rejoining Fnatic, he has shown time and time again that was one of the biggest factors of Fnatic’ s success.
Before the legendary 18-0 season, it was YellowStar who, in cooperation with the organisation, formed the new Fnatic roster and held it together like superglue. Now that YellowStar faces a new task of bulding a roster largely from scratch, I’ m dead certain he will be able to exceed expectations. Additionally, not only does history prove YellowStar’ s competence in terms of leadership and team building, he himself has already shown that he learned from past experiences: In his AMA he stated that he intends to bring in two Korean players that should“ lead” the younger, talented EU players into transitioning to full fletched professionals. Not only do these talents get the time needed to adapt themselves to a professional schedule, but with Korean players on their side, they’ ll always have competent teammates to look for that won’ t fall into the stale European meta. YellowStar himself of course has the best experience with bringing in Korean players, as Reignover and Huni were a huge factor in Fnatics dominance in the 2015 seasons. Korean players might not result in immidiate success, and sometimes they even fail, but in general all Western regions have had good experiences with importing players from the most dominant of all regions.
For those that aren’ t familiar with the football club, Paris-Saint-Germain is known for two things: Having a thing for Brazilians and having massive amounts of money at their disposal. Now I don’ t know whether PSG plan on signing Revolta anytime soon, but the latter definitely applies to their eSports division as well. Despite rumors of PSG having a budget of