DreamHoN Redemption Semi-Finals – coL.HoN Vs. ORGE

September 20th, 2012

DreamHoN Online Summer Championships: Redemption – Semi-Finals

compLexity Gaming vs. Orange eSports Malaysia

After an extremely successful run in the group stage, taking out all of their matches, coL.HoN finds themselves in a similar situation to the previous edition of the ‘DreamHoN’ tournament series. They went undefeated in all maps throughout the group stage and managed to take the quarter final match up against Fifteen in a quick and clean 2-0 series.

The compLexity.HoN team now finds themselves up against the strong Malaysian outfit known as Orange eSports Malaysia. After placing second in their group, ORGE has cruised through Pikachu in the quarter finals with a clean 2-0 victory. Orange eSports is certainly not to be underestimated, as the team has plenty of history in defeating tournament favourites.

The Semi-Final between compLexity.HoN and Orange eSports Malaysia will start at Midday PST (21:00 CET) on Thursday the 20th of September and will be streamed LIVE on Honcast. The winner of this match will go to the winners bracket final where they will face either TradeMark eSports or Team Tt eSPORTS.

Check out the current finals brackets:

 
coL.HoN
0
0
2
ORGE
0
0
0
Time: 12:00 PM PST / 21:00 CET
Format: Best of Three

The matches will be broadcasted live on Honcast with breakycpk and Tralfamadore casting:

PG2: coL vs Fnatic – EGMC Week 2

September 19th, 2012

Tonight compLexity Gaming will be taking on Fnatic in week 2 of the Evil Geniuses Master’s Cup Series League – Season VIII. After a tough loss versus the Russian team Empire in week 1, our boys are looking to get a win tonight and generate some momentum for the rest of the season. One thing that makes tonight’s match particularly interesting is that coL and Fnatic met in the semi-finals and the grand finals of EGMC’s last season. Hopefully we can recreate last season’s success and bring home a win versus Fnatic.

Tonight’s match-ups are:
(Z) Moon vs(T) TriMaster
(Z) J vs(Z) Goswser
(T) aLive vs(T) QXC
(T) Rain vs(T) Heart

The match kicks off tonight at 9:00 PM EDT and can be watched here. If you’re not able to watch the match live, VODs will be made available on the EGMC website.

Score 1 2 3 F
coL.TriMaster 1 0 0 1
Moon 0 1 1 2
Score 1 2 3 F
coL.Goswser 1 0 1 2
J 0 1 0 1
Score 1 2 3 F
coL.QXC 0 0 0
aLive 1 1 2
Score 1 2 3 F
coL.Heart 0 1 0 1
Rain 1 0 1 2

compLexity Gamma Gamers House Featured on FOX Houston

September 19th, 2012

Today, FOX Houston has released a video and article about the compLexity Gamma Gamers House in Houston, Texas. Last week, FOX’s John Perera visted the house in order to gain an understanding of what it’s like to eat, sleep and breath professional gaming, as well as live in the same house as your teamates.

Check out the video below:

 

 

For the article, click here.

GSL World Championship Player Selection ft. qxc, Minigun & goswser

September 18th, 2012

Today the IGN Pro League announced that it will be hosting, in conjunction with GOMtv, the GSL World Championship live from IPL5 at the Cosmopolitan in Las Vegas on November 29th. According to the TeamLiquid post, “The GSL World Championship will have the best players from South Korea duking it out against seven of the best players from the rest of the world. The GSL World Championship will be played across multiple days with both Pro League format and Winners League format aspects.”

So far only two of the seven foreign players have been chosen: Naniwa and Stephano.

This is where it gets interesting. You see, the IPL needs help deciding on the other five players to invite. The IPL is reserving three of the invites for European players and two for the North America / South America / SEA regions combined. In order to figure out who to invite the IPL has set up two polls (one for Europe, one for NA, SA, SEA).

We at compLexity are honored to have three players featured in the poll: qxc, Minigun and goswser. We ask that all of our fans help send them to the 16-player qualifier where the top two NA, SA, SEA players will get a trip to the GSL World Championship so they can represent North America. Please act quickly as the poll will end at midnight Pacific on Sunday, September 23.

Vote for qxc, Minigun and goswser HERE!

Mind of the Gamer #17 – Brendon “Ryze” Walker

September 18th, 2012

In the 17th episode of “Mind of the Gamer,” the show that has professional gamers explain their replay and describe what they were thinking during the match, Brendon “Ryze” Walker, a highly skilled Zerg player recaps one of this matches to give insight to this gameplay.

 

coL.HoN’s Franzzii Interviewed by Clan Milk

September 18th, 2012

coL.HoN’s Peter “Franzzii” Dager Interviewed by Clan Milk

Clan Milk’s yumstix sat down with our very own Peter “Franzzii” Dager to discuss the recent results of the compLexity.HoN team along with where he thinks the team will go in the months ahead. They also discuss Franzzii’s thoughts on the scene, including where he see the future of Heroes of Newerth and the development of other scenes including that of South-East Asia.

The interview is structured as a fun conversation and does include some sarcasm and light humour from both the interviewer and Franzzii which is somewhat refreshing to see amidst the amount of scripted, to-the-letter interviews that currently fulfil our scene. Franzzii is currently residing in the compLexity Gamma Gamer House along with fellow HoN player David “MoonMeander” Tan and you can find his stream at http://www.twitch.tv/franzzii

Here is a sample of the interview:

Do you expect to see a further integration of the SEA and INT scene in the near future?

I would love nothing more than for the Asian teams to participate more with the International scene. I don’t know if there’s anything in the works, but I would love for Garena to host a LAN and bring the INT teams to it.

What do you expect to see in the future of competitive HoN, or what would you like to see from S2 Games?

Just like most other top-tier gamers I want there to be more LANs. Dreamhack is awesome but I think we can do better than simply two LANs a year. Hopefully HoNTour helps with this.

How do you think the Complexity team travelling at the moment? Are you confident for upcoming tournaments?

We’re always confident; playing any other way is stupid. We believe we can win any game with any lineup no matter how much we’re down. The team in general is going very well, we all get along and we are active players who log on more than to just scrim.

Check out the full interview HERE

 

OriginPC Special – FREE Shipping and FREE Overclocking

September 17th, 2012

coL.Academy Vs Fusion Esports – ESEA

September 16th, 2012

It has been a rough few weeks for the compLexity Academy. After a strong opening in the ESEA, The Academy has had a turn of luck losing its last two matches. Currently sitting with a record of 2-2, our boys are looking to net a win tonight in their match versus Fusion Esports.

Kicking off at 9:00 PM EST, the match will be cast by our official Academy commentator Samsc2. You can watch the match live on Sam’s stream here.

Tonight’s match will start out on ESV Ohana LE and will see:
(Z) PartSasquatch  vs(T) hazazard
(Z) fuzzy  vs(T) WrathSC2
(P) Kyo7763 vs(T) everytime
(Z) Nocreativity vs(T) eAsyScM

Be sure to tune in tonight and let The Academy know you’re supporting them.

compLexity HotS FFA by Husky

September 14th, 2012

Recently, compLexity’s SC2 team participated an 8 person, all coL, free for all match casted by HuskyStarcraft. The match is recorded in two parts and is the first in the series by Husky. Additionally, the match takes place on Heart of the Swarm.

Participating Players

  • Minigun
  • Popcorn
  • TriMaster
  • QXC
  • Sasquatch
  • Goswser
  • Fuzzy
  • Ryze

 


INTERVIEW: coL.DotA’s FLUFFNSTUFF & ixmike88 Talk Post-TI2

September 14th, 2012

coL.DotA: After The International 2

So over the course of these past two weeks Valve treated the team like they were professional sports stars, and obviously with good reason, being the premier Dota 2 event. During the International, what were the thoughts and feelings going through your guys’ heads?

Michael “ixmike88” Ghannam: It felt exactly like that, like professional sports stars. Starting from the very beginning with being chauffeured from the airport to Chappy’s house, and Valve was very hospitable each step of the way, for every team. No other gaming organization treats their players as well as Valve treated the TI2 attendants.

Brian “FLUFFNSTUFF” Lee: I was anxious to play and really focused on the task. I spent a lot of my time doing research and staring at the hero pool looking for answers. Outside of that, I was really surprised by the amount of care Valve invested in each team. It was really well organized and great to see how responsible and smoothly the whole process was running. I think people underrate how hard it is to be a professional DotA 2 player. It requires so much work and dedication. A lot of the times tournaments will put very small prize pools for the teams to work for. I’m glad TI2 rewarded players for their hard work in such a tremendous way. It is inspiring to see people meet their potentials and work extremely hard because they know that it’s more than worth the trouble.

During the prelims, the coL.DotA squad managed to finish with a record of 9-5 and 2nd place in their group. However, the team was knocked down to the lower-bracket by Zenith and finally eliminated by EHOME. How are the Asian teams’ playstyles noticeably different than the Europeans or North Americans?

ixmike88: Chinese teams are much more passive and safe, and prefer to obtain as much farm as possible; while European teams choose to push towers quickly and become aggressive much earlier into the game.

FLUFFNSTUFF: Zenith is a team that can be very intimidating because of their versatility. It’s very hard to predict how they’ll proceed more times than not. EHOME is one of the more aggressive Chinese teams. They are also very versatile (constantly swapping roles). I attribute our Zenith game to unfamilarity as well as an unclear head going into the games. I think that EHOME had the upper hand on us after we slipped up a bit. I felt like the games was ours to win early on, but we crippled ourselves by not thinking ahead. The metagame was pretty set-in-stone going into the main event, but these teams took their own spin on it. I think, compared to EU teams, these teams were more in-tune with adjusting to the high tier picks of the tournament.
 
FLUFFNSTUFF at TI2To be a great support player, you have to have good position and map awareness lest you be killed. As a player of this role, Mike, what were some major adjustments you had to make for yourself in order to combat some teams that may have been unknown to you?

ixmike88: I tried to familiarize myself with every team going into the tournament, the Chinese are much better at executing team fights than Europeans, so each skirmish must be coordinated perfectly. In general, the most varying things from team to team is the initial ward locations and how much support they’re willing to give their carry.
 
Are there any supports out there that you feel are very underused? Are there any heroes you feel that could be used differently and effectively that aren’t normally used in that role?

ixmike88: There’s not too much flexibility with the hard support role unfortunately, I think Disruptor and Bane are really good though. There’s a bit more options if you’re willing to give your supports the farm and levels in the early game instead of immediately pushing.
 
With a huge event like the International, there is a very likely chance that new tactics presented itself. Are there any that you picked up on?

ixmike88: Morphling solo mid caught on really quickly, something that wasn’t ever used before the start of the tournament. It’s really hard to deal with because his high base damage with Morph will beat any other hero solo and he’s very hard to gank with Waveform. This allowed for teams who had Morphling the option of choosing another hard carry for their safe lane, or a strong mid game hero such as Panda or NS without having to worry about the farm on their main carry hero.

Brian, one of the most interesting things coming out of the International for me was the friendship and camaraderie that most teams showed to each other. Are there any teams that you may have personally befriended or hung out with during your stay in Seattle?
 
FLUFFNSTUFF: Well, I’m really shy and introverted. I appreciate more intimate friendships and conversations. I definitely found some there. I did bypass my inhibitions a little bit and introduce myself to other players. Most of the interactions I had were with the fans and I made sure to go outside to meet and greet. Overall it was just a great experience to hear the audience cheer and to see the players get excited for each other.

The level of the drafting that went on at the International reached a new high. What were some key highs and lows for you that helped you in the drafting stage during the International?

FLUFFNSTUFF: I don’t think that I even scratched the surface. I felt like there were a lot of options that we didn’t go to because of confidence issues (mostly my own). I really don’t even think we played our own game, at least the one that we’ve been practicing in bootcamp. Honestly, I went in with a mentality that was all too complacent and didn’t open myself up to variation. Against the Western teams in specific we understood what to do and how to do it. However, against Asian teams, whom we weren’t too familiar with, it called for adjustments that just weren’t there. There’s nothing else to be said about this.

coL.DotA at GameClucks

During the International, many teams gave up the Chen to you. How do you feel you did as the jungling support? Do you feel there is a reason they always gave you Chen?

FLUFFNSTUFF: It’s been banned many times, but on 2nd pick there isn’t really a good reason to ban a hero like this over the top-tier heroes. It got through a couple of times and honestly I don’t go to it that often. I think Chen is still one of the best supports in the game and that there are a lot of creative ways to play the hero. It’s been one of my favorite heroes for many years, but I still like to think that I can go to many other heroes in his place.

What is your opinion on the Luna picks from iG? Do you feel that Luna and similar ganking heroes can be utilized in the same way?

FLUFFNSTUFF: Luna’s a hero with incredible late game, with the correct items. She also is very good at figthing at most points in the game compared to other hard carries. I think it was a natural hero for teams to go to when morphling was banned out. The carries don’t matter so much as the teamplay and the support that they are given. Teams like iG and LGD might fool you with their flashy carries, but ultimately they are able to shine because of the other members creating space.

Lastly, thanks for the interview, any shoutouts you want to give?

FLUFF: Yes, shoutout to my friends, family, and fans. Shoutout to our sponsors: Gamma Gamers, PNY, Creative, Sound Blaster, Origin, and QPAD. Shoutout to GameClucks at Lynnwood and Chris for being so supportive and accommodating our team.