Английская Википедия:FunPlus Phoenix

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Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Use dmy dates Шаблон:Infobox sports team

FunPlus Phoenix (FPX) is a Chinese professional esports organization owned by video game developer FunPlus. It has teams competing in League of Legends, Valorant, Counter-Strike: Global Offensive, Fortnite Battle Royale and PlayerUnknown's Battlegrounds.

FPX was founded on 20 December 2017 following FunPlus' acquisition of a spot in the League of Legends Pro League (LPL), the top level of professional League of Legends in China.[1] On 10 November 2019, FPX's League of Legends team won the 2019 League of Legends World Championship after sweeping G2 Esports in the grand finals.[2]

League of Legends

History

On 20 December 2017, FunPlus' esports division announced the creation of FPX and its acquisition of a spot in the League of Legends Pro League (LPL).[1] FPX's inaugural roster consisted of top laner Kim "GimGoon" Han-saem, jungler Hu "Pepper" Zhiwei, mid laner Feng "bing" Jinwei, bot laner Lin "Lwx" Weixiang, and support Liu "Crisp" Qingsong. The team's first tournament was the 2017 Demacia Championship,[3] which they placed ninth to fifteenth after losing to Team WE in the third and final round of Group E.[4]

For the 2018 LPL Spring regular season, FPX was placed in the league's western conference. Despite adding veteran mid laner Yu "Cool" Jiajun,[5] FPX finished fifth in their conference with a 9–10 record and did not qualify for playoffs. Chen "Alex" Yu-ming replaced Pepper as the team's primary jungler for the 2018 LPL Summer regular season.[6] FPX finished fourth in their conference with an 8–11 record, qualifying for playoffs as one of the bottom seeds. They were promptly defeated by JD Gaming in the first round.[7]

In preparation for the 2019 LPL Spring regular season, FPX revamped their roster, adding jungler Gao "Tian" Tianliang and veteran mid laner Kim "Doinb" Tae-sang.[8] The team massively improved, finishing first in the regular season with a 13–2 record and getting an automatic bye to the semifinals.[9] However, in an upset result, FPX lost 2–3 to JD Gaming in the semifinals, and advanced to the third place decider match rather than the finals.[10][11] FPX defeated Topsports Gaming 3–1 in the third place decider match.[12]

Going into the 2019 LPL Summer Split without making any roster changes, FPX once again finished first in the regular season and automatically qualified for the semifinals. In the semifinals FPX defeated Bilibili Gaming 3–1, qualifying them for the finals and the 2019 World Championship, as any result would have sent FPX to the World Championship (i.e., a victory in the finals would automatically qualify FPX as the first LPL seed, a loss would award them enough championship points to qualify as the second LPL seed).[13] FPX then defeated three-time champions Royal Never Give Up 3–1 in the finals, securing their first title.[14]

For the main event group stage of the 2019 World Championship, FPX was placed in Group B along with Splyce, J Team, and GAM Esports.[15] After defeating Splyce in a tiebreaker match, FPX qualified for the knockout stage as the first seed in their group.[16][17] In the quarterfinals FPX defeated Fnatic, which finished runner-up the year prior,[18] and in the semifinals FPX defeated fellow LPL team and defending world champions Invictus Gaming to advance to the finals.[19] FPX then swept G2 Esports 3–0 in the finals to win their first international title and the LPL's second World Championship title.[2][20][21]

On 30 November 2019, FPX won the award for "best team" at the 2019 China LoL of the Year Awards, held during the LPL All-Star event.Шаблон:Citation needed In preparation for the 2020 spring season, several additions were made to FPX's roster: Two-time LCK champion Kim "Khan" Dong-ha joined from SKT T1,[22][23] while three players were promoted from FPX's academy team.[24]

Current roster

Шаблон:Esports roster header Шаблон:Esports player Шаблон:Esports player Шаблон:Esports player Шаблон:Esports player Шаблон:Esports player Шаблон:Esports player Шаблон:Esports roster footer

Tournament results

Placement Event Final result (W–L)
Шаблон:Ntsh 9th–15th Шаблон:Ntsh 2017 Demacia Championship Шаблон:Ntsh 1–2 (against Team WE)
Шаблон:Ntsh 5th Шаблон:Ntsh 2018 LPL Spring Split (West) Шаблон:Ntsh 10–9
Шаблон:Ntsh 4th Шаблон:Ntsh 2018 LPL Summer Split (West) Шаблон:Ntsh 13–6
Шаблон:Ntsh 7th–8th Шаблон:Ntsh 2018 LPL Summer Playoffs Шаблон:Ntsh 1–3 (against JD Gaming)
Шаблон:Abbr Шаблон:Ntsh NEST 2018 Qualifiers Шаблон:Ntsh 1–2 (against Team WE)
Шаблон:Ntsh 1st Шаблон:Ntsh 2019 LPL Spring Split Шаблон:Ntsh 13–2
Шаблон:Ntsh 3rd Шаблон:Ntsh 2019 LPL Spring Playoffs Шаблон:Ntsh 3–1 (against Topsports Gaming)
Шаблон:Ntsh 9th–16th Шаблон:Ntsh NEST 2019 Шаблон:Ntsh 0–3 (against SinoDragon Gaming)
Шаблон:Ntsh 2nd Шаблон:Ntsh Rift Rivals 2019 LCK-LPL-LMS-VCS Шаблон:Ntsh 1–3 (against LCK)
Шаблон:Ntsh 1st Шаблон:Ntsh 2019 LPL Summer Split Шаблон:Ntsh 14–1
Шаблон:Ntsh 1st Шаблон:Ntsh 2019 LPL Summer Playoffs Шаблон:Ntsh 3–1 (against Royal Never Give Up)
Шаблон:Ntsh 1st Шаблон:Ntsh 2019 World Championship Шаблон:Ntsh 3–0 (against G2 Esports)
Шаблон:Ntsh 3rd Шаблон:Ntsh 2020 LPL Spring Split Шаблон:Ntsh 12–4
Шаблон:Ntsh 3rd Шаблон:Ntsh 2020 LPL Spring Playoffs Шаблон:Ntsh 3–0 (against Invictus Gaming)
Шаблон:Ntsh 2nd Шаблон:Ntsh 2020 Mid-Season Cup Шаблон:Ntsh 1–3 (against Top Esports)
Шаблон:Ntsh 8th Шаблон:Ntsh 2020 LPL Summer Split Шаблон:Ntsh 9–7
Шаблон:Ntsh 7th–8th Шаблон:Ntsh 2020 LPL Summer Playoffs Шаблон:Ntsh 1–3 (against Victory Five)
Шаблон:Ntsh 4th Шаблон:Ntsh 2020 LPL Regional Finals Шаблон:Ntsh 2–3 (against Invictus Gaming)
Шаблон:Ntsh 4th Шаблон:Ntsh NEST 2020 Шаблон:Ntsh 1–2 (against Edward Gaming)
Шаблон:Ntsh 5th–8th Шаблон:Ntsh 2020 Demacia Cup Шаблон:Ntsh 0–3 (against Top Esports)
Шаблон:Ntsh 5th Шаблон:Ntsh 2021 LPL Spring Split Шаблон:Ntsh 11–5
Шаблон:Ntsh 2nd Шаблон:Ntsh 2021 LPL Spring Playoffs Шаблон:Ntsh 1–3 (against Royal Never Give Up)
Шаблон:Ntsh 1st Шаблон:Ntsh 2021 LPL Summer Split Шаблон:Ntsh 13-3
Шаблон:Ntsh 2nd Шаблон:Ntsh 2021 LPL Summer Playoffs Шаблон:Ntsh 1–3 (against Edward Gaming)

Counter-Strike: Global Offensive

History

On 15 March 2020, FPX announced they had signed the former Danish roster of Heroic, consisting of Marco "Snappi" Pfeiffer, Casper "cadiaN" Møller, Johannes "b0RUP" Borup, Patrick "es3tag" Hansen, and Martin "Stavn" Lund, with Frederik "LOMME" Nielsen as their coach.[25] The team played a single match in Phase 1 of the tournament before Patrick "es3tag" Hansen left the team to join Astralis. As a result of this, they had to forfeit the second match.[26] For Phase 2, the organization fielded North American team Bad News Bears, consisting of Michael "dapr" Gulino, Peter "ptr" Gurney, Jonathan "Jonji" Carey, Mitch "mitch" Semago, and Austin "crashies" Roberts.[27] With 65 points, FPX advanced to the quarterfinals.[28] After losing the first match to MAD Lions, the team fell to the lower bracket, where they played against Gen.G. Despite an outstanding performance by the team's in-game leader Michael "dapr" Gulino, FPX lost the match and was eliminated from the tournament. This roster only lasted for the inaugural season of the Flashpoint league.

On 25 September 2020, FPX signed Serbian Petar "⁠peca⁠" Marković, who will be in charge of building the organization's new CS:GO team and split his duties between managing its CS:GO and VALORANT divisions.[29]

On 25 January 2021, FPX confirmed that they signed the quartet of the former Godsent roster.[30] The next day their fifth player Chris "ChrisJ" de Jong was announced.[31]

On 3 March 2021, HLTV.org reported that chrisJ would leave from the current FPX-roster, being replaced by the former ENCE eSports player, Miikka "suNny" Kemppi.[32]

Final roster

Шаблон:Esports roster header Шаблон:Esports player Шаблон:Esports player Шаблон:Esports player Шаблон:Esports player Шаблон:Esports player Шаблон:Esports roster footer

Tournament results

Placement Event Final result (W–L)
Шаблон:Ntsh 7th–8th Шаблон:Ntsh Flashpoint 1 Шаблон:Ntsh 0–2 (against Gen.G)
Шаблон:Ntsh 2nd Шаблон:Ntsh DreamHack Open January 2021 Europe Шаблон:Ntsh 0–3 (against Team Spirit)

Valorant

Шаблон:Expand section

History

FPX built a Valorant team from CIS to compete in EMEA. They had won VCT 2022 stage 1 EMEA Challengers to qualify the 2022 VCT: Stage 1 Masters in Reykjavík, but could not attend due to travel restrictions on their Russian and Ukrainian players related to the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine and COVID-19 regulations.[33]

At the 2022 VCT: Stage 2 Masters in Copenhagen, FPX was forced to play with Alliance player SEIDER after SUYGETSU was unable to travel from Russia to Denmark due to visa issues.[34] After three matches played, SUYGETSU got his visa approved and made his way into Denmark. With the complete starting roster, FPX went on to win the tournament after beating APAC side Paper Rex 3–2, getting its first major win at Valorant.

After the organization's application to be part of the Valorant Champions Tour's new franchise system was denied in 2022, it released its CIS roster and set up a new team in China.

Tournament results

Placement Event Final result (W–L)
Шаблон:Ntsh 4th Шаблон:Ntsh 2022 Valorant Champions Шаблон:Ntsh 0–2 (against DRX)
Шаблон:Ntsh 1st Шаблон:Ntsh 2022 Valorant Champions Tour: Stage 2 Masters Шаблон:Ntsh 3–2 (against Paper Rex)
Шаблон:Ntsh 1st Шаблон:Ntsh 24cyber ORCs Cup Шаблон:Ntsh 2–0 (against One Breath)
Шаблон:Ntsh 2nd Шаблон:Ntsh BLAST Valorant Twitch Invitational Шаблон:Ntsh 2–3 (against G2 Esports)
Шаблон:Ntsh 3rd–4th Шаблон:Ntsh VALORANT First-Strike Europe Шаблон:Ntsh 1–2 (against Fnatic)

Sponsorships

FPX is sponsored by BMW,[35] Herman Miller, Huya Live, OPPO, PUMA, Oish, Cool Fish, and Bixin.[36]

References

Шаблон:Reflist

External links

Шаблон:S-start Шаблон:S-ach Шаблон:Succession box Шаблон:Succession box Шаблон:Succession boxШаблон:S-end

Шаблон:League of Legends Pro League