2023 LEC Season
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2023 LEC Season
The 2023 LEC season is the 11th season of the League of Legends EMEA Championship, ''League of Legends'' EMEA Championship (LEC), a professional esports league for the Multiplayer online battle arena, MOBA PC game ''League of Legends'', and the first under new branding. The LEC rebranded from the "European Championship" to the "EMEA Championship" to broaden player eligibility. Two team changes occurred for the 2023 season, with Misfits Gaming selling their LEC franchise slot to Team Heretics and Rogue rebranding to KOI. The league also saw a major format change, expanding from two splits to three, and introduced a season final playoff. The schedule also underwent adjustments, with Superweeks every week, extending into Monday. League changes Branding and regions The LEC rebranded from the ''League of Legends'' European Championship to the ''League of Legends'' EMEA Championship, opening eligibility for players with residency status in Europe, the Commonwealth of Independent ...
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League Of Legends European Championship
The ''League of Legends'' EMEA Championship (LEC) is the professional ''League of Legends'' esports league run by Riot Games in the EMEA (Europe, the Middle East and Africa) region, in which ten teams compete. Each annual season is divided into three splits: Winter, Spring and Summer. At the end of the season, the top performing teams qualify for various international events: the First Stand Tournament by winning the Winter Split, the Mid-Season Invitational (MSI) for the top two teams of the Spring Split, the ''League of Legends'' World Championship for the top three teams of Summer Split. The LEC represents the highest level of ''League of Legends'' play in the EMEA region. With the exception of some touring events, all games of the LEC are played live at the Riot Games Arena in Adlershof, Berlin, Germany. In addition to a small studio audience, all games are streamed live in several languages on Twitch and YouTube, with broadcasts regularly attracting over 300,000 viewers. ...
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KOI (esports)
KOI may refer to: * KOI character encodings KOI (''КОИ'') is a family of several code pages for the Cyrillic script. The name stands for ''Kod obmena informatsiey'' () which means "Code for Information Interchange". A particular feature of the KOI code pages is that the text remains huma ..., for Cyrillic script * Indonesian Olympic Committee () * Kepler object of interest * Kirkwall Airport (IATA airport code) * Komi-Permyak language (ISO language code) * Torre KOI (skyscraper in Mexico) See also * KOI-18, a cryptographic fill device used by the U.S. government * * * Koi (other) {{disambig ...
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2023 In Esports
List of esports Esports (), short for electronic sports, is a form of competition using video games. Esports often takes the form of organized, multiplayer video game competitions, particularly between professional players, played individually or as teams. ... events in 2023 (also known as professional gaming). Events Tournaments Leagues References {{Esports competitions 2023 in esports Esports by year ...
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Gamereactor UK
''Gamereactor'' is a Nordic online media network covering video games in multiple languages and a former print magazines network. In 2013, it was "one of the biggest games publications in Europe" according to Develop. History The Gamereactor website was started by Egmont Digital in 1998. Also in 1998, brothers Morten Reichel and Claus Reichel launched online and print magazine Gamez.dk in Denmark, which took over the online sites Gamereactor Denmark, Sweden and Norway (.dk/.se/.no) from Egmont in January 2002. In 2001, they released Gamereactor Magazine in Norway and soon after in Sweden. Since late 2007 Gamereactor has also been available in Finland, and it also launched in Germany (Online only) in 2009. In 2010 they launched in Italy (Online only), and a Portuguese version came online in 2013. Gamereactor later opened outlets in France in November 2016, The Netherlands in January 2017, and China in January 2018. On 1 September 2008, Gamereactor International was launched, ...
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Hylissang
Zdravets Iliev Galabov, better known as Hylissang, is a Bulgarian professional ''League of Legends'' player for Team Vitality. He previously played for Fnatic, MAD Lions and Unicorns of Love. Hylissang plays the support role. Career Unicorns of Love Hylissang began his professional career in 2014 when he joined Unicorns of Love. The team's promotion to the EU LCS spring split in 2015 led to a fan-voted entry into the Intel Extreme Masters Season IX. The tournament was Hylissang's and his team's first intercontinental experience. In an upset, UOL defeated Lyon Gaming in the quarterfinals and Team SoloMid in the semifinals. They secured second place in the tournament, after losing to Cloud9. Hylissang's and UOL's debut during the EU LCS spring split was also a success, finishing as the runner-up after a 2–3 loss to Fnatic in the finals of the spring playoffs. In the subsequent summer split, the team finished in 4th place. Despite consistent achievements in the regular spli ...
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Hans Sama
Steven Liv, better known as Hans Sama, is a French professional ''League of Legends'' player for G2 Esports. Liv has previously played for Team Liquid in the League of Legends Championship Series (LCS), as well as Rogue and Misfits in the League of Legends EMEA Championship (LEC). Professional career Misfits Hans joined Misfits at age 16, in June 2016. At the time, Misfits was a new organization in the European Challenger Series (CS). The team placed first in the CS regular season, and were eligible for the European promotion tournament, where they defeated FC Schalke 04 and claimed their spot in the EU LCS; the highest level of professional play in Europe. At the end of the year, Hans signed a 2-year contract with Misfits, before even playing a single game in the EU LCS. The following year, Hans and Misfits found spring success, qualifying for playoffs and reaching the Semifinals, and in summer, they made it all the way to the finals match, before falling to G2. Howeve ...
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Caps (gamer)
Rasmus Borregaard Winther (; born 17 November 1999), better known by his in-game name Caps, is a Danish professional ''League of Legends'' player for G2 Esports, and is widely considered the greatest western ''League'' player of all time. Career 2018 season During the 2018 EU LCS Season, Caps managed to win both the Spring and Summer Split with his then team, Fnatic. In both splits, he secured a spot on the 1st All-Pro Team. Additionally, he managed to win the title of most valuable player (MVP) in the Summer Split. At the 2018 League of Legends World Championship, 2018 World Championship, Fnatic was seeded into Group D alongside 100 Thieves, Invictus Gaming, and G-Rex. They picked up five wins in the group, allowing them to advance into the knockout stage of the tournament. In the quarterfinals, Fnatic defeated EDward Gaming by 3–1. Caps' performance on Azir and LeBlanc helped Fnatic win the semifinals against Cloud9 League of Legends, Cloud9 without losing a single game ...
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2023 League Of Legends World Championship
The 2023 ''League of Legends'' World Championship was an esports tournament for the multiplayer online battle arena video game ''League of Legends''. It was the thirteenth iteration of the League of Legends World Championship, ''League of Legends'' World Championship, an annual international tournament organized by the game's developer, Riot Games. The tournament began in South Korea on October 10 until November 19. Twenty-two teams from nine regions qualified for the tournament based on their placement in regional circuits; defending champions DRX (esports), DRX failed to do so after losing to Dplus KIA in the 2023 LCK Regional Finals. JD Gaming were in contention to become the first team to complete the "Golden Road", but lost to eventual champions T1 (esports), T1 in the semifinals of the knockout stage. "Gods" (stylized in all caps), performed by NewJeans, was announced as the tournament's theme song. A virtual world, virtual boyband named "Heartsteel" (stylized in all cap ...
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2023 Mid-Season Invitational
The 2023 Mid-Season Invitational was the eighth Mid-Season Invitational (MSI), a Riot Games-organised tournament for ''League of Legends'', a multiplayer online battle arena video game. The tournament was the culmination of the 2023 Spring Split and the first interregional competition of Season 13. The event marked the first time a double elimination format would be applied to a League of Legends esports event, as the event was split into two stages, that being the play-in stage and the bracket stage. The tournament was hosted in London, England, from 2 to 21 May 2023. All stages of the tournament were played in the Copper Box Arena. "Rules (Are Meant to Break)" was the tournament's theme song, put together by Che Lingo. Royal Never Give Up from China were the two-time defending champions, but failed to qualify for the event after losing to Bilibili Gaming in the 2023 LPL Spring Playoffs. JD Gaming and Bilibili Gaming, both from China, faced off in the finals, with JD Gaming ...
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Team Vitality
Team Vitality, or simply Vitality, is a French esport club founded in 2013 by Fabien "Neo" Devide, Nicolas Maurer, Corentin "Gotaga" Houssein, and Kevin "BrokyBrawks" Georges. Team Vitality has teams in eleven PC/console esports titles (''League of Legends'', ''Valorant'', ''Counter-Strike 2'', ''Rocket League'', ''EA FC'', ''StarCraft II'', ''Tekken'', '' Rennsport'', ''Street Fighter 6'', ''Call of Duty Warzone'' and ''Teamfight Tactics''), with several professional teams and content creators from across Europe and South Korea. Vitality also has teams in four mobile esports titles ('' Mobile Legends: Bang Bang'', ''Honor of Kings'', '' Free Fire'' and '' PUBG Mobile'') under the name "Bigetron by Vitality" after they acquired the Indonesian organization Bigetron Esports in 2025. The organization has previously fielded teams in numerous other titles, including ''Call of Duty'', ''Call of Duty Mobile'', ''Fortnite'', ''Rainbow Six: Siege'', ''PUBG'', '' H1Z1'', ''Clash R ...
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Team Heretics
A team is a group of individuals (human or non-human) working together to achieve their goal. As defined by Professor Leigh Thompson of the Kellogg School of Management, " team is a group of people who are interdependent with respect to information, resources, knowledge and skills and who seek to combine their efforts to achieve a common goal". A group does not necessarily constitute a team. Teams normally have members with complementary skills and generate synergy through a coordinated effort which allows each member to maximize their strengths and minimize their weaknesses. Naresh Jain (2009) claims: Team members need to learn how to help one another, help other team members realize their true potential, and create an environment that allows everyone to go beyond their limitations. While academic research on teams and teamwork has grown consistently and has shown a sharp increase over the past recent 40 years, the societal diffusion of teams and teamwork actually follo ...
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