LOCK//IN was the first taste of what partnered teams were bringing to the table. Now with months of practice from VCT regional play, teams have had a chance to refine their playstyles and gear up for the second international event this year: Masters Tokyo.
Three Pacific teams will be repping the region: two mainstays at international LANs over the past years, and one newcomer. All three of them are gunning for that shiny Yoru-masked trophy. The stakes are high for not just individual teams but also partnered regions since, similar to LOCK//IN, the winner of Masters Tokyo will receive an extra slot at Champions 2023.
The VCT Pacific Grand Finals Stage. Photo by Riot Games.
Paper Rex (#1 seed)
Paper Rex is a team on a winning streak, with them having a flawless run through the playoffs to be the first seed out of the Pacific League. At LOCK//IN, they were eliminated in their first match against
Cloud9
Cloud9
North America
Rank #8
Xeppaa
Erick Bach
v1c
Victor Truong
mitch
Mitch Semago
neT
Michael Bernet
OXY
Francis Hoang
and the event's brutal format meant that was all anyone would see out of them.
They had a bit of a rocky start in the Pacific League as well, facing losses to
Team Secret
Team Secret
Asia-Pacific
Rank #9
invy
Adrian Jiggs Reyes
JessieVash
Jessie Cuyco
Wild0reoo
Brheyanne Christ Reyes
2GE
James Goopio
Jremy
Jeremy Cabrera
and
DRX
DRX
Korea
Rank #4
Flashback
Cho Min-hyuk (조민혁)
MaKo
Kim Myeong-gwan (김명관)
free1ng
No Ha-jun (노하준)
HYUNMIN
Song Hyun-min (송현민)
BeYN
Kang Ha-bin (강하빈)
in two of their first four games. After their loss to Team Secret, perhaps Paper Rex read the writing on the wall: something had to change.
The team announced their signing of Ilya "something" Petrov, the Russian superstar who had been topping the killboard in VCL Japan Split 1. He was the missing piece of the puzzle that Paper Rex needed to have the firepower to go up against their dreaded foe and APAC's final boss DRX.
Even though Paper Rex, with something, lost to DRX the first time they faced them, after that, it was a clean sweep for Paper Rex. They made it to playoffs as the second seed and locked in their spot at the grand finals after 2-0ing
T1
T1
Korea
Rank #2
stax
Kim Gu-taek (김구택)
Meteor
Kim Tae-oh (김태오)
Sylvan
Go Young-sup (고영섭)
BuZz
Yu Byeong-cheol (유병철)
iZu
Ham Woo-ju (함우주)
and DRX, the latter for the first time in PRX's history. The two teams had a rematch in the grand finals, but Paper Rex pulled off a reverse sweep and won three maps in a row to cement themselves as the new kings of APAC. Something was the MVP of the finals, with a +31 kill differential.
Their first major trophy, hopefully not the last. Photo by Riot Games.
Paper Rex announced that they were benching Benedict "Benkai" Tan ahead of Masters Tokyo, but also said that something might not be able to play in the event. As APAC's first seed, they will be starting off directly in the playoffs bracket. Paper Rex are known for their ‘W gaming' methodology, one that has served them well with the addition of something to the roster and his synergy with f0rsakeN and Jinggg . Will that be enough though for them to win their first global trophy?
DRX (#2 seed)
The Korean titans have one of the most storied histories in Valorant. Their core, under their original name
Vision Strikers
Vision Strikers
Inactive
stax
Kim Gu-taek (김구택)
Rb
Goo Sang-min (구상민)
Zest
Kim Ki-seok (김기석)
BuZz
Yu Byeong-cheol (유병철)
MaKo
Kim Myeong-gwan (김명관)
, had the most notorious win streak in Valorant history with 102 wins. At LOCK//IN, they almost reverse swept
LOUD
LOUD
Brazil
Rank #1
dgzin
Douglas Silva
v1nny
Vínicius Gonçalves
pANcada
Bryan Luna
tuyz
Arthur Andrade
cauanzin
Cauan Pereira
in the semifinals but fell to them and placed third at the event.
The team has not changed much from last year, with the exception of the addition of Foxy9 as their star duelist, though in some games, BuZz picks up the duelist mantle instead while Zest fills as an initiator/controller. In the Pacific League, the team had an almost flawless win streak, where they only lost one series to Team Secret on their way to becoming the top seed in the playoffs. MaKo was also named the MVP of the regular season.
The playoffs started well: DRX were able to get revenge against Team Secret, who had prevented them from winning the season flawlessly, winning map two and three with a scoreline of 13-5 and 13-4. Their next game was against Paper Rex in the upper finals, a team they had always beat before.
Not this time. Paper Rex beat them 2-0, knocking them into the lower bracket where they had to face off against their next challenger:
T1
T1
Korea
Rank #2
stax
Kim Gu-taek (김구택)
Meteor
Kim Tae-oh (김태오)
Sylvan
Go Young-sup (고영섭)
BuZz
Yu Byeong-cheol (유병철)
iZu
Ham Woo-ju (함우주)
. It was a close series which went to all five maps of which three of them ended 13-11, but DRX eventually prevailed to rematch against Paper Rex in the grand finals.
Although DRX surged out of the gates with back-to-back wins to put themselves just one map from the Pacific League Trophy, Paper Rex found a last spark to burn away DRX's lead. Paper Rex went on to pull the reverse sweep by winning the next three maps convincingly, with the decider map ending 13-3. Despite DRX's consistency throughout the season, they just couldn't hold against the firepower coming out of f0rsakeN, Jinggg, and something.
As a result of being Pacific's second seed, they will have to make their way through the group stage. Their first game in Group B is against
Attacking Soul Esports
Attacking Soul Esports
Inactive
monk
Wang Haoyu (王浩宇)
Yuicaw
Huang Yung-chieh (黃湧傑)
YHchen
Chen Yuhan (陳昱瀚)
Zero1
Meng Zhen Ren (任梦真)
, the second seed from China. Will DRX be able to pick themselves back up and finally win an international VCT event?
DRX after beating T1 in the lower finals. Photo by Riot Games.
T1 (#3 seed)
The third seed for APAC is yet another Korean squad, albeit one without DRX's international experience. T1 built a roster from scratch - they traded with C9 last year for
xeta
and coach
Autumn
for player
curry
. They also signed a player who had initially played controller on the organization's short-lived NA team and who had last year proved he was one of the best duelists in NA,
Sayaplayer
. They further added
Munchkin
of
Crazy Raccoon
Crazy Raccoon
Inactive
fame,
ban
who had previously played for Knights, and
iNTRO
who had experience with
Gen.G
Gen.G
Korea
Rank #1
Foxy9
Jung Jae-sung (정재성)
t3xture
Kim Na-ra (김나라)
Munchkin
Byeon Sang-beom (변상범)
yoman
Chae Young-moon (채영문)
Karon
Kim Won-tae (김원태)
. As their sixth member, the roster signed a star, but one in another game, a complete wildcard:
carpe
.
At LOCK//IN, T1 were eliminated right off the bat by
FURIA
FURIA
Brazil
Rank #4
heat
Olavo Marcelo
raafa
Rafael Lima
mwzera
Leonardo Serrati
havoc
Ilan Eloy
Khalil
Khalil Schmidt
. Afterwards, their time in the Pacific League went a bit better, if still a bit rocky. They lost to Paper Rex and Gen.G in their first three games, but after that it was smooth sailing.
They would win against every other team in the league except DRX, and made it to the VCT Pacific playoffs as the third seed. This meant they had to play an additional series as only the top two of the qualified teams made it to the upper semifinals directly. Their first game was against
Gen.G
Gen.G
Korea
Rank #1
Foxy9
Jung Jae-sung (정재성)
t3xture
Kim Na-ra (김나라)
Munchkin
Byeon Sang-beom (변상범)
yoman
Chae Young-moon (채영문)
Karon
Kim Won-tae (김원태)
, where they found revenge with a close 2-1 victory. Their next opponent was
Paper Rex
Paper Rex
Asia-Pacific
Rank #6
mindfreak
Aaron Leonhart
Jinggg
Wang Jing Jie
f0rsakeN
Jason Susanto
d4v41
Khalish Rusyaidee
something
Ilya Petrov
, who despite close games, ended up beating T1 without heading to a map three.
In the lower bracket, they once again had to face off against Gen.G, where they again found a clean win — this one clinching them the qualification to both Masters Tokyo and Champions 2023. They ended up narrowly losing against
DRX
DRX
Korea
Rank #4
Flashback
Cho Min-hyuk (조민혁)
MaKo
Kim Myeong-gwan (김명관)
free1ng
No Ha-jun (노하준)
HYUNMIN
Song Hyun-min (송현민)
BeYN
Kang Ha-bin (강하빈)
in the lower bracket finals in a series that went to all five maps, and placed third overall in the Pacific League.
Since week eight of the Pacific League regular season, T1 have been running the same roster with iNTRO not playing. Carpe has also shown drastic signs of improvement, with him now coming in clutch and putting up numbers on the initiator role. Overall, T1 have leveled up quite a bit since their time at LOCK//IN. Will it be enough for them at Masters Tokyo though?
T1 take the stage. Photo by Riot Games.
As the third seed from Pacific, they will have to fight through the group stage to make it to the playoffs. In group A, their first encounter is against China's seed one -
EDward Gaming
EDward Gaming
China
Rank #1
S1Mon
Hsien Meng-Hsun (谢孟勋)
ZmjjKK
Zheng Yongkang (郑永康)
nobody
Wang Senxu (王森旭)
CHICHOO
Wan Shunzhi (万顺治)
Smoggy
Zhang Zhao (张钊)
.