Updated on December 2, 1:15 p.m. (GMT+8): Added Bwipo’s official announcement on his new role in Team Liquid.
Updated on December 1, 1:57 p.m. (GMT+8): Added achievements and awards.
League of Legends Championship Series (LCS) top laner Gabriël “Bwipo” Rau will be taking a break from competitive play in the upcoming season.
He had signed with Team Liquid for the 2022 season. During the offseason, the organization had given him permission to explore options, but since he’s been unable to find a team, he’s now a free agent contracted to Team Liquid as a content creator.
The former League of Legends EMEA Championship (LEC) and Fnatic pro moved to North America in 2021. He joined Team Liquid and replaced Barney “Alphari” Morris as the team’s top laner.
The Belgian-French player answered some burning questions on his Twitch livestream and announced his plans for LCS 2023.
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The LCS pro revealed his experience during the offseason, where he approached all teams in the NA league, but got rejected.
“I reached out to all 10 LCS teams, they did not want me,” he said in his livestream.
He received a “great offer” from Team Vitality but felt that he was not yet ready to sign with the team and move back to the EMEA region. He verbally agreed to take it, but later pulled out because “it didn’t feel right, without even exploring the (LCS) market, to immediately jump on the offer.”
“Because I moved my whole life here because I expected to stay on Team Liquid,” he explained. “[This] was supposedly going to be the case going to this offseason too, but when push came to shove they decided to go into a different direction.”
If any team wants to hire him during or in between splits, “they have complete freedom to do that” according to Bwipo.
TL claimed the top spot in the LCS Spring 2022 with a 14-4 standing. The team was also the champion of the pre-season tournament, LCS Lock-In 2022.
Bwipo will stay on as a content creator for Team Liquid in the meantime, and plans to grind solo queue and champions queue to ready himself for the Summer Split. He is also looking into coaching Team Liquid’s academy team once the Spring season starts.
“TL’s already allowed me to do (coaching), so we’ll see what I can do to help the team,” he said.
Bwipo showed his flexibility as a pro player with Fnatic from 2018 to 2021, where he took on jungle, bot lane, and top lane roles.
Together, they won back-to-back regular season champions in the EU LCS Spring and Summer 2018. In the same year, he was awarded Esports PC Rookie of the Year by the Esports Awards.
Additionally, he also talked about his former Fnatic teammate, Tim “Nemesis” Lipovšek, who is currently a streamer for Gen.G. The top laner believes that Nemesis’ negative public image has made it difficult for himself to find a top-tier team after leaving Fnatic in 2020.
In the past, Nemesis had made statements that angered League of Legends fans, particularly in 2019 when he labeled League of Legends Pro League (LPL) player Kim “Doinb” Tae-sang as “one of the worst mids” in Worlds 2019.
Watch Bwipo’s full stream here.
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