These five gentlemen, collectively known as team Enemy, clawed their way into the 2016 Smite World Championship grand finals only to lose three straight games to Europeâs Epsilon, letting all of North America down. As punishment, they only get $230,000. I blame myself.
Enemy (spelled all cleverly on their fancy shirts) were my favorite to win the whole shebang, which is to say that their mildly humiliating loss to a team consisting of a player many call the greatest of all-time (for a game thatâs been out what, three years?) is completely my fault.
No team I have ever rooted for has won an esports competition. Or a sports competition of any sort, for that matter. Those 14 straight division titles for the Atlanta Braves in the â90s with only a single World Series win? I stopped rooting for them in â95. Then started up again afterwards.
So donât blame Enemy for losing three games straight in the best of five third-person MOBA grand final. It wasnât their poor god picks, which were actively booed by the audience.
It wasnât the fact that Epsilonâs Adapting is a god of the game walking among humans, descending on the Enemy team in a single mighty strike that led to the Deicide (all five opposing gods dead) that ended the final game.
It was all me. Or as my pal Chef Lu Bu put it, âFahey single-handedly lost the world championship for North America.â Note I was also rooting for North American favorites Cloud9 to be in the final. Itâs a fair cop.
And so Enemy only gets $230,000, less than half of the $500,000 Epsilon won. Theyâll probably have to hitchhike home with all of the other losing teams, who only earned $10,000 (Avant Garde, Isurus), $25,000 (Fnatic, OG Reapers, OMG and Pain Gaming) or $75,000 (Cloud9 and Paradigm).
Sorry about that, Enemy.
On the plus side, this means that for the first time in the Smite World Championshipâs two-year history we have a championship team from Europe. Congratulations, Epsilon. You played a damn fine game. Maybe next year Iâll root for you guys.
Donât mind Adapting. He always glows like that.
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