This articlerelies excessively onreferences toprimary sources. Please improve this article by addingsecondary or tertiary sources. Find sources: "Evil Geniuses" – news ·newspapers ·books ·scholar ·JSTOR(November 2022) (Learn how and when to remove this message) |
![]() | |
Short name | EG |
---|---|
Divisions | Valorant |
Founded | 1999; 26 years ago (1999) |
Based in | Seattle, Washington,United States[1] |
CEO | Chris DeAppolonio (Interim) |
Head coach | Christine Chi (Valorant) |
Manager | Matthew Speidel (Head of Gaming) |
Partners | Wolverhampton Wanderers Secretlab Hewlett Packard Enterprise LG UltraGear |
Parent group | PEAK6 |
Website | www![]() |
Evil Geniuses (EG) is an Americanesports organization based inSeattle,Washington. Founded in 1999, the organization has fielded players in variousfighting games,Call of Duty,Counter-Strike: Global Offensive,Dota 2,Fortnite Battle Royale,Halo,League of Legends,Valorant,StarCraft II,Rocket League,Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six Siege, andWorld of Warcraft.
In May 2019, EG was acquired byPEAK6, a Chicago-based investment company.[2] While independently owned at the time of the acquisition, it was formerly a subsidiary of GoodGame Agency, which in turn was owned byAmazon.com through its divisionTwitch.[3][4]
EG'sDota 2 team wonThe International 2015, receiving the largest prize payout in esports history at the time.[5] TheirCall of Duty: WWII team won the2018 Call of Duty Championship.[6] TheirValorant team won the2023 Valorant Champions.
Evil Geniuses was founded as a Quake clan in Victoria, British Columbia,Canada in 1997. Playing from the first cyber cafe in Victoria, the Underground Onramp, the original roster included Dakine, MikeJ, Killboy, Zakath, Muppetman, Jello and the EG girls featured in Wired Magazine, Jasp and Mystique. The Onramp and the EG clan were very popular in the emerging gaming circuit, being on the West Coast and having access to a T1 internet connection while the rest of the world was still on dial-up.
Many new members located in Seattle joined the clan and would regularly spar with members of DR including the world's first pro gamer, Thresh.
Members from both the Canadian and American roster were present during the 1997 Gameworks Tournament with access to the gaming lounge. Canadian players were not admitted into the tournament at the time due to the nascent pro gaming circuit, but were allowed to warm up with the contestants.
When the Underground Onramp closed, shortly after the release of modern home broadband internet, most of the Canadian roster went on to new careers, some into game development and still work in the gaming industry to this day. Meanwhile, the American roster flourished and went on to become one of the greatest gaming clans in the history of esports.
Philadelphia native and future CEO Alex Garfield started working for the team in 2004.[7]
Evil Geniuses expanded intoWorld of Warcraft (WoW) Arena by acquiring HukHukHukHukHuk[clarification needed] in 2007. The roster consisted of many notable players including Abdul "Bokas" Suleiman, Garett "Garett" Llorent, Jesse "Koorban" Ryan, John "Nuvas" Liao, Einar "Spinister" Galilea, Brian "Tyz" Gustafson, Cyrus "Morifen" Foroughi, Anthony "Neia" Krug, and Paul "Zsu" Coats. In 2008, Evil Geniuses later acquired Issac "Azeal" Cummings-Bentley, Conrad "Zyz" Lope, Dan "spoh" Street, Emerson "Woundman" Condon, Charles "Cdew" Dewland, and Tim "Kollektiv" Yen, forming a new 3v3 arena team, as most of the previous team retired from competitive play. Notable accomplishments including winning the 2007 US Arena Championship, placing 3rd at Blizzcon 2007 (World Arena Championship), winning MLG San Diego 2008, placing 4th at Blizzcon 2012, and winning the Intel Extreme Masters IV WoW World Championship (2010).
Evil Geniuses acquired aDefense of the Ancients (Dota) roster on April 12, 2008, made up of players transferring from team eMg.[8] EG entered theStarCraft: Brood War scene on April 25, 2009, with the recruitment ofWorld Cyber Games USA championsGeoff "iNcontroL" Robinson, and Dan "Nyoken" Eidson, along with Eric "G5" Rothmuller, Jake "LzGaMeR" Winstead, and Bryce "Machine" Bates.[9] EG saw its North AmericanDotA squad depart on December 3, 2009, following two months of minimal practice and insufficient exposure.[10]
Evil Geniuses expanded intoStarCraft II during the game's launch year of 2010 with the recruitment of top American player Gregory "IdrA" Fields as well as the well-known commentator and playerNick "Tasteless" Plott on September 9.[11] In a controversial move, EG acquired the brand of fellow North American gaming organization, Loaded, on October 9, 2010, but the deal only constituted the company sponsors, team owner and theirHeroes of Newerth squad.[12]
In 2010, EG expanded intofighting games by signingJustin Wong and Martin "Marn" Phan. Within a year, they expanded their fighting game division with the addition of Ricki Ortiz, Ari "fLoE" Weintraub, and Eduardo "PR Balrog" Perez-Frangie, as well as Japanese playersYusuke Momochi, and Yuka "Chocoblanka" Kusachi. Marn was eventually let go in 2011 at his own request, with the intention to start his ownLeague of Legends team, Team MRN.
On March 31, 2011, long-time memberManuel "Grubby" Schenkhuizen, as well asStarCraft II division managerNick "Tasteless" Plott departed from the organization.[13] EG lost itsHeroes of Newerth squad on July 8 toSK Gaming, due to sponsorship complications.[14] Near the end of that month, the KoreanNorth American Star League champion, Ho Joon "PuMa" Lee, joined up with EG, despite the lack of consultancy with his previous organization.[15] Three weeks later, the top Canadian player,Chris "HuK" Loranger, left his long-time organization ofTeam Liquid, and joined EG, to compete alongside Fields and Lee inSouth Korea.[16] On October 21, it was announced that the trio would be moving to stay with the South Korean team SlayerS, in accordance with a correlating partnership established between the organizations.[17] EG saw the return of two formerDotA players, Clinton "Fear" Loomis and Jimmy "DeMoN" Ho, with the acquisition of their firstDota 2 squad.[18]
On January 7, 2012, EG announced the dismissal of its long-standingCounter-Strike squad, though star playerJordan "n0thing" Gilbert initially stayed on to produce content related to the game.[19] In September 2012, Bulba and xHobbzeEx left theDota 2 team due to personal issues and were replaced by Jio "Jeyo" Madayag and Robert "bdiz" Tinnes. On December 5, 2012, EG signed the successfulStarCraft: Brood War Zerg playerLee Jae-Dong. On January 25, 2013, EG announced their expansion intoLeague of Legends with the signing of the former Counter Logic Gaming European division – in negotiations that reportedly spanned three months, however the team would later disband due to extremely poor results.[20]
On April 4, 2014, EG announced that they had signed fighting game player Kenneth "K-Brad" Bradley. Prior to this, Ari "fLoE" Weintraub had been let go from the team.
On October 27, 2014, it was announced that three players from the Evil GeniusesCall of Duty squad,Patrick "Aches" Price, Ian "Crimsix" Porter, and Ken Dedo, had left the organisation, later joiningOpTic Gaming.[21] The CEO of EG, Alex Garfield confirmed viareddit that he had indeed let three of the players go to OpTic.[22]
On November 21, 2014, Evil Geniuses announced the launch of its firstHalo squad, consisting of the twins Jason "Lunchbox" Brown and Justin "Roy" Brown, the 2014Halo 4 World Championship finalist Justin "iGotUrPistola" Deese and the Eric "Snip3down" Wrona, who is reckoned among the best slayers in the world. The team competed in the Halo Championship Series Season 1 and won 3 online cups to this point. On December 21 iGotUrPistola left the squad due to an injury. He was replaced by Tony "LxthuL" Campbell transferring from the BTH.
On December 9, 2014, Evil Geniuses' parent organisation, GoodGame Agency announced that it had been acquired byTwitch.[3][4]
On December 16, 2014, Evil Geniuses' Yusuke Momochi won the 2014Capcom Cup tournament. Momochi has qualified for the event by winning South East Asia Major 2014 in Singapore. This win automatically granted him entry intoCapcom Cup 2015. On July 19, 2015, Yusuke Momochi wonEvolution 2015, taking the win from AVerMedia'sBruce "Gamerbee" Hsiang in a controversial Grand Finals set that saw Momochi suffer from hardware failure with hisRazer arcade stick.
On December 12, 2016, Evil Geniuses along withAlliance became player-owned organizations.[23] It was later confirmed that AmericanDota 2 playerPeter "ppd" Dager was named CEO of Evil Geniuses.[24]
At the beginning of 2017, ppd announced lineup switches for the fighting game andStarCraft II divisions. PR Balrog, Justin Wong, Momochi, and ChocoBlanka would depart from the FGC division; Ricki Ortiz,PPMD, and K-Brad would be kept while addingNYChrisG to the team. In addition, ppd announced that their SC2 division would be disbanding as InControL and HuK were released.[25]
On March 24, 2017, Evil Geniuses entered into the Smash Bros. for Wii U scene by acquiring Julian "Zinoto" Carrington.[26]
On November 10, 2017, Evil Geniuses announced that the organization had enteredTom Clancy's Rainbow Six: Siege by signing the former Continuum roster.[27]
On April 12, 2019, Evil Geniuses enteredFortnite Battle Royale by signing Jordan "JTruth" Clouse and Chance "MoNsTcR" Duncan.[28]
In late August 2019, Peter Chau, Troy "Canadian" Jaroslawski, and Aaron "Gotcha" Chung all left the Evil GeniusesRainbow Six Siege division. Morquis "Modigga" Hribar joined the team as a player.[29][30][31]
On September 26, 2019, the team confirmed their return toCounter-Strike, signing the roster ofNRG Esports.[32] The Evil Geniuses would shock theCounter Strike: Global Offensive scene by winning their first big event together, ESL One New York 2019.[33]
On April 15, 2020, Evil Geniuses released theirRainbow Six Siege team and exited the scene.[34]
On March 30, 2021, Evil Geniuses partnered with American apparel company POINT3.[35]
In April 2021, Evil Geniuses partnered withcryptocurrency companyCoinbase.[36]
On May 23 2023, Evil Geniuses partnered with crypto casino Thunderpick.[37]
On January 27, 2021, Evil Geniuses entered Valorant with their first roster consisting of Temperature, aleksandar, Osias, clawdia and Potter.[38]
On September 21, 2022, they were selected as a partner to compete in the Valorant Champions Tour Americas League.[39] The starting roster consisted of Alexander "jawgemo" Mor, Corbin "C0M" Lee, Ethan "Ethan" Arnold, Kelden "Boostio" Pupello, and Brendan "BcJ" Jensen, with potter as coach. Evil Geniuses also harbored a "reserve" roster consisting of Vincent "Apoth" Le, Jeffrey "reformed" Lu, Max "Demon1" Mazanov, Kyle "ScrewFace" Jensen, and Jacob "icy" Lange.
In the 2023Valorant Champions Tour (VCT) season, Evil Geniuses faced a series of challenges that led to their unfavorable status as the Valorant Champions Tour progressed. With a 1–4 record to begin the season, the team struggled to gain momentum. Following their poor start, the team underwent a roster overhaul, moving BcJ to the reserve roster and Demon1 to the starting roster. In spite of their poor beginning, as well as an unprecedented 0–13 loss on a map againstLOUD, Evil Geniuses narrowly managed to secure a spot in the Americas League playoffs. Against all odds, the team performed well enough in the playoffs to qualify for Masters Tokyo and2023 Valorant Champions later that year. At Masters Tokyo, Evil Geniuses performed above expectations, defeating both Americas League championsLOUD and Pacific League championsPaper Rex. Evil Geniuses were able to achieve an impressive second-place finish, losing only toFnatic 0-3 in the Grand Finals.
During Champions 2023, Evil Geniuses, now strong contenders to win the event, began a flawless run up to the Upper Finals, where they would face off against a familiar rival in Paper Rex. In a tight map three in which they barely lost in overtime, Evil Geniuses were sent to the lower finals, where they would then clinch a narrow 3-2 win against defending champions LOUD, advancing to the Grand Finals once again in a rematch against Paper Rex. Evil Geniuses ended up winning the series with a 3-1 score, completing theCinderella run and becoming the first North American team to win Valorant Champions.[40][41]
Following an announcement in which Evil Geniuses' players were met with a decision to either explore new options or come back with pay cuts, the championship-winning roster ultimately disbanded; only Jawgemo and potter opted to remain with EG. The rest of the roster were spread out among teams includingNRG,100 Thieves, and LEVIATÁN. On January 26, 2024, Evil Geniuses revealed their new roster consisting of jawgemo, Apoth, Derrek, supamen, and NaturE, with potter as head coach and Mike "pho" Panza as assistant coach.[42]
After placing 9th in Stage 2 of the 2024 VCT season and failing to qualify for any of the year's international tournaments, Evil Geniuses parted ways with jawgemo and Apoth, the former of which signed withG2 Esports. In their place, the organization signed Jacob "icy" Lange from G2 Esports and Jaccob "yay" Whiteaker, known for his time withEnvy/OpTic Gaming, for 2025.[43]
Evil GeniusesValorant roster | |||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Players | Coaches | ||||||||||||||||||
|
Christine "potter" Chi
Mike "pho" Panza | ||||||||||||||||||
Legend:
|
During September 2021, Evil Geniuses announced their return to theRLCS.
On October 5, they announced the signing of "German Amigos" consisting of Leonardo “Catalysm” Crist Ramos, Ivan “ivn” Sabri, Riccardo “Rizex45” Mazzotta and coach Kuno “Mumen” Hildebrandt.[44] On September 30 Rizex45 and Mumen were released.[45] On October 3 Damian "Tox" Schäfer was signed as a player with John "Virge" Willis as coach.[46]
On January 26, 2023, Evil Geniuses announced that they were leavingRocket-League.[47]
After the International 2011, Evil Geniuses announced their newDota 2 team in October 2011. This roster included Clinton "Fear" Loomis, Rasmus Berth "MiSeRy" Filipsen, Jimmy "DeMoN" Ho, Amel "PlaymatE' Barudzija, and Pers Anders Olsson "Pajkatt" Lille.[48]
EG acquiredKurtis "Aui_2000" Ling fromCloud9 in December 2014 andSumail from Pakistan.[49] On August 8, 2015, Evil Geniuses beatCDEC Gaming to winThe International 2015, securing a first-time championship and winning a total ofUS$6,616,014, which was one of the largest purses ever awarded in esports. They were also the first American-based team to win the event.[50] A week later, Aui_2000 was released from his contract with the team, with former memberArteezy replacing him on the roster.[51]
EG finished third at both theFrankfurt Major 2015[52] and theShanghai Major 2016. On March 22, Arteezy and UNiVeRsE left the team to join Team Secret.[53] On March 25, EG announced that former members Aui_2000 and Bulba would rejoin the roster to fill these vacancies.[54]
EG placed third atThe International 2016. After the tournament the team released ppd and Fear, who both decided to retire from playingDota 2 to pursue other opportunities within the organization. They were replaced by Andreas Franck "Cr1t-" Nielsen, who would go on to become the new captain, and Arteezy.
Following their elimination atThe International 2017 in August, Ludwig "zai" Wåhlberg departed Evil Geniuses, saying he would seek new options about his career. Shortly after, Peter "ppd" Dager stepped down as CEO and was replaced by former team manager, Philip Aram.[55] The following month, Evil Geniuses announced that Clinton "Fear" Loomis would come out of his coaching role to rejoin the team as an active player.[56]
In December 2017, EG announced that they would be releasing UNiVeRsE and their head coach, SVG. They would pick up Rasmus "Misery" Filipsen and Sam "Bulba" Sosale to replace them, respectively. In May 2018, EG announced the acquisition of formerOG playerss4 andFly after releasing Fear and Misery from their contracts.[57] Shannon Larkin was added as the Dota team's manager in June 2018, in time for the team's participation in Dota Summit 9, which they would win.
After adding two ofDota 2's most accomplished players, EG headed toThe International 2018 inVancouver,Canada. After a successful group stage where they went 13–3, the joint highest record withTeam Liquid. They defeatedTeam Secret 2–0 in the upper bracket, before setting up a grudge match with OG. The series went to three games, eventually culminating in EG's defeat as they fell to the lower bracket. They continued eliminating tournament favorites inVirtus.pro and Team Liquid, before bowing out toPSG.LGD and taking third place and more than US$2.6 million in prize money.
As of November 15, 2022, Evil Geniuses has ceased operations in the North American Dota Scene, and has switched operations to the South America region, according to a tweet by CEO Nicole LaPointe.[58]
As of November 1, 2023, Evil Geniuses releases its roster.[59]
EG had multipleCounter-Strike Source teams during the late 2000s and early 2010s.
In September 2019, Evil Geniuses acquired the Counter-Strike: Global Offensive (CSGO) team ofNRG Esports the day before ESL One New York 2019. The original team consisted of Peter "stanislaw" Jarguz, Tarik "tarik" Celik, Vincent "Brehze" Cayonte, Ethan "Ethan" Arnold, Tsvetelin "CeRq" Dimitrov, and Chet "ImAPet" Singh as coach.[32][60] At ESL One New York, EG was in Group B, alongside Danish superstarsAstralis,FaZe Clan, andOpTic Gaming. EG's opening match was against FaZe Clan, in which they won 2–0. The following match was against Astralis, in which EG defeated them 2–0, something they have done only twice before and qualified for the playoffs. Evil Geniuses defeatedG2 Esports 2–0. In the Grand Final, Evil Geniuses faced Astralis again, this time in a best of five. EG took the first map 16–3 and the second map 16–12. Unfortunately, on match point, EGchoked a 4-round lead after reaching 15–11 and eventually lost the map 20–22. The next map, after struggling in the first half, EG won 16–8 and won the series 3–1.[61] Brehze was named MVP of the event.[62] At DreamHack Masters Malmö 2019, Evil Geniuses placed last alongsideNorth,TyLoo, and fellow North Americans,Team Envy.
At StarSeries i-League CS:GO Season 8, located inBelek, Turkey, Evil Geniuses faced unknown Chinese5Power Gaming in the opening match, where they won 2–0 relatively easily, though the team would fail to take two maps away from SwedishNinjas in Pyjamas (NiP), forcing the EG into the losers bracket.[63][64] In the losers bracket, the team would defeatHeroic after narrowly losing the first map but taking the next two with little struggle.[65] EG took a solid victory againstFuria 2–0 then took revenge against NiP by defeating the Swedes 2–0, progressing to the upper bracket.[66][67] Evil defeatedRenegades (which later became100 Thieves) 2–0, taking the first map easily but struggling slightly more on the second.[68] EG would next playFnatic in the upper bracket finals. After a terrible first map losing 16–2, EG took the next two maps and booked a spot in the grand finals, facing the winner of the losers bracket, Fnatic once again.[69] In the grand final, EG played extremely well, making a tremendous comeback from a 9–0 deficit to win the first map 16–12 and win the second map much more decisively with a 16–9 score.[70] Ethan was named MVP of the event[71]
On January 12, 2024, Evil Geniuses announced that they were leavingCounter-Strike.[72]
In September 2019, Evil Geniuses announced it would be reenteringLeague of Legends by filling in theLeague of Legends Championship Series (LCS) slot left open following the departure ofEcho Fox.
During November, Evil Geniuses announced the signing of Dennis "Svenskeren" Johnsen, Tristan "Zeyzal" Stidam and Colin "Kumo" Zhao ofCloud9, Bae "Bang" Jun-sik of100 Thieves, Daniele "Jiizuke" di Mauro ofTeam Vitality and Heo "Irean" Yeong-chol ofCounter Logic Gaming as the Head Coach.[73][74][75][76][77][78] They ended theSpring Split in 3rd place, losing toFlyQuest in theplayoffs with a final score of 1–3.
In the 2022 spring split, the team placed fourth in the regular season with a .500 record of 9–9, and played against the first seedTeam Liquid in the first round of playoffs, falling 3–2. The team then went on to complete a lower bracket run all the way to the Grand Finals, including a decisive 3–0 win against Team Liquid. In the Grand Finals, Evil Geniuses beat100 Thieves 3–0 to win their first LCS Championship as an organization.[79] They went on to finish 3–4th at the2022 Mid-Season Invitational, losing 3–0 against eventual championsRoyal Never Give Up. Keeping the same roster for the summer split, Evil Geniuses finished 3rd following a 3–2 loss against 100 Thieves.[80]
Following the2022 World Championship, where the team placed finished 11th–14th with a 1/5 group stage record, Evil Geniuses released their coaches Peter Dun, Artemis, Rigby, Artemis, and academy head coach ZzLegendary.[81] It was later announced thatImpact also left the team.[82]
On November 20, 2023, Evil Geniuses announced that they were leavingLeague of Legends and would not compete in the 2024 LCS season.[83]
In early 2019, Evil Geniuses acquired aFortnite Battle Royale team. The team was released in June 2020.[84]
In July 2017, Evil Geniuses announced that they would be releasing their Overwatch team just two months after it was originally formed.[85]
In October 2017, Evil Geniuses acquired a PUBG team. After many changes throughout the following year, Evil Geniuses dropped the team in December 2018.[86]
In November 2017, the team announced that they had acquired the roster for the Rainbow Six Pro League team of Continuum shortly before the Year 2 Season 3 Finals. It included Troy "Canadian" Jaroslawski, Nathan "nvK" Valenti, Austin "Yung" Trexler, Brandon "BC" Carr, Ammar “Necrox” Albanna, and Jordan “BKN” Soojian as the team's Coach.[27]
At the Year 2 Season 3 Finals in São Paulo, Brazil, EG placed 5–8th after losing to eventual championsENCE Esports in the quarter finals. In February 2018, the team placed second toPENTA Sports in the Six Invitational 2018, theRainbow Six Siege world championship. BKN would be released from the team on August 30 after placing second toG2 Esports, who picked up the former PENTA roster, in the Six Major Paris 2018.[87] Necrox was later moved to the coach role as the team acquired Emilio "Geoometrics" Leynez Cuevas on September 3. Peter Chao also became manager of the Rainbow Six Siege team the same day.[88] BC retired from a playing role on September 20, bringing Necrox back to a player role.[89] On October 12, Aaron "Gotcha" Chung filled the empty spot of coach for the team and often played when another member of the team was unable to play.[citation needed]
In August 2019, Evil Geniuses would fall in the group stages of the Six Major Raleigh 2019 stunning fans and opponents. After a disappointing run in the Six Major Raleigh, Peter Chao, Gotcha, and Canadian all left the team, supporting the rumors of a potential change.[29][30][31] To replace Canadian as a player, Morquis "Modigga" Hribar joined EG from Gotcha's former team,Disrupt Gaming. Ryan Towey also replaced Peter Chao as Manager. Canadian joinedSpacestation Gaming and Gotcha joinedTeam SoloMid (TSM). EG performed relatively badly in the second half of Pro League Season 10, tying toSusquehanna Soniqs,Rogue, losing toLuminosity Gaming, placing 3rd failing to reach the Pro League Season 10 Finals inTokoname, Japan.[90]
In November, Geoometrics left to join TSM and was replaced by Gotcha as a player. Tristan "Ranger" Pehrson, the former coach of Rogue, joined as a coach.[91]
On April 15, 2020, Evil Geniuses released the roster.[34]
Awards and achievements | ||
---|---|---|
Preceded by | The International winner 2015 With:Fear,Sumail,Universe,Aui_2000,ppd), and BuLba (coach) | Succeeded by |