Inhuman Revival: How a CS:GO Boomer Became Valorant's Kingmaker



HiKo entered Valorant for one reason: to win.

But at first, things didn’t work out. His team was a mess, and the results were bad.

So HiKo went back to work, to rebuild, to fulfill his promise. And with the help of some old friends, he’s made an incredible comeback.

In just two months, 100 Thieves has taken over NA Valorant, and they’re not done yet.

Written by: Malcolm Abbas (@smashhh)
Edited by: Connor Dunn (@ConnorDunn_)
Hosted by: Daniel Rosen (@Daniel_Rosen)
Thumbnail by: Fermin Mulett

Music used under license from Associated Production Music LLC (”APM”).

Follow us on Twitch: http://www.twitch.tv/thescoreesports
Follow us on Twitter: http://twitter.com/thescoreesports
Follow us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/theScoreesports
Follow us on TikTok: http://www.tiktok.com/@thescoreesports
Follow us on Instagram: https://instagram.com/theScoreesports

Source

44 thoughts on “Inhuman Revival: How a CS:GO Boomer Became Valorant's Kingmaker”

  1. so funny to me that valorant pro teams that are successful are full of washed cs pros. nitro: benched. hiko: forgotten. steel: lifetime ban for match throwing. and now ethan: cut by eg. val cannot compete with cs

    Reply
  2. Hiko wants to win in Valorant because he can't win in CSGO. Valorant is a game for noobs compared to CSGO and the game will die within a few years.

    Reply
  3. i remember people called the old 100t players bad but if u looked at the comps they were running they had no shot of winning half the time cos they would play some games with no duelist and have something like omen and brim 2 sentinels and a sova or someshit like that their team comps were awful not the players

    Reply
  4. Hilo’s like Mick Foley, he’s loveable, calm and collected under extreme pressure and I feel like if he saw a sign that says “Hiko is God” he’d respond with “I’m not God but I’m pretty damn good”

    Reply

Leave a Comment