Victory Five

Victory Five was a Chinese professional esports organisation based in Shenzhen. It was owned by Mario Ho, head of Macau's esports association and son of the late Stanley Ho. It had teams competing in League of Legends and PlayerUnknown's Battlegrounds.

Victory Five
Logo of esports team Victory Five
Short nameV5
Games
Founded2018 (2018)
Folded6 January 2023 (2023-01-06)
LeagueLeague of Legends Pro League
Based inShenzhen (2021–2023)
Macau (2018–2020)
LocationChina
StadiumShenzhen Media Group Longgang Production Center
OwnerMario Ho

Plans to merge Victory Five and Ninjas in Pyjamas (NiP) were announced on 9 July 2020 by the teams' respective owners. The merger was completed on 10 August 2021, and, on 6 January 2023, Victory Five was dissolved and its teams were rebranded as NiP China.

League of Legends

History

Victory Five entered the professional League of Legends scene on 30 November 2018, when their application to the League of Legends Pro League (LPL), China's top-level league for the game, was accepted.[1] Along with SinoDragon Gaming, Victory Five joined the league as part of its expansion from 14 to 16 teams.[2] Victory Five's inaugural roster consisted of top laner Lim "Jinoo" Jin-woo, junglers Tu "Ben4" Xincheng and Hu "Pepper" Zhiwei, mid laner Lei "Corn" Wen, bot laner Wang "y4" Nongmo, and supports Le "Ley" Yi and Yun "Road" Han-gil, with Tsai "DOG8" Hsueh-yu as head coach.[2][3] The team finished 13th in the 2019 LPL Spring Split with a 4–11 record.

Victory Five replaced almost their entire roster for the 2019 LPL Summer Split, except for Ben4 and y4. Jinoo was traded to Edward Gaming in exchange for mid laner Li "Mole" Haoyan on 23 May 2019. Two days later on 25 May 2019, it was announced that top laner Huang "Aliez" Hao, mid laner Tao "Windy" Xiang, and support Li "Max" Xiaoqiang would be promoted from Victory Five's academy roster, V5 87. Despite the late addition of Hou "Otto" Guoyu, Victory Five finished 12th in the regular season with a 5–10 record.

In the 2020 LPL Spring Split the team set a league record for most consecutive losses, failing to win a single series and winning only one game against the second-last team, LNG Esports. The team's performance was hindered throughout the season by the COVID-19 pandemic in China, as several of their players lived within quarantine zones and were forbidden from leaving.[4]

Victory Five revamped their roster prior to the 2020 LPL Summer Split; top laner Yu "Biubiu" Leixin, jungler Wei "Weiwei" Bohan, and bot laner Lee "Samd" Jae-hoon were acquired from Suning, while prospective rookie Guo "ppgod" Peng joined from FunPlus Blaze as the team's new support.[5]

Final roster

Victory Five League of Legends roster
PlayersCoaches
RoleHandleNameNationality
TopRichLee Jae-wonSouth Korea
JungleKarsaHung Hao-hsuanTaiwan
MidRookieSong Eui-jinSouth Korea
BotPhoticYing QishenChina
SupportppgodGuo PengChina
JungleXLB  Li XiaolongChina
Head coach

Jeong "NoFe" No-chul

Assistant coach(es)

Yoon "Zero" Kyung-sup


Legend:
  • (I) Inactive
  • (S) Suspended
  • Substitute
  • Injury / Illness
  

Tournament results

PlacementEventFinal result (W–L)
13th 2019 LPL Spring Split 4–11
12th 2019 LPL Summer Split 5–10
17th 2020 LPL Spring Split 0–16
5th 2020 LPL Summer Split 11–5
5th 2020 LPL Summer Playoffs 1–3 (against Suning)
5th–8th 2020 Demacia Cup 1–3 (against JD Gaming)
12th 2021 LPL Spring Split 6–10
17th 2021 LPL Summer Split 0–16

Organisation

The Swedish esports organisation Ninjas in Pyjamas (NIP) announced on 9 July 2020 that it planned to merge with ESV5, a joint venture between eStar Gaming and Victory Five, to establish a new entity which would be listed on the Nasdaq Stock Market.[6] The merger was actualised on 10 August 2021, with plans for Victory Five to rebrand under the NIP name by the end of 2022.[7][8][9]

Hong Kong rapper Jackson Wang joined Victory Five as an investor in September 2020. Victory Five also partnered with Team Holding, owned by Wang.[10][11]

References

External links