Today marked SuperNova’s official retirement from pro SC2.
While he was never accounted among the greats of SC2 pros, his career was a successful one. He had 13 Code S appearances, has reached the playoffs three times and played as the ace for nearly every team he ever joined. But those are just his results, what made SuperNova great was that he was an outlier.
In SC2, we as players, as spectators, as fans, as a scene are outliers. In the grand scheme of things we are a niche culture, a subculture of eSports and gaming as a whole. Despite or because of that, we as a community want to, need to seek validation from the larger audiences. So it becomes natural to try to regress back to the mean, to try to emulate the successes of other games, to try to achieve the success of other larger scenes like LoL, Dota2 or CS:GO.
And just like the scene as a whole, pros naturally regress to the standard in their quest to seek success. It is a natural step. As a game gets figured out, the best paths are written down, refined and then passed around. This is especially true for the Terran race as most of its history has been defined by standard builds and compositions. It is a clear road sign to success, one nearly every player follows. Nearly.
If we are outliers, then SuperNova was an outlier among outliers. In an earlier article I talked about his incredible use of preparation. He was among the few handful of players to ever take preparation to that height. On that alone he could be accounted as one of the unique players of the game. But more than that from 2011 to now, if you hid every pro gamers name in every VoD, I could still point out nearly every important game SuperNova had ever played.
This was a man who took strange builds, strange compositions and unique attack patterns to untold levels (the only Terran even crazier than him was Gumiho). He played marine/tank/banshee against Protoss in WoL. He played mass hellions against Protoss in WoL. He played hellbat bio/thor against Zerg an year before it became a standard build (pre transformation-servos removal). He played Hellbat Bio against Protoss in the early stages of HotS. He went for Mech builds against both Zerg and Protoss in the early stages of HotS when both were considered completely unviable.
And the way he constructed attacks was a thing of beauty. With the first attack, he could completely control the entire flow of a game against anyone when he was playing at his best. Even the greatest players in their days, players like: MC, Losira, Leenock, Trap, MMA, Mvp, DRG, Innovation, Soulkey.
With a career that lasted 4 years, in a game that naturally forces players to go along a standard path, with a race that punishes those who play unique, SuperNova went against the grain. He stuck to his guns and in his games you got a strong sense of individuality. You could nearly see him yelling in his games, “This is who I am, this is where I stand.” In a scene where players scramble to copy and refine the current standards of the game, SuperNova held his ground.
There is something beautiful about that. In a world where people are pressured to conform to a natural ideal of normal or standard, but in this one instance, in this microcosm we saw one man hold to himself to the very end.
He never won a Premier Championship. He spent most of his years getting knocked out early in Code S. He will never have a tangible object of his achievements he can hold. Yet his games were intense, entertaining, complete with varied unit compositions, builds and on his best days he could compete with and win against the very best.
Against the natural inclinations of human nature and society, against practicality, against the very nature of SC2 itself, SuperNova played by his own rules from beginning to end. And that is his legacy. Years from now SuperNova can say to himself without a shadow of a lie that he stayed true to himself. That he was SuperNova to the very end. And we were lucky to be witness to that.
Oddly enough some of my fondest memories stem from the fact that I could always count for SN to be streaming late at night (Central US Time) when virtually no other Terran streamers were online. His consistent presence both in the pro-gaming as well as live-streaming scenes will be missed.
I'm not gonna lie, I was a bit sad after reading this article. This was a terran player I really liked, and I thought he'd be a fixture of the scene for a very long time, I just couldn't see him move on....
I always enjoyed Supernova, I've drifted away from the scene (and Twitch in general) due to responsibilities at work but having watched dozens of his games I can honestly say I'll really miss his play and the stubborn longevity of his play in the professional SC2 scene.
Best of luck in wherever life takes you next buddy!
It's always a sad thing to see an SC2 old timer retire, especially one that innovated his own race, one that was more than "just another korean pro-gamer".
I was thinking this yesterday that he was the best Terran than never won a big tourney and it is still kind of baffling to me as to why. The fact that he played so weird, yet sooooo consistent is beyond me.
Byun at times played pretty uniquely and he would have his ups and downs. Gumiho is currently on the up and plays weird, but he certainly had his downs. SuperNova was ALWAYS powerful until very recently.
This write-up serves SuperNova the highest respect and admiration he deserves.
He was a true innovator, and my eyes are welling up just thinking upon all he's done in and for the scene. SuperNova, you are one of the reason's I truly got into the game and stuck with it for all this time. Your games were artwork... a thing of beauty.
May your legacy live on in our memories forever and ever!
I don't follow SC2 as closely as I did in 2011-2012, but Supernova's name was one of those regulars. Now it's 2015 and he's retired. I guess it hasn't been that long in the grand scheme of things, but it still feels like the end of an era for me.
And the next Terran retired. Supernova was a huge player, i like to see him. I wish him good luck for the future. The SC 2 is more and more Protoss and Zerg.
<3 Supernova. Never forgive maru for knocking you out of OSL in 2013 with weird all-ins when you actually looked like the best player in the world for a bit.
watching him watch some of his biggest matches on his last stream is one of the more unique SC2 moments I've had, and I won't soon forget it. a great player who was easy to like.
Wasn't he the guy who blew up his own Medivacs in the opponents face (with seeker missiles) and who lost all his army in a game vs Stephano because of the stupid random widow mines? Good Times
On September 01 2015 09:08 Rollora wrote: Wasn't he the guy who blew up his own Medivacs in the opponents face (with seeker missiles) and who lost all his army in a game vs Stephano because of the stupid random widow mines? Good Times
Haha, this is the 2nd time I see Tasteless mocking Artosis. The first time "and he kills the Artosis pylon" Artosis "is that was this is?" Tasteless "yep, that's an Artosis Pyolon" And now this about the Artosis Curse :D
For real, SuperNova was great b/c he was unique and still effective at the top level for many years. His stream is one of the few high level Terran streams you could find on a regular basis. One of the best times on his stream was watching viewers pay him to troll avilo on ladder. He will be missed.
While I wouldn't say Supernova was my favorite player, I always rooted for him, when I saw him play! And I think it was exactly because of these things you write in the article! Hope to see him somewhere again!
i was hoping Oasis was going to play at Blizzcon one year... and Supernova would make it to the finals .. and he'd get this played as he walked along the platform into the player booth
SuperNova's been around since the beginning of time to me and even though I wouldn't say I was his fan before, for the year of 2015 I began watching his stream out of boredom as there were really few good terran streams available. I started to watch his stream more and more and eventually fell in love with his play. He interacted with his chat when he could and I enjoyed his response as even though his english wasn't perfect, he at least put effort into communicating with his foreign viewers/fans. That's something I really respect about him. After tuning hearing that he was going to retire early August, I made she I tuned into his stream everyday and the days flew by so fast, alas his last stream came.. it was so sad that this is the last time he will be streaming.
I wish SN the best and I hope he has a good life and future in whatever he decides to do!
Sad to see him go. Since I did most of my SC2 watching back in the days when Supernova was gunning for the Nestea Award, it will be weird not to have him in the scene.
Good luck to you Supernova, and thanks for all the strange and awesome games.
the ace match of the gstl finals is to this day one of the best games. super high stakes, all or nothing, last days of stxSoul, innovation at his peak, supernova the perfect villain, and last but not least,what a match this was...
Game vs Life reminded me of why I completely stopped watching SC2 during the WoL era. SuNo was SO superior all game long and still had to come to some silly lame to get the win.
i'll never forget what sc2 has done for me, and oGs was the team that really sold me to the game and scene. Forever greatful for everyone of their players, and supernova is no exception. Great player and great person, will be missed