotate the map, like Tuskar, Spirit Breaker, and Pangolier. Even their position one, Skiter, joins the fun, infesting inside their initiators to pop out as a nasty surprise. With carries like Slark and Chaos Knight, skiter wants to play with his team.

Tundra isn’t fond of team fighting on equal footing; instead, they use their information advantage to outmaneuver and outfarm their opponents. Notice how often Tundra has a significant gold lead over their enemies, despite having similar kills. In the first upper bracket game of Tundra and Secret, Tundra finished their close game with a 62k gold lead, even though they were only twelve kills ahead. Or, in the second game of the grand finals, Tundra ended with a 25k gold lead, with six kills ahead of their opponents.

Tundra uses heroes who can summon minions or illusions to their full advantage. Again, back to 33’s hero pool, using heroes like Broodmother and Visage, he can camp in their opponent’s jungle to slowly drain their resources away from them. Skiter’s Naga Siren is a famous example of this oppressive strategy because he sends his illusions to cut waves and repeatedly farm the enemy’s jungle. Look at how active Nine’s Arc Warden was at taking up space.

While individual skill is undoubtedly important, Dota 2 is about playing the map, like gaining information and distributing resources. Tundra is an extremely disciplined team, engaging and disengaging according to their gathered information. Their excellent pick-offs, lightning-quick farming, cheesy picks, and game knowledge made them win TI11 without a contest.

Most Picked and Most Banned Heroes

At 95 picks and 128 bans, Marci is the most contested hero of The International 2022. Marci is a safe pick because teams can flex her on any role. She’s great at engaging with Dispose and Rebound, can solo carries with Unleash, and provide a significant buff with Sidekick; she’s a welcome sight for any team. 

Tiny, Shadow Fiend, Leshrac, and Undying are next in line for most picked. Out of the top five, Leshrac has the highest win rate at 57.14%. The changes to bloodstone really catapulted Leshrac to a top-tier pick. Another interesting statistic is that Shadow Fiend was a contested pick during the group stages, especially for EG and Hokori, yet miserably failed during the main event. The only team who managed to win with Shadow Fiend during the main event is Boom Esports against Team Spirit.

At 61.90%, Enigma is the most banned hero during the tournament. Black Hole is a game-winning ultimate that’s often impossible to deal without a counter-pick in the draft. Additionally, Wraith Pack builds naturally into its itemization. Marci, Primal Beast, Batrider, and Morphling join to make up the top five most banned heroes.

Repeat PUBG Tournaments: Update on Scoring, Patch Notes, the Esports Scene & More

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Repeat PUBG Tournaments

How Repeat PUBG Tournaments are running, any scoring updates, anything new within the game and what’s happening in PUBG Esports.

We want our Repeat PUBG Tournament players to know everything that is going on with PUBG, and that includes how our tournaments work and their scoring, updates within the game that may (or may not) impact tournaments, and anything noteworthy going on in the PUBG Esports world.

We’ll provide an update (usually) monthly but if you have any specific questions, ideas or concerns you can always join the Repeat Discord and shoot us a message in the #feedback channel.

What have we done with our tournaments?

As you may have noticed, we started doing daily tournaments for PUBG in the last month. Daily tournaments have been a staple at Repeat and we will run them for any games that make sense. These provide all users who need that quick satisfaction of seeing your account go up in prizes daily and also give flexibility across time zones.

There has also been a new scoring format change within PUBG tournaments to address the concerns over bots in public matches. Users who participate in matches 40% bots or greater will no longer have those matches count.

Furthermore, there will be a modifier to scores to reward users who get kills in matches with fewer bots. So a user who has a match with 70% real players (30% bots) will have their total score multiplied by 0.7, and a user who has a match with 90% real players (10% bots) will have their total score multiplied by 0.9.

In this example, if these users end up with their kills, damage, assists and placement equal to 150 points, the user with 70% real people will have an actual score of 105 (150*0.7), and the user with 90% real players will have a score of 135 (150 * 0.9).

What are we going to do with our tournaments?

PUBG Mobile is a massive global game and we are looking to add it here in the coming weeks. Please stay tuned for more updates as we know more!

Any updates within the game worth talking about


PUBG has announced a mission event collaboration with Dead by Daylight! Follow that link to find out how you can participate.

The latest Patch Notes include an update to vehicles you might find interesting, along with a bunch of other updates and fixes. They also announced a collaboration with Neymar!

What’s going on in PUBG Esports?

Are you as hyped for the PUBG Global Championship 2022 as we are? It is currently running and will finish with the finals in Dubai on November 20 and an incredible $2 million prize pool!

Are there any bugs / issues?

We had many reports of scoring not working for a short while last week and have since resolved the issue and your scores should be coming in. Thank you to all the users who helped identify this issue!

As always, if you have questions, thoughts, concerns about the state of Repeat PUBG tournaments, email us at [email protected] or join our Discord.

Esports Tournament Trash Talk That Went Terribly Wrong

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esports tournament trash talk

Every one loves some heated back and forth between players, but these are times esports tournament trash talk went terribly wrong.

For as long as competitive gaming exists, trash talk will always remain. Whether it’s lighthearted banter or salty exchanges, esports teams and players love to sling mud at each other. The fans love the heated exchanges, which creates rivalries and intense entertainment.

Esports professionals can definitely back up their big talk with equally tremendous skill. But sometimes, inflated egos can cause esports tournament trash talk that went terribly wrong for them in the end.

Nicolaj “Cant Wait to Clap Faker” Jensen 

For a long time, Faker was undoubtedly the best mid-laner and one of the best players in League of Legends history. During Worlds 2016, C9 was up against SKT in the group stages. Jensen tweeted that he couldn’t wait to clap Faker before their match.

While Faker hasn’t formally responded with words, SKT provided Jensen an extremely humbling experience. Jensen was ganked and killed left and right against his opponents, leaving the laning stage with four deaths and more than fifty creep scores behind Faker. Fortunately, Jensen kept the original tweet so everyone could see the exact moment trash talk didn’t go as planned during an esports tournament.

Florida Mayhem Spamming “GG, Losers” To Atlanta Reign

Dusttin “Dogman” Bowerman is a retired Overwatch support player who last played for Atlanta Reign. During his time in the Overwatch League, he was known for stirring the pot against his opponents. Like a WWE wrestler, he would banter non-stop, occasionally crossing the line with his harsh comments.

In the 2020 May Melee, Florida Mayhem chose Atlanta Reign as their next opponent because they wanted revenge for a previous loss. Dogman joined Mayhem’s interview and threw some lighthearted digs against their opponents. Needless to say, Atlanta Reign’s trash talk went horribly wrong because they lost to Mayhem and were spammed with “GG, losers” during the last map.

ATF’s Signature Mantle of Intelligence Drop Backfires

esports tournament trash talk

Ammar “ATF” Al-Assaf is a relatively new player in the Dota 2 pro scene. Despite that, the rising pubstar quickly gained notoriety for his bad manners in both public games and professional matches. One of his signature and hilarious insult is dropping mantles of intelligence against his opponents in esports tournaments, suggesting they need to be smarter. Additionally, he loves dropping a banner between two mantles to form a middle finger.

He has dropped mantles against notable teams like Team Secret, Team Nigma, NaVi, and even against PSG.LGD while OG was losing. His behavior has caused teams also to return the bad manners when they win against OG, like when Sneyking from Tundra Esports did it. Even Yatoro from Team Spirit wanted to join the fun, but unfortunately, OG surrendered too early before he had a chance to drop the mantle.

Perfect Legend Loses 13 Matches in a Race to 10 Wins

Perfect Legend is a three-time EVO winner who loved to talk smack. While arguing about the viability of Mortal Kombat characters online, he indirectly downplayed new blood SonicFox’s tournament win by saying no one knew to play against his character, Kitana. Perfect Legend and SonicFox talked trash against each other before settling on a first to 10 exhibition match at Summer Jam 9, 2015.

The highly anticipated grudge match was anti-climactic because SonicFox completely destroyed Perfect Legend with flawless ten wins. Each match grew increasingly hard to watch as SonicFox was toying and disrespecting his opponent, showcasing a quintessential example of tournament trash talk that went wrong. 

Perfect Legend did not take this beatdown lightly and said that SonicFox wouldn’t be able to beat him without using Kitana and that he would body his Erron Black. So, SonicFox changed to Erron Black and took another three wins before Perfect Legend had enough. 

Chillindude’s Legendary Diss Track

Kashan “Chillindude” Khan is one of the original competitors in Super Smash Bros Melee and pioneered how Fox was meant to be played. Back then, a rising star named Leffen gained popularity in the Melee scene for dismantling the greatest “gods” of the game. 

He also loved to talk trash; one instance has Leffen and Chillindude exchanging heated words on Twitter. Their banter ended with a highly publicized money match in VGBootCamp’s 2015 Salty Suite, but the biggest prize is that the victor wins the right to use Fox’s default color.

Chillindude took the banter to the next level and recorded a diss track called “Respect Your Elders.” Unfortunately, Chillindude couldn’t back up his smack talk, losing all five sets to Leffen, making it the most iconic moment when esports tournament trash talk went terribly wrong.

Repeat Dota 2 Tournaments Update for October

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dota 2 repeat tournaments

The Repeat Dota 2 Tournaments October update includes influencers we worked with, updates to our scoring formats, and The International tournament status.

Every month we will update you on any changes we have made, influencers or brands we have worked with, shouting out winners of giveaways in Dota 2 Repeat tournaments, and important changes to the actual game itself that will be helpful for our users.

If you have anything to suggest to us you can also reach out to us on Discord or email [email protected].

We did want to start by saying we are aware of an issue some users are having with games not counting and are doing our best to determine the issue as it’s not affecting all users at the moment. If you can provide information that will help, feel free to reach out to our support email above.

Tournament winners

Congratulations to the winners of the Purge Gamers tournament! They got to split a massive $1,000 prize pool, and the top winners were below:

  • MoriroDaRe – $100
  • nayanthanethsara – $890
  • Soloo – $60
  • AnimaL_Lover – $40
  • Manticore – $25

Who we worked with

Big thanks to the Dota 2 influencers we worked with in October — Purge Gamers, Dotown and Holy E. Be sure to watch their video and hit follow or subscribe!

Update to Dota 2 tournaments scoring format

We have officially banned Zeus/Clockwerk sitewide to reduce amount of players with crazy high scores.

Upcoming changes we have planned

We will soon begin holding tournaments where only Dota 2 Turbo Mode matches count, which could be incorporated into our weekly and monthly schedules.

Updates in Dota 2

Steam announced the contents of The International 2022 Swag Bag giveaway! This includes the below:

  • One month of Dota Plus.
  • A Level 1 Battle Pass, redeemable for 24 Battle Levels if you already own a Battle Pass.
  • Your choice of one Arcana from any available on the Dota 2 store.

The world’s biggest Esports prize pool tournament is going down to the wire! The International 2022 Top 4 teams have been decided and the TI Finals will take place over the weekend of October 29-30. Congratulations to Team Secret, Tundra, Aster and Team Liquid!

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Credit: @dota2ti on Twitter

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I am also doing my best to review our users to ensure less smurfing on our platform, but also working on long-term solutions to in order to better address these smurfs in the future. Many exciting things will be happening in Repeat in the near future, so make sure you don’t miss out on the fun.

Esports Teams You Should Be Following on Social Media

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esports teams

Whether it’s elite clips, the best memes, or some of the cutest content, these are the Esports teams you should be following on Social Media.

Are you looking for engaging, interactive, and fun esports teams to follow on social media? Then we’ve got you covered. 

In the past few years, esports tournaments and competitions have seen exponential growth, and new teams are emerging every year. 

After scouring through the profiles of dozens of esports teams, we’ve found some of the best ones you should follow on social media if you love entertaining and engaging content.

Cloud9 – Memes and Behind-the-Scenes Content

Cloud9 is a North American esports organization that fields teams in League of Legends, CS:GO, Fortnite, and many more. Cloud9’s social media is always filled with great content, memes, giveaways, inside looks, and behind-the-scenes content from their teams, players, and content creators. 

Since their partnership with Microsoft, Cloud9 has been releasing more content for fans where they can learn more about their favorite players, teams, and content creators. One such piece is their trivia video on whether LCS champions know League of Legends. 

100 Thieves – Behind-the-Scenes Snapshots and Funny Clips

100 Thieves, or 100T, is not only a gaming organization but a lifestyle brand. Along with their passion for lifestyle, they have teams in many popular esports titles, such as Call of Duty, VALORANT, and League of Legends.

So, suppose you like behind-the-scenes shots, funny clips, and comical cooking videos. In that case, you won’t be disappointed when you follow 100 Thieves.

Evil Geniuses – Insider Insights, Memes, and Highlight Clips

Despite being one of the oldest esports organizations, the content you’ll find on Evil Genius’s social media is always fun, fresh, and entertaining. 

With teams in League of Legends, Rocket League, VALORANT, and Dota, there is something for everyone when you follow Evil Geniuses, especially if you love memes, highlight clips, and insider insights.

Team SoloMid – Behind-the-Scenes Updates and Snapshots

TSM is a professional esports organization with teams in popular esports titles such as Apex Legends, League of Legends, VALORANT, and more. TSM is well-known for their passion for gaming, and their social media channels show that. 

If you love more visually-pleasing content, follow TSM as they regularly share videos, snapshots, and behind-the-scenes updates from their creators, players, and teams.

Team Liquid – A Cute Mascot and Creative Video Content

Team Liquid is a multi-regional esports organization with teams in League of Legends, Dota 2, Fortnite, and more. Team Liquid is another esports organization whose social media is focused on providing creative and vibrant visual content. They also have an adorable Team Liquid mascot.

You’ll find everything from videos, snapshots, and behind-the-scenes content from your favorite players on their social media channels. 

FaZe Clan – Highlight Snippets and Memes

FaZe Clan began in 2010 with kids turning their passion for gaming into one of the most well-known esports organizations. Now, they field teams in several popular titles, such as Call of Duty and Fortnite. 

If you love a variety of content, highlight snippets, and memes, FaZe Clan is an excellent team to follow. 

Whether you love memes, behind-the-scenes content, or highlight clips, these esports teams are worth following on social media.

If you’re wondering who else you should follow, that would be us! Follow us on our social media channels to stay up-to-date on future changes, new tournaments, and other exciting content.

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