coL.DOTA in ESL One New York Qualifier

September 12th, 2014

Today, compLexity DOTA will continue their run through the ESL One New York Qualifier. The event will feature eight teams from three different regions. 4 European and 3 North American teams will qualify for the event through online qualifiers featuring an open bracket allowing anyone to participate through joinDOTA’s tournament system. 

The qualifier is split up into two separate stages. The first stage is the open bracket, allowing anyone to enter and compete. The four best teams from this qualifier will move up to the second stage of the qualifier, the invitational bracket.

In the invitational bracket, the four best teams from the open bracket will be joined by invited teams. These teams feature the best players and squads in the world and have previously competed in many world class tournaments. With their success in the record books, these teams have secured themselves a seed in the 2nd round of the qualifiers.

The four best teams from the European Qualifier and the three best teams from the American Qualifier will qualify for ESL One New York taking place on October 9th and October 10th.

Results

coL.DOTA 2 VS 1 Gerg
Invitational Bracket
coL.DOTA 0 VS 2 EG
Invitational Bracket
coL.DOTA 2 VS 0 TOP5
Invitational Bracket

Stream

compLexity Invades The Inn; Adds Hearthstone

September 11th, 2014

 

Today compLexity gaming is proud to announce the opening of a new gaming division, coL.Hearthstone. While the competitive card game has captured our attention for some time, we have been patiently searching for the right player to kick off our new squad. After an exhaustive search, we’re confident that we have found the player that best represents compLexity’s commitment to professionalism and dedication to competition. Please welcome, David “coL.Dog” Caero.

Dog is an up-and-coming North American Hearthstone player, known most for his popular stream, high ladder ranking, and his signature ‘Dog Deck’. Though he has played since the early beta, it was only earlier this year that Dog began to stream his Hearthstone antics. Since then, viewers of Dog’s exceedingly popular stream have seen him hit #1 on both NA and EU ladders, create an extremely powerful ramp Druid deck – coined the ‘Dog Deck’ – earn a spot in the Hearthstone World Championship qualifiers, and educate thousands of players about top-tier Hearthstone play. Now Dog looks to center his sights on even more competition, as he will represent compLexity at online tournaments, and at events around the globe.

 

“Hearthstone has been on our radar for quite a while, but it was imperative that we entered the scene with the right player.” remarked Kyle Bautista, General Manager of compLexity. “Dog is an excellent mix of entertainer, innovator, educator, and of course, competitor. I look forward to seeing Dog and coL.HS make their mark on the world of Hearthstone competition.”

“I’m very honored to be announced as the first member of the new compLexity Hearthstone team.” said David “Dog” Caero. “I can’t wait to do my absolute best at competitions, and bring home some championships under the compLexity banner.”

 

Be sure to check out Dog’s stream, as he shows off his high-level and entertaining play multiple nights each week. Stay tuned for more announcements as compLexity Hearthstone invades the Inn.

More Info

Twitter: @coL_HsDog
Twitch: hsdogdog

coL.LoL vs Team 8 – NA Spring Promotion

September 11th, 2014
compLexity VS Team 8

Today, compLexity League of Legends will play for their LCS lives as they take on Team 8 in a best of five series. coL.LoL comes into this match as the 8th place LCS team, meaning they are handed the team that CLG and EG did not wish to face, Team 8. Team 8 comes into the match as the top ranked Challenger Team after defeating Curse Academy 3-1 in the 2014 NA Challenger Series Summer Playoffs.

Take a look at our preview of the match here

The match is scheduled to begin at 6PM EST.

Format

Game 1
coL Team 8
Gragas Ban Ban Ziggs
Nami Ban Ban Tristana
Nidalee Ban Ban Irelia
Alistar Pick Pick Maokai
LeeSin Pick Pick Khazix
Lucian Pick Pick Orianna
Syndra Pick Pick Corki
Thresh Pick Pick Braum
Game 2
coL Team 8
Nidalee Ban Ban Irelia
Alistar Ban Ban Syndra
Maokai Ban Ban Ziggs
Orianna Pick Pick Tristana
Nami Pick Pick Khazix
LeeSin Pick Pick Thresh
KogMaw Pick Pick Corki
Renekton Pick Pick Gragas
Game 3
coL Team 8
Maokai Ban Ban Tristana
Gragas Ban Ban Ziggs
Alistar Ban Ban Irelia
Nidalee Pick Pick Orianna
LeeSin Pick Pick Khazix
Lucian Pick Pick Nami
Syndra Pick Pick Corki
Morgana Pick Pick Malphite
Game 4
coL Team 8
Gragas Ban Ban Syndra
Alistar Ban Ban Ziggs
Maokai Ban Ban Nidalee
Corki Pick Pick Tristana
Khazix Pick Pick Nunu
Ryze Pick Pick Nami
Morgana Pick Pick Orianna
Zed Pick Pick Katarina
Game 5
coL Team 8
Gragas Ban Ban Tristana
Maokai Ban Ban Nidalee
Alistar Ban Ban Morgana
Khazix Pick Pick Thresh
Corki Pick Pick Lucian
Ryze Pick Pick Syndra
Zed Pick Pick Nocturne
Braum Pick Pick Malphite

Stream

Match Preview – coL.LoL vs Team 8: NA Spring Promotion Tournament

September 10th, 2014

By Jorge “Caldo” Calderon – @coL_Caldo

Continuing our journey through the North American LCS, coL.LoL have been selected to go up against Team 8, the 1st placed NACS team. According to my previous article, I said that Curse Academy would be coL.LoL’s toughest match, and Team Coast would be their easiest match, in my opinion. Therefore, this leaves Team 8 in the middle, and it will be a series that will be quite even throughout the Best of 5. In addition, both CaliforniaTrlolz and Westrice have similar play styles. They both love the Maokai and Mundo picks, and they’re both not afraid to make risky plays. In addition, CaliforniaTrlolz actually picks non-standard top laners at times. In fact, in game 4 of the NACS finals against Curse Academy, he ended up playing Fizz in the top lane, which would be a great risk for most teams. They ended up winning that Game 4 which granted them the 1st place NACS team. coL.LoL’s Coach and Analyst, Kubz, had this to say about Team 8:

We played Team 8 with a substitute at LoneStar Clash. My first impression of them was that they live and die by their top laner, CaliTrolz. I think they are the top challenger team in NA, but at no point did I view them as a LCS level team when I first met them. I think their obvious strength is CaliTrolz and his playmaking ability. I don’t want anyone knowing what I view as their weaknesses. Sorry.

– Kublai “Kubz” Barlas

Slooshi and coL.LoL’s AD-Carry, ROBERTxLEE, have some history together. In fact, they were both on Absolute Legends North America and succeeded in placing 2nd at the IEM Season VII – Global Challenge Singapore by defeating MeetYourMakers in a Best of 3. In addition, Bubbadub is friends with most of the Team 8 players.

Team 8 has always been a team I wanted to do well in the NA scene. I am friends with most of them and want to see them in the LCS, just not through us! We expect to force them into the expansion tournament and hope not to disappoint.

– Royce “Bubbadub” Newcomb

Going more into depth with some of the players, let’s now set our eyes on the bottom lane of Team 8 and talk about Dodo8.

Dodo8 is the support player for Team 8 and a player that isn’t well known in the League of Legends community; he was a HoN player for Evil Geniuses. Based off of the last NACS playoffs, Dodo8 seems to love playing Nami and she has to be one of his top supports. He ended up playing her all 4 games against Curse Academy in the NACS Finals! Out of 9 games in the Summer Playoffs, Dodo8 played Nami 7 of those 9 games. A Nami ban will definitely be of use in the pick and ban phase.

One main thing I want to point out is that CaliforniaTrlolz is the main engine of the team. What I mean by this is that the team is quite dependant on him in, he likes to play off meta champions which can end up cheesing the opposing team. Therefore, the enemy laner might not be ready for the lane matchup and result in a lost lane. When I asked Kubz and Bubbadub who they think is Team 8’s strongest player, they both agreed and said that it was CaliTrlolz.

He is simply their game changer and its evident in challenger that he is the driving force behind that team.

– Kublai “Kubz” Barlas

I have to completely agree with Kubz, he just loves being able to carry from the top lane, for instance, the Fizz pick in game 4 against Curse Academy in the NACS Finals.

I think team 8’s strongest player is CaliTrlolz. I don’t think he is particularly good in lane, but he always seems to have good sense in teamfights and can have huge impacts with his teleport plays.

– Royce “Bubbadub” Newcomb

Nidalee is one of his top champs and one champ that should definitely be banned out against him, not only because he is skilled with her, but because she is just dominant in the current format for the Top lane.

Overall, I am excited for this match and it should definitely be one to be viewed by all. It will be close, but I am confident enough in our coL.LoL squad to bring that win home and prepare for another season of the North American LCS. coL.LoL are working hard, and when talking to Kubz, he had this to say:

For us, it’s business as usual. We’re going over data, planning our picks / bans and creating the strategy we feel will beat Team 8.

– Kublai “Kubz” Barlas

He doesn’t want to give out too much information, but I’m sure they are doing great things in terms of practicing and researching their matchup.

What Bubbadub is doing to prepare for this match is looking at what to expect from the Team 8 bot-lane and improving bot-lane synergy with ROBERTxLEE. The team has improved dramatically over the course of the Summer split as Bubbdadub improved on finding good roaming opportunities and how to play as a team. He also broadened his champion pool as new champions became part of the meta. The team as a whole have improved their teamwork and objective control focus the most. They were weak coming from the Challenger scene in terms of objective focused play and they relied on good mechanics, rotations, and team fights to win their games. Kubz believes that every aspect of their game has improved. Whether it be laning phase, the vision war or objective control, they have improved in all areas of the game.

Be sure to tune in to watch this Best of 5 series against Team 8, which will be on Thursday, September 11th at 3:00PM PST. 

From the Casters Desk With Kevin “qxc” Riley

September 9th, 2014

This week Kevin ‘qxc’ Riley is in California to cast the WCS America Round of 16. The veteran Terran player has been doing a lot of casting recently with appearances at WCS and IEM events, so we sat down to talk a bit about his recent trip to the casters desk.

For the last couple years you’ve had appearances on talk shows and as a guest caster at events, but recently you’ve been casting much more frequently. What’s prompted the change?

qxc: I decided to do more casting as I was having a lot of trouble playing. I was getting very frustrated in practice and needed a break from it all. Casting was a great way for me to stay involved with the scene and continue to do what I enjoy, while distancing myself from the stresses of competition for a time.

What has been the most difficult about changing your roles in the Starcraft scene?

Sometimes I get a bit sad that I’m not one of the players in the event. I’m also not really used to working as a team, so it’s taking me some time to adjust to that as well.


Kevin “qxc” Riley

What is most enjoyable part of casting at major events?

I love being able to hype the crowd up and get them excited about the game.

If you could choose, who would be the one person you really want to cast with, or the one match you really want to cast?

I would most like to cast with Harstem as I haven’t had a chance to cast with him in a long time. Perhaps we could do Flash vs Zest rematch at next IEM – hah!

Which event has been your favorite to cast so far?

My favorite so far has been WCS AM. The crowd was really spectacular and the games were top notch as well. Everything seemed to flow best there both on and off the camera for me.

Which event are you hoping to cast next?

I’ve actually already decided that this will be my final casting job for an undetermined amount of time. It has been fun, but I’m aching to put real effort toward being a player again.

Who do you see coming out on top of WCS NA this season?

Trust in Taeja.

Big thanks to Kevin for taking the time to answer a few questions. You can see (hear) qxc in action during the WCS AM Ro16 on the 9th, 10th, 16th, and 17th of this month. Let’s hope for some epic games!

Stream

coL.DOTA in Excellent Moscow Cup

September 8th, 2014

Today, compLexity DOTA will continue their run through the Excellent Moscow Cup Season 2. There the team will fight notable opponents like Na’Vi, Meet Your Makers, Fnatic and Team Empire for the chance to travel to the capital of Russia to fight for $60,000 USD. The invite came on the heels of Virtus Pro dropping out of their home tournament, blowing the door wide open for coL to get a piece of the action. The Bo2 format Round Robin is in full swing, and the new coL.DOTA team will be competing for the next two weeks to bring home a qualification.

Format

  • Every team in the Europe division plays each other twice in a round-robin format.
  • A 2-0 result is worth 3 points, 1-1 is worth one point.
  • Top 3 European teams and the top Chinese team qualify for LAN finals.1
  • In case of a two-way tie, the team winning the game between those teams in question advances.
  • In case of a tie involving more than 2 teams, additional games are played to determine rankings.

Results

coL.DOTA 0 VS 0 NVMI
Round Robin
coL.DOTA 2 VS 0 Na`Vi
Round Robin
coL.DOTA 1 VS 1 Relax
Round Robin
coL.DOTA 1 VS 1 Coast
Round Robin
coL.DOTA 0 VS 2 Fnatic
Round Robin
coL.DOTA 0 VS 2 Denial
Round Robin
coL.DOTA 1 VS 1 M5
Round Robin
coL.DOTA 0 VS 2 Empire
Round Robin
coL.DOTA 1 VS 1 MYM
Round Robin
coL.DOTA 1 VS 1 Power Rangers
Round Robin

Stream

Looking Ahead for compLexity DOTA

September 5th, 2014

by Sören ‘Fantasy’ Vendsahm

Only a few days after announcing the return of compLexity to Dota 2, the project is already showing results. Ever since applying tag, the former stayGreen players are undefeated in official matches, walking through every opponent during the WePlay and ESL One New York Open Qualifiers. With a flawless record through the early portions of these events, the boys from coL have secured themselves a spot in the second stage of the NYC qualifiers – only two wins away from Madison Square Garden – and a shot at the over $200,000 prize pool of the WePlay event.

The first Dota major in the Big Apple is in coL’s sight, but other tournaments are also on the calendar now. With their win in the second qualifier of the WePlay Dota2 League Season 3, the red and black team punched their tickets and gained entry to the main stage of the global event. At first they will have to compete with regional foes like Sneaky Nyx Assassins, Union Gaming, and four invited teams from North America, while offline finals will feature South East Asian, European and even the feared Chinese teams. Play in both the ESL One NYC Qualifiers and The WePlay event is expected to begin within the next two weeks.

Aside from their efforts in qualifiers, the team with captain Swindlemelonzz also picked up an invite for the Excellent Moscow Cup Season 2. There the team will fight notable opponents like Na’Vi, Meet Your Makers, Fnatic and Team Empire for the chance to travel to the capital of Russia to fight for $60,000 USD. The invite came on the heels of Virtus Pro dropping out of their home tournament, blowing the door wide open for coL to get a piece of the action. The Bo2 format Round Robin is in full swing, and the new coL.DOTA team will get their first shot this Sunday against the always fearsome Power Rangers.

Another major invite came in just yesterday, when compLexity became a part of the SynergyLeague. Once more, the team gets the chance to prove themselves online first, followed by a potential trip to a LAN event. This time the destination would be Barnaul, Russia where $50,000 USD are on the line. Before packing their bags, coL has to overcome stiff competition in the European group. Team Tinker, NVMI, Meet Your Makers, Secret Team and the hometown heroes of Team Empire and Virtus.Pro are only a few names of the stacked event. The group play of this event will officially kick off on September, 27th with the offline portion scheduled for the last week of November.

Last but not least, the team was also invited to a more domestic tournament. The third iteration of the Canada Cup put coL.DOTA on their invite list – an opportunity that the newly acquired team does not want to pass up. The tournament will feature top competition from North and South America including Na’Vi NA, Sneaky Nyx Assassins, Union Gaming, ROOT Gaming and Isurus Gaming. A grand total of 16 teams will test their Dota 2 strength for the $4,000 USD in this Online tournament. That event kicks off on September, 8th.

Be sure to stay tuned to compLexityGaming.com for more information on future matches and events that coL.DOTA will take part in!

Top 3 NA Challenger Series Teams and Relegation Preview

September 2nd, 2014

By Jorge “Caldo” Calderon – @coL_Caldo

The NA LCS Summer Split has come to an end. The coL.LoL squad has come far and improved a tremendous amount. They went from being the underdogs who everyone believed had the 0-28 dream, to the underdogs who were known as the mighty blue shell! The blue shell had been conquering the top teams in the NA Summer Split. They managed to bring down Cloud 9, the number one team during the regular season, and have improved on vital team communication. They managed to conquer other in-game problems, such as vision and objective control, even becoming the team to most often take the first Dragon.

Now that we are here at the end of the Summer Split, with the playoffs behind us, it is time for promotions and one more thing. It is relegation time; compLexity Gaming ended up being the 8th place team in the 2014 NA LCS Summer Split. Even though they are in last place, they are not the same team that they were at the beginning of the Summer Split; they have evolved and grown significantly stronger. The three Challenger teams that made it to the 2015 Spring Promotion Tournament are Team 8, Curse Academy, and Team Coast. The coL.LoL squad will have to face one of these 3 teams, so lets break them down and see what we might go up against.

Let’s start with the 3rd placed team, Team Coast.

 

 

Team Coast was formerly an LCS Team and were relegated out by the coL.LoL squad in the 2014 Summer Promotion Tournament. There are some notable players on the current roster, including DontMashme, who played for coL.LoL last year for about two months, and then moved on to Good Game University, which would later become Team Coast. In addition, former coL.Red player, Goldenglue, is a strong mid laner. He replaced Scarra after a retirement earlier this year. Sheep was on XDG as their support before they ended up being relegated out of the LCS. Santorin is not a particularly known player, but he was a sub for Cloud 9 Eclipse. Now he is the jungler for Team Coast. Lastly, There is Rhux, who has played on Curse and Curse Academy in the past and is now the top laner. Team Coast were the favorites, but ended up getting third place even though they were expected to be the strongest NACS team. It is now reported that two Korean challengers will be added to the Coast roster, just in time for relegation/promotions, likely replacing GoldenGlue and Rhux.

Moving forward is the 2nd place team, Curse Academy.

 

 

Curse Academy is made up of some pretty strong players. First off we have Saintvicious, who was the jungler for Curse and also a player for CLG back in the day. He has been playing exceptionally well in the NACS and is definitely someone to look out for. Next, we have Bunny FuFuu, he was also part of Curse as a support, but later on replaced. He is now the Support player for Curse Academy and definitely one of the best supports in NA. People believe that he is underrated and in fact an extremely strong support. Moving forward, we have Cris, who is the top laner and was previously on vVv Gaming, and Velocity eSports. He has LCS experience with Velocity eSports, where he was the top laner. Impactful is another former coLRed player and is now the AD Carry for Curse Academy. Lastly is Keane, the mid laner and sub for Curse. He was the mid laner for Team Curse OCE previously. Overall, the team is strong and I believe they will give anyone they face a rough time.

Lastly we have Team 8, the team that placed 1st at the NACS Playoffs!

 

 

Team 8 is a squad that seemingly came out of nowhere over the past year. They started dominating the NACS scene and people realized that they are indeed a really strong team. The best known player on Team 8 is frommaplestreet, who was the AD Carry for Velocity eSports before they were relegated. He is also TheOddone’s brother, for those who did not know. Next we have CaliforniaTrlolz, the Top laner for Team 8! He is a really strong top laner, often picking up non-meta champions and succeeding! Moving forward, PorpoisePops is the jungler and was previously on vVv Gaming and vVv Gaming Red. The last two members of Team 8 don’t have a ton of prior experience with top level competitive teams. Dodo8 is the support and he came out of nowhere, this is his first team and he is doing well! Slooshi isn’t that known either, but he was on Absolute Legends along with ROBERTxLEE, the current AD-Carry for the coL.LoL squad.

Overall, I feel like coL.LoL will have a good matchup against Team Coast because of the two roster changes that are currently going on. The team doesn’t seem to have practiced too much with this new roster. Goldenglue and Rhux have been moved down as subs for Team Coast, shortly after qualifying for the promotion tournament.  I feel like the team will be on tilt in a way, or just not well coordinated because of lack of practice with the new roster. The hardest matchup for coL.LoL will be Curse Academy in my opinion. The reason for this is because of the LCS experience within the team. Saintvicious, Cris, and Bunny FuFuu are great players that have LCS experience, they can perform well in stressful situations. In addition, Impactful and Keane are two strong players that should not be underestimated.

In any case, coL.LoL will have to fight for their NA LCS position against one of these three teams. We will soon find out which, and bring you the thoughts of the coL.LoL squad as they head into one of the most important matches of their career, on September 11th.

Interview with coL.DOTA captain – swindlemelonzz

August 27th, 2014

by Sören ‘Fantasy’ Vendsahm

This week I was able to talk with the new compLexity DOTA team’s captain, Kyle “swindlemelonzz” Freedman. We were able to get a look into the process of transitioning to a new game, selecting a roster, setting goals, and joining up with a professional gaming organization. Enjoy this look into one of the mind of one of the brightest up-and-coming captain’s in DOTA.

Hey Swindle, thanks for taking the time out of your busy practice schedule for this interview. First, want to talk a bit about your past. You’ve recently switched from HoN to DOTA 2. What was the hardest thing to get used to in the new game?

Turn rates and attack animations for sure. Players switching from HoN to DOTA often complained of how laggy it was (myself included), but it’s really just a huge variance in individual hero’s turn rates, whereas in HoN nearly every hero can stop and change direction on a dime. 100-150 games and you get used to it, but man was it frustrating at first. The other thing that takes getting used to is being forced to click on enemy heroes to see how much mana they have remaining, whereas in HoN it’s simply displayed under the health bar.

Was there also the opposite effect? Things you got into really quick and easy because of the extensive HoN history?

QoP for sure. I think every ex-HoN player loves qop. Other than that, utilizing blink dagger. I love DOTA’s blink. HoN’s had 75 mana cost and a 15 second cooldown; using one in DOTA is amazing in comparison. I almost always played the initiator role, and my main heroes all revolved around buying an early blink. In DOTA you just buy a blink no matter what hero you’re playing, and boom – viable.

Why did you decide to leave HoN and go to DOTA 2 at the time you did?

I thought I was done with gaming entirely after we won the last HoN Tour World Finals. It was our fifth lan win – my goal all along – and I thought I was ready to move on in life. Then I saw the prize pool for TI4 just go up, and up, and up, to the point where even placing in the top 8 could drastically change your life. The tipping point was when I realized peterpandam had a legitimate chance to win five million dollars.

PPD is a very nice segway into the position you have in the team. You drafted in HoN, you now draft in DOTA 2 – with much more scrutiny from the community. What would you say is the biggest thing you have to adapt to in terms of the draft?

For starters I need to play more, much more. As of this interview I’m just about hitting the 3 month mark since starting my DOTA 2 career. I’ve only been actively scrimming/playing in tournaments for maybe…3 weeks. The wonderful thing about DOTA is that there are so many unique heroes that do completely different things for your lineup. There’s no hero that could replace say, a Pugna, a Furion, a Brew, a Rasta, so I’d say the hardest thing as far as adapting goes is just figuring out how ALL of the heroes fit into the metagame at large. It’s something that requires lots of scrims, lots of replays, and lots and lots of work :).


swindlemelonzz and brother Zfreek hoist the trophy at Garena Star League 2013

Do you have any ties in the competitive scene of DOTA 2 to assist you in those matters? Or are you learning it from scratch?

For the most part I’m learning from scratch, with assistance from the rest of my team. I have a few friends in the pro DOTA scene that I can ask for tips and tricks, but in my opinion you learn much more rapidly and effectively by reviewing your own mistakes and failures versus listening to someone else describe theirs to you. I was an awful drafter in HoN for quite a while before finding success, I won’t be surprised if I’m the same in DOTA for a little bit.

Reddit certainly agrees with that opinion. Are you phased at all by the criticism?

A couple years ago, definitely. Now, it’s just noise. As Teddy R said, “The credit belongs to the man actually in the arena.”

Switching gears from you as an individual to you as a captain. Can you walk us through the process of forming this team? How did you pick the players?

Quite simple, really. Zak and Limmp were my teammates in HoN; I would choose the two of them over any other players in the game. I’ve wanted to play with Riser for a while, even offered him a spot on my team a full year ago. He declined then, but we still remained friends. The last spot was tough, we were really hoping to get Chessie, which would have been my dream team. When I realized that wasn’t likely we tried out a few people; none of them really impressed us. That led to Moon. It might appear to an outsider that he’s, well, an outsider, but his mindset and dedication match what we required exactly. No one on the team is pursuing further education. We don’t have a backup plan. We will succeed in DOTA not because we want to, but because we HAVE to. It is hard to bring five people together who share an almost unhealthy desire for victory. Luckily for us, we have.

In HoN, you and Moon sometimes collided verbally. Was that an issue?

When I approached him at first about the team I was planning on just extending him a tryout offer. However, from around 1 AM to about 5 AM we spoke at lengths about what transpired in the past, our prospects with compLexity, our mutual plans and goals, and most importantly why we both wanted to win so badly. By the end of the conversation I knew he was going to be the right player for us, and I straight up offered him the spot on the team. I do not foresee any issues caused by our personalities clashing, nor do either of us hold any lingering grudges.

You keep talking about the desire for success, the need to win. First you have to grow together as a team though, right? What are reasonable expectations in the short term?

I honestly have no idea. At the moment, we’re bad (by our standards). There is a long road ahead of us. My only promise is that from now until our inevitable dissolution we will be the hardest working team in the world. Obviously we want to succeed, and succeed as soon as possible, but I have no idea how long that might take.


Team stayGreen on stage after winning the 2014 HoN Tour World Finals

If there are no set short term goals, what are long term goals that you guys set for yourself?

Our ultimate goal is to be the first team to win more than one International.

That’s a fairly big goal to set. Are you worried at all, that this pressure you guys put on yourself might work against you someday?

Better to aim too high and miss, than too low and hit. We don’t want to find limited success and become complacent. Most will call this goal unreachable, even impossible. If we are unable to win an International we will be considered a failure – what better way to ensure we always remain diligent and motivated?

That’s a nice way to look at it. To become the best, you also have to prepare against the best. What is your training routine and scrim schedule look like currently?

We play a minimum of 5 hours a day scrimming together as a team, with an additional 4+ hours of matchmaking or alternative training methods. At present we are winning too many scrims, which suggests it is time to find better opponents so that we can lose far more often.

Where would you see yourself within the NA scene at the moment?

Outside of the top three. We really want to go to ESL, thus it is imperative we make to the top three as soon as possible, preferably yesterday.

If you aiming for ESL One, you also aiming to play against the top teams on this planet. You have any team you are most eager to face off against?

Evil Geniuses.

Why them?

Ask any educated fan 😉

Fair enough. We talked about the members of the team, we talked about your goals, the thing we haven’t touched on is the organization. How did you get to be with compLexity?

Zak, Riser, and I have been friends with Beef for quite a while now, seen him at a few LANs as well. He set up a meeting with the Jasons, who were familiar with our HoN history. We said some things that they liked, they gave us an offer and we accepted.

Were there any other teams or sponsors approaching you?

No. We had planned to go without a formal organization, much like we did in HoN. I don’t think we’d have signed with any other organization.

Good news for coL then. To close this interview, can you tell your fans tournaments in the near future where they will get a chance to see you?

When this interview goes live we’ll be playing in the WePlay tournament. We also have ESL qualifiers this weekend. Other than that, we’ll play anything and everything we get invited to.

Awesome! Have any final words, thoughts or shoutouts?

Big shoutout to my dad, without whom my career in gaming would have ended a long time ago as a miserable failure. My mom and my four younger brothers for their constant support, both in and out of game. Thanks to compLexity for having an incredible amount of faith in a team that offered nothing but a promise to work hard. Thanks to all of our sponsors, Sound Blaster, CyberPower PC, Creative, Twitch, Corsair, DXRacer, Scuf Gaming, and PWNIT WEAR. And of course, huge thanks to all the fans that have stuck with me throughout the years. We will not disappoint.

Big thanks to swindlemelonzz for taking the time for this interview. You can check out the new coL.DOTA team playing in lots of events in the near future, and make sure to enter our contest to win the same gear used by the coL.DOTA team!

#ProjectRed Revealed: compLexity Returns To DOTA 2

August 27th, 2014