How Hating Faker Made Me Love League of Legends
Images from LoL Esports YouTube channel
You can’t swing a mouse in e-sports journalism these days without hitting a fawning profile of Lee “Faker” Sang-hyeok. “The biggest difference between Faker and LeBron? LeBron didn’t win a title in his first three seasons,” gushes ESPN’s Tyler Erzberger. Faker, who on October 29th won his third League of Legends world championship in four years, is assigned such breathless sobriquets as “The Unkillable Demon King” and “God.” Slingshot ran a whole nauseatingly wistful article describing his behavior at a press conference where they couldn’t land an interview: “As I snapped a few pictures of my own, I thought of what it must have been like for Sang-hyeok … Only the bigger publications got their hands on him … He understood how to behave in front of the media: professional, clear-spoken, and confident.”
I can’t stand Faker, and I think the bubble of obsequious hype that surrounds him is largely to blame. Faker himself seems like a nice enough guy, albeit confident to the point of arrogance (“I’m not really affected by long series, but I did get a little hungry after Game 4, so I had a chocolate bar and was all good”). But plenty of my favorite e-sports players are confident. There’s something else about Faker that irritates me, even if I can’t put my finger on exactly what it is.
I haven’t historically been a League of Legends fan. In the MOBA wars, I tend to side with Dota 2. And since Dota 2 doesn’t have anyone nearly as dominant as Faker, my distaste for him might simply be jealousy that the putative “Michael Jordan of e-sports” happens to play League. But I also think it’s natural for every superstar, regardless of sport, to engender a cadre of anti-fans, people who find the wheedling hero-worship skin-crawly and irritating. “He’s not that good,” we snivel. “Sports journalists just exaggerate his greatness, because they know that superstars attract attention, and at the end of the day, what is modern sports journalism if not slack-jawed promotional material,” the more verbose and irate among us continue.
But so there was nothing I wanted more on the night of the 2016 World Championship Grand Finals than to see Faker lose, preferably in the most embarrassing way possible. The first game was promising—Samsung Galaxy (SSG) held off Faker’s SK Telecom T1 (SKT) for 54 minutes before collapsing. But in game two, SSG got certifiably disemboweled. And when SKT started off hot in game three, it looked like the five-year curse of lopsided Grand Finals was likely to continue. Concessions in the venue began to close down after SKT won their lanes. At home, I very nearly turned my stream off.