Interview With Sodah From Col

  • Uploaded by: Legacy Gaming Network
  • 0
  • 0
  • May 2020
  • PDF

This document was uploaded by user and they confirmed that they have the permission to share it. If you are author or own the copyright of this book, please report to us by using this DMCA report form. Report DMCA


Overview

Download & View Interview With Sodah From Col as PDF for free.

More details

  • Words: 1,556
  • Pages: 6
Interview with Sodah from coL By: Cameron "fams" Carson Posted 2009-04-25 22:00:18 CDT Sodah sat down and talked with us about his life, how to become a professional gamer and what steps it takes, as well as his thoughts and insight on the current state of arena. This is an interview you don't want to miss!

If you would please start off by introducing yourself to the community and telling us a little about yourself.

I'm Sodah, I've clasically played a druid but for the past 4 months I've dedicated myself to playing only Priest. I love World of Warcraft PvP, I play it every single damn day, but I also attend college at UCSB as a political science major. I play for compLexity with the same mage rogue I've been playing with for a year now, Venruki and Happyminti.

What did you plan on being when you grew up as a kid and did you ever picture yourself playing games professionally?

Growing up as a kid I thought I'd follow what my dad did because he's the coolest, which is software engineering. He writes code and stuff for manufacturing companies. I never ever considered playing games professionally, I just played it for fun because that's what my brother did, too.

When did you realize you were going to become a pro gamer and how did you go about the steps to actually being one?

I only realized I was actually going to dedicate a ton of time and effort and actually get some money from gaming a little over a year ago, when MLG San Diego decided to start having WoW as a part of the circuit. At that point I had been first place in

every bracket in my battlegroup, which was really only because I loved competition and I loved winning - not because I wanted to be a pro gamer. This had allowed me to get a sponsorship, which was awesome, and that's when I really started playing even more. In regards to the steps to becoming ridiculously good at games, It's really about who you become friends with and how much fun you can have playing with them. In high school I played counter-strike with some friends and we made a team for CAL. We didn't get very far, but that's when I first started using ventrilo and practicing every night to get better. I adopted that same idea for everything else I started playing. I guess it's just my personality, really.

You are one of the best players in the US in wow, but how about your skills with the ladies? Do you currently have a girlfriend?

I do not have a girlfriend and I advise against it if you want to be crazy good at games. Happyminti, our rogue, has a girlfriend which we have to fight against constantly so we can get our damn practice in. Complexity also has a policy against girlfriends, because historically they have broken up CS teams. So uhh, there is a lot of sacrifice involved with the "sport."

Do you do anything extracurricular outside of World of Warcraft with your spare time?

I really don't. I definitely will have to be doing a lot more come junior year, including internships and such, but right now I'm just trying to get the best possible grades in my classes while I'm doing arenas and crap every day. WoW kinda detracts from real sports and fraternities, most definitely.

Is your family supportive of your E-Sports career?

As long as I do well in college, they definitely are. My mom keeps track of how well I'm doing and watches the tournaments, and I think both of my parents are kind of proud that I'm able to make something positive out of gaming. They're pretty awesome that way.

Imagine yourself in 5 years, where do you think you will be and what do you want to have accomplished?

I don't have a totally set goal in life, as I want to keep things flexible, but realistically, I see myself working my ass off in a law office somewhere. I don't think I'll be doing what I love, which is sad, but professional gaming right now is a sort of temporary dream world. I don't think I can consistently make enough money off of it to be doing it in 5 years - and I don't think more than a few people can say that they're actually making a living off of it.

What made you choose an MMO over a RTS or a FPS?

I didn't choose an MMO. I love to play them all - It just happened to be that when I was "in my prime," I was playing World of Warcraft. Plus, you really have to be playing a game right when it comes out to get super good at it. I hadn't been playing Counter-strike right when it came out, and I was too young for Starcraft.

Have you ever thought of quitting World of Warcraft, or changing games lately?

Yes. A lot of players have quit World of Warcraft at this point, as the game is changing for the worse. I don't know a single player that doesn't think that the game was way better back in season 2. I'll likely quit when Starcraft 2 comes out, or Diablo III. However, there's really no games around right now to quit for, so I'm sticking with it for now - especially given that tournaments are still going.

How often does your team practice and are there ever conflicts with real life or school?

We practice every night around 7 PST, sometimes taking Fridays and/or Saturdays off. In the past our team had a lot of conflicts with real life / school when we practiced in the afternoon, so this solution has worked really well for all of us - we just set aside everything for that one specific time. Gaming is really just another part of our schedule, so it very rarely conflicts with stuff.

What is your most memorable moment at a tournament or inside arena in general?

A lot of people missed this and no one really cared about it, but against Nihilum's Warrior Lock Druid last year at ESL Los Angeles, I blew Nature's Swiftness to finish off Carekoala with a Wrath with my last bit of mana. He was about to turn a corner when a big green ball hit him in the back and he fell over, while both my mage and my rogue were being controlled and couldn't kill him. It's sort of the ultimate insult to get killed by a NS wrath, because it means the druid didn't have to use it to survive, plus it's a huge waste of a cooldown to use NS for wrath.

As a professional arena player are there any changes you’d like to see in rules at tournaments or changes in the way things are done during them? If not, any changes you would like to see Blizzard make to the game?

I could write 10 pages on changes they need to make both at tournaments and in the game. So I'll just mention two big ones. There need to be LAN servers for tournaments for 0 ping, because having 300 ping at a tournament is ridiculously stupid. Another tournament change should be that you should be given only one set of computers which have no view of other computer screens, and never be moved from that computer. I can't tell you how many times I've had to set up my entire character interface... it's over two hundred times.

What is your most hated 3v3 comp at the moment?

Retribution Paladin, Restoration Shaman, Discipline Priest. Can't kill anything, EVER, and there's no way to ever beat a good one.

How strong do you feel your current comp is against the rest of the competition?

RMP is such a well balanced and versatile composition, it will always have a good chance to surprise and defeat someone in a tournament. It's a tournament comp because even though it can lose a lot, a really well-played one can take a series even when "countered."

Is Complexity going to be sticking with your current comp or are you guys going to be exploring new team make-ups for upcoming tournaments?

That's a secret. Even though I can play a druid really well, and Minti and Ven can both multiclass, RMP will always be our core setup.

If tomorrow by some miracle Complexity ceased to exist and you had to play for another team, which would it be?

I don't know. In the past I'd say Team EG because they were looking for a new healer, but I think most teams are confident in their healers. I'd probably just make my own team with some friends, try to do well with it, and go to tournaments with my own winnings.

What is the next tournament we should be looking for you at?

Blizzard regionals, which is unannounced but coming soon, or MLG Columbus which is June 5th. Whichever comes first

Do you have any closing statements?

Yes, compLexity is awesome, go to complexitygaming.com and upload your videos for their contest, and Blizzard, druids are boring, fix them.

Thank you for your time.

Photos: gotgame, Julia Christophers

http://www.mylgn.com/content.php?postid=100

Related Documents

Col
May 2020 15
Col
May 2020 16
Col
May 2020 13

More Documents from ""