Hi. This is Vincent from IEG. This is the short-cut interview with Hero in EG-TL.
Thanks for watching. Enjoy SPL!
*Interview with JD is as below Short-cut interview with JD *New video will be on air in our Youtube channel soon (http://www.youtube.com/user/ESportsTV)
Such a great interview, it's awesome to hear a few bits from the teammates before the formal interview begins. It's also pretty cool to get a peak at how the team interacts in a non-competitive setting. Excellent work to say the least, I anxiously await more of these interviews!
Keep on going HerO, I know you guys can kick major butt in Proleague!
On January 07 2013 01:23 Backlash wrote: this was interesting to watch. still weird for me to see guys stroking each other's hair...
would be great to have jaedong's one translated also. appears to be quite funny as they laugh quite a lot.
Yeah, as moskonia said above just click the "turn on subtitles" button which should be next to the quality button. Just watched the Jaedong one. Amazing stuff. :D
That was too funny, Zenio comes off exactly as I thought he would as well. I hope HerO rocks TL colors as long as he wants to be playing professionally.
I love subtitled interviews, really enjoyed this. But next time please include the audio where you ask the question in Korean as well. Reading the question and the subtitles at the same time is too much multitask for me. I am no Hero. :-)
On January 07 2013 03:31 JustPassingBy wrote: I love subtitled interviews, really enjoyed this. But next time please include the audio where you ask the question in Korean as well. Reading the question and the subtitles at the same time is too much multitask for me. I am no Hero. :-)
It's very interesting learning things about players that aren't related to Starcraft, for once. It really helps to distinguish the players and assists with storylines in tournaments. One of the main reasons that I like SC2 is that I'm not rooting for a team. Very rarely have I ever actually liked a team, and even then it was only because I liked the individuals within it, which is something impossible to do in most mainstream sports. The teams have too many people, most of which are too "big" for us small folk to ever really connect to. In SC2, I can root for an individual. I'm not rooting for a massive clump of many people, most of which I know nothing about. I can root for one man, who succeeds and fails based solely on his own skills, and who is a person, not simply a member of a team, a mere cog in the machine. Stuff like this, that makes rooting for a person in SC2 easier and more entertaining, is almost always great in my book.