The most famous League of Legends pro players on twitter


PlayerCountryClub/Teamlinkedin
Followers
1.Søren Bjerg (Bjergsen)DenmarkTeam SoloMid604,000
2.Enrique Martínez (xPeke)SpainOrigen596,000
3.Yiliang (Peter) Peng (Doublelift)United StatesTeam SoloMid393,000
4.Jason Tran (WildTurtle)CanadaImmortals376,000
5.Hai Du Lam (Hai)United StatesCloud9297,000
6.Henrik Hansen (Froggen)DenmarkEcho Fox270,000
7.Martin Larsson (Rekkles)Swedenfnatic258,000
8.Bora Kim (Yell0wStaR)FranceTeam SoloMid256,000
9.Zachary Scuderi (Sneaky)United StatesCloud9244,000
10.Felipe Gooncalves (brTT)BrazilpaiN Gaming196,000
11.Zaqueri Black (Aphromoo)United StatesCLG184,000
12.Paul Boyer (sOAZ)FranceOrigen181,000
13.Alexey Ichetovkin (Alex Ich)RussiaRenegades166,000
14.An Le (Balls)United StatesCloud9160,000
15.Gabriel Santos (Kami)BrazilpaiN Gaming157,000
16.Darshan Upadhyaha (Darshan)United StatesCLG144,000
17.Maurice Stückenschneider (Amazing)GermanyOrigen132,000
18.Eugene Justice Park (Pobelter)United StatesImmortals121,000
19.Fabian Diepstraten (Febiven)Netherlandsfnatic104,000
20.Alberto Rengifo (Crumbzz)VenezuelaRenegades103,000

The most famous League of Legends pro players on facebook (ordered by likes)


PlayerCountryClub/Teamlinkedin
Likes
1.Lee Sang-hyeok (Faker)South KoreaSK Telecom T1806,000
2.Felipe Gooncalves (brTT)BrazilpaiN Gaming507,000
3.Gabriel Santos (Kami)BrazilpaiN Gaming504,000
4.Enrique Cedeño Martínez (xPeke)SpainOrigen415,000
5.Zachary Scuderi (Sneaky)United StatesCloud9376,000
6.Martin Larsson (Rekkles)Swedenfnatic364,000
7.Søren Bjerg (Bjergsen)DenmarkTeam SoloMid296,000
8.Yiliang Peng (Doublelift)United StatesTeam SoloMid238,000
9.Alexey Ichetovkin (Alex Ich)RussiaRenegades217,000
10.Tường Vũ Nguyễn (QTV)VietnamBoba Marines213,000
11.Liu Shu-Wei (Westdoor)Taiwanahq e-Sports Club210,000
12.Bora Kim (Yell0wStaR)FranceTeam SoloMid210,000
13.Jason Tran (WildTurtle)CanadaImmortals181,000
14.Henrik Hansen (Froggen)DenmarkEcho Fox172,000
15.Felipe Noronha (Yoda)BrazilCNB e-Sports Club123,000
16.Paul Boyer (sOAZ)FranceOrigen116,000
17.Gustavo Alves (Minerva)BrazilKaBuM! e-Sports113,000
18.Hai Du Lam (Hai)United StatesCloud9106,000
19.Park Tae Jin (Winged)South KoreaJin Air Green Wings99,000
20.Heo Seung-hoon (Huni)South KoreaImmortals86,000

eSports Gamer Revolution

If you’re still unsure about what the hell is going on with this gamer revolution, you should really check out VICE’s thorough five-part ‘eSports‘ series which investigates this emerging global phenomenon.


Let's look at the people involved in the eSports gamer revolution:
Pro-gamers

The ones who get paid to play. Samsung White, Dignitas, Fnatic, Team Liquid and Rascal Jesters are a few of the more famous professional gaming squads, in which the brightest young men (and maybe the occasional woman?) train daily to become the best video game players in the world. Despite their parents’ inevitable protestations, they make a decent living, with the top players earning over $100k a year, whilst others generate millions as they become international sports brands. They usually embark on this career path in the most formative years of their lives, dropping out of school or university to compete.
Samsung White

Dignitas

Fnatic

Team Liquid

Rascal Jesters
Cos-players
In addition to the humans who want to play the characters, there are also the humans who want to be them.  We’re in this strange place where, if you drop some dosh on creating an elaborate costume, you can actually become a professional virtual character, an online presence in the real world. There are teams of these people, who are making careers out of dressing up, parading at events as mascots, posing for photographs and becoming the ‘cheerleaders’ of eSports. Women’s outfits can be particularly revealing, you wouldn’t guess at the traditionally male gamership.

Manager “Coaches”
They enlist players, they make merchandise, they ‘train’ their players, they make cash. Nuff said.
Amateur Gamers
The video-gaming public, tapping away at controllers in millions of homes and internet cafes around the world.

The movement is vast – League of Legends has 27 million players, the FIFA franchise has generated more than $6 billion USD since it launched in 1993, Twitch has accumulated 55m unique monthly users and “Leeeeeroy Jenkins” has 43,925,767 views and counting.

It’s a fun and satisfying pursuit – many even suggest that video games can actually boost analytical skills and reaction times.
And if you still in any doubt as to the scale of the revolution, watch the blinding vision of the League of Legends’ World Championships – held in the gigantic World Cup stadium – complete with Korean drum ceremony, American rock band, Olympic-style graphics of the players, fireworks, commentators, pres junkets, paparazzi and a $1m prize.  It’s an incredible spectacle as the Samsung Whites claim their momentous victory.
History’s arenas have seen chariots raced through the dust, gladiators fighting to the death, maimed war veterans sweating through the Paralympics, bull fights, rodeo, the World Cup Finals, celebrating humanity’s glorious physical prowess. Now the twenty first century offers ten eSports gamers in various degrees of scrawn and podge.
Are these gamers to be the sport legends of our time?