League of Legends: DaHuang's live stream comments were exposed by netizens for loopholes, confirming that the LPL region has no future.

2026-03-05 11:28

League of Legends: DaHuang's live stream comments were exposed by netizens for loopholes, confirming that the LPL region has no future.


The development potential of the LPL region is obvious to netizens. Opening the League of Legends community, the atmosphere is one of anxiety or disappointment. The matches are almost devoid of entertainment value, and discussions revolve entirely around transfer news. Internal regional battles and veteran player swaps are essentially the same thing, so how can this help the region? The same group of players on different teams are facing the reigning LCK champions, and the odds of victory are obvious.

The successful examples of youth training all feature veterans who have been playing for many years.

The LCK region is teeming with talent, with rookies reaching the top of the Korean server rankings. All of them are unfamiliar faces, seemingly top players emerging from a youth academy, with talent scouts constantly discovering their potential. In the LPL region, the most sought-after player during the transfer period was surprisingly a veteran you'd been following for seven or eight years. Then, WE's top laner, "Da Huang," ignited a firestorm during a livestream, causing netizens to lose their temper and launch a war of words.

Knowing Da Huang's personality, I know he speaks frankly and never beats around the bush. His views should have some value, but as I listened, I started to think he was ignorant and living in a bubble. He said that the T1 team is not enough to represent the entire LCK region. Yes, the consecutive champions are interesting, but you can't use this team to measure the LPL region's youth training results. The strength is not comparable. Then he slowly counted on his fingers and named several players who came from youth training, such as Ning, Tian, and JieJie, all of whom have won world championships.

Age restrictions shattered the e-sports dreams of many young people.

It sounds reasonable, but the most ridiculous thing is that all the examples given are people from many years ago, who are now history. They only talk about current youth training, and can they even name the names of the newcomers who have established themselves? The LCK region is constantly absorbing talent, even if they are minors. The LPL region still has age restrictions. If you are under 18, don't even think about playing professionally. You lose at the starting line. How many passionate young people have been killed by this threshold?

Eighteen years old, yes, still very young. Parents still have reservations about esports. It's not like a sports school where you train from a young age and then get lucky and be recognized, maybe even join the national team. At the age of just graduating, would you choose your esports dream or your university major? Realistically, choose the latter.

Image source: Internet


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