Offlaner BetBoom in Dota 2 boldly placed himself among the top three players

Offlaner betboom in dota 2 boldly placed himself among the top three players

BetBoom Offlaner Boldly Places Himself Among the Top Three Players in Dota 2

Star third-position player of the BetBoom Team roster for Dota 2, Matvey "MieRo" Vasyunin

Team Morale and Response to Ammar

Matvey says the squad finally feels right on the server — calmer than before, more focused. They worked a lot on the mental side; the old coach coming back sped up the reset of their in-game routines. Reporters pressed him about Ammar "ATF" Al-Assaf’s recent praise (ATF labeled him "the best in the world"). MieRo didn’t shy away — he places himself inside the top three offlaners globally. That said, he stopped short of crowning himself #1: every tier‑1 hardliner, he pointed out, reads macro and hero choices in their own, often stubborn, way.

Absolute Freedom in the Hard Lane

On the current meta, he was blunt: the offlane is the most intriguing spot right now. With the right ideas you can shove nearly any hero there — really, any. His quick example: pick Ancient Apparition in the hard lane. Buy Spirit Vessel and Rod of Atos, and, according to Matvey, you already tilt the game in your favor (i.e., influence tempo and space).

Signature Hero's Comeback

Batrider’s return made him genuinely happy — it’s a personal throwback, one of his earliest go‑to picks on the hardlane. Recent matches on Batrider weren’t flawless; he admits there were rough moments and is actively fixing mistakes. Still, the vibe is clear: he’s polishing that hero and intends to make opponents regret facing it again.

Earlier, coach‑analyst Timur "Ahilles" Kulmukhambetov shared a practical guide on steamrolling pub games with the meta Ursa — pacing, draft choices, and simple execution were his focus.

Not long before, star third‑position player of Team Falcons Ammar "ATF" Al-Assaf made a public plea as his squad teetered on the brink at PGL Wallachia Season 7. He asked fans for help — literally begged for energy and support — ahead of a do‑or‑die match.