Dota 2 Analyst Harshly Humiliates Aurora Gaming Roster and Predicts a Disgraceful Failure
Well-known esports analyst for Dota 2, Khaled "sQreen" El-Khabbash, has torn apart Aurora Gaming. The expert literally left no stone unturned in his criticism of the Eastern European roster's gameplay, calling their success a temporary fluke.
Terrible Execution and Lorenof's Motivation
According to El-Khabbash, the team's actual skill level remains extremely low. The analyst noted that Aurora continues to perform terribly, managing to lose maps to outright weak tier-2 mixes and get crushed in 20 minutes with a devastating score. sQreen attributes their temporary success to a total slump and lack of proper practice among other competitors on the pro scene.
The only bright spot, according to the expert, is the stand-in, Artem "lorenof" Melnik. Khaled is sure that the midlaner is clinging to every map purely out of "hunger" — the player is without a club and is desperately trying to prove himself to get a contract with a good salary.
Cheap Authority and Inevitable Collapse
sQreen also explained where the team's sudden confidence came from. The analyst emphasized that Aurora padded their stats and built their overconfidence solely by playing a huge number of matches against weak stacks from tier-3 tournaments.
El-Khabbash is absolutely convinced of the team's inevitable downfall. The expert boldly stated that as soon as the real tier-1 giants stop fooling around and fully engage in the competitive season, Aurora Gaming will instantly return to the very bottom of the pro scene, where, in his words, they belong.
Recently, Team Falcons support Jingjun "Sneyking" Wu frankly complained about a real streak of bad luck for star teammate ATF, which forced the team to urgently play with a stand-in. Besides roster problems, the esports athlete harshly criticized the toxic meta for the position 5 support in Dota 2, which forces players to pick the same boring heroes over and over again.
Earlier, the team's Russian midlaner Stanislav "Malr1ne" Potorak honestly spoke about the suffocating language barrier he faced in his first year playing for an English-speaking team. The esports athlete also described without embellishment the harsh underbelly of the professional scene, shattering fans' naive myths about fun tourist travels around the world during tournaments.