The Shotcaller #2 29/11/2016 | Page 42

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