Image: Ubisoft/Joao Ferreira
After only having turned 18 years-old in April this year, William "Spoit" Löfstedt is SiegeGG’s Most Valuable Player of the Berlin Major.
The young wunderkind tore through the competition in the EUL in Stage 2, before setting his sights on the Berlin Major. There, he was instrumental in multiple matches and looked right at home in the high-pressure environment.
Overall, Spoit was the best Rogue player at the Berlin Major, finishing with a SiegeGG Rating of 1.09, a +25 K-D (second-best on his team), and a jaw-dropping Entry split of +11 -- the highest on his team and the third-highest at the entire event.
EVPs
SiegeGG also awards Exceptionally Valuable Player awards to those who also performed impressively, but fell marginally short of the MVP accolade.
#flag@20:de Pascal "cryn" Alouane: One of only two Germans at the event, Cryn was only marginally outshone by his rookie teammate and was near-unstoppable in terms of kills with a +27 K-D -- the fourth-highest at the entire Major.
#flag@20:br Jaime "Cyber" Ramos: The FaZe Clan player was in lethal form, similar to his run at the Sweden Major, but just fell short of the win. Still, he finished with the highest K-D and Entry figures at the entire tournament.
#flag@20:br Lucas "soulz1" Schinke: Cyber's teammate was also playing extremely well and finished with the third-highest K-D while also securing a total of eight defuser plants.
#flag@20:br Gabriel "volpz" Fernandes: A fellow rookie to Spoit, the w7m esports player may have been eliminated in the semi-final, but he was the fourth-highest rated player that made it to the playoffs in his second-ever international event.
#flag@20:br Lucas "DiasLucasBr" Dias: The third rookie to be awarded an accolade, the Brazilian XSET player was instrumental for his team. He finished with the highest KOST figures in the entire tournament, despite losing to eventual champions Rogue in the semi-finals.