On December 19th, Rain officially retired from his pro-gaming career. He told journalists privately at Flash’s retirement and told them to announce his retirement one day after. Many speculated that his recent liver donation to his father was the main reason for hanging up his mouse and keyboard. However, in an interview released shortly there afterwards, Rain revealed that he had already decided that this would be his final year. In fact, he would have retired a year earlier after leaving SKT, but the lure of life on a foreign team—and all the invaluable experiences it entailed—convinced him to delay his retirement. His final words were both a parting shot about his own greatness as well as advice to future pros to always ask themselves if they still have the passion to keep on playing.
Rain’s career was one of excellence. Rain had already shown glimpses of real potential in BW as he was named rookie of the year and was a contributor for SKT in Proleague. Sadly that potential was never realized in BW as KeSPA forcefully switched from BW to SC2.
It was in SC2 that Rain found his natural talent. All of the initial hype was built around the greats of BW; players like Flash, Jeadong, Bisu, Stork, FanTaSy, and JangBi. They were the elite, and everyone expected their skills to translate into a new game and form a new era of dominance. They were supposed to be the vanguard of KeSPA.
Yet rather than them, it was the rising stars of BW that really brought the thunder. Players like Soulkey, INnoVation, Zest and soO. And the very first to storm the arena was Rain. Rain hit the SC2 scene like a clap of lightning as he rocketed to stardom. He quickly became the de facto star of SKT and almost instantly became an elite player. He then proved that potential by winning OSL 2012 and WCS Asia, while placing well by getting a Top 4 in GSL and a 3rd at 2012 WCS WC. He left an indelible mark on the game by solving the mess that was WoL PvP, writing the blueprint for an entire matchup in the process. He taught everyone how to consistently get to the mid and late game in PvP and his innovations continue to be the bedrock of the matchup in Legacy of the Void.
Since vaulting to the top, many predicted Rain to be the new face of Protoss, possibly the heir to MC’s throne. However while Rain remained between Top 5 to Top 1 Protoss for the rest of his career, he was never able to dominate for a long period of time as we had expected. He still won numerous tournaments and got multiple high placings such as: a 2nd at OSL 2013, 1st Hot6IX Cup, and another Top 4 GSL in 2014. Yet he lacked that extra spark that turned champions into dominant legends. Which was why his GSL victory in 2015 was all the more significant.
Rain’s greatest weakness in the early days of his SC2 career was his predictability. During 2012, he was a defensive macro monster that was near the peak level of mechanical skill. However, he could get tricked and was mind gamed hard by Mvp during his GSL run in 2012. He fixed this going into 2013-2014 as he started mixing in a significant amount of cheese and aggression into his repertoire. Unfortunately, other players had caught up with him in skill and matchup knowledge, and he no longer had the edge to create an era of dominance. Still, he stayed ahead of the curve because he had evolved into an incredibly clean player with high mechanical prowess that had a large variety of builds and counters.
So then, what changed in 2015? Aside from joining mYi, I’d argue that in 2015, his mechanical skill declined. His game wasn’t nearly as clean or as detailed. However, his series planning, build order choice and player scouting seemed much stronger. In many ways it paralleled Mvp’s own victory against Rain back in Rain’s 2012 GSL run where Mvp defeated Rain despite the large mechanical skill difference and matchup expertise. While not nearly as extreme as that (as Rain was still a top level player), the loss of skill he suffered was more than made up for by his change in approach and mentality towards his Bo3/Bo5 play.
This is what makes Rain’s retirement all the sadder. If Rain had rejoined a KeSPA team, we could have been able to use this new found strength and combine it with his earlier mechanical skill. We could have seen a reborn Rain in LotV. Even on a foreign team, Rain still had the skill and mindset to play at a very high level in SC2. It's not difficult to imagine what his stronger mentality could have achieved with more structure.
That is why it was all the more surprising to hear that Rain had decided to retire. Unlike other retirees like MMA or Flash, he was still a championship contender in every tournament he attended. This is one of the few retirements that felt too soon as it was clear that Rain still had more to give.
However it is his choice and few players get the luxury of choice to retire when and how they want. Rain will be remembered as one of the all-time great Protoss players, a player that had saved PvP when it was at its worst, a genius that gave us some of the greatest games we’ve seen in SC2
However, all storm ends. The rain cannot pour down forever and though it seems premature in this case, at least Rain was able to end his career on his own terms. Too many times we’ve seen players get squeezed out of the scene because of a lack of support, opportunity or skill. Rain left of his own accord as his passion for the game had finally run out. In the clear light of day, we can see what Rain’s legacy is: One of SC2’s greatest Champions, one of the absolute best Protoss players, and a great thinker of the game.
In many ways Rain’s retirement from SC2 parallels his early exit from BW. At the end of BW he was clearly on the path to becoming one of the best Protoss in the game. With enough time, he could have even joined the elite ranks of Brood War players. Now, he retires after finally conquering Code S and lifting a foreign tournament trophy. That he leaves us still close to his peak will forever leave us with the question, "What if he had continued playing?"
Rain was the first player I liked in Starcraft 2 and was a big reason why I got into the Starcraft scene. He was and will always be one of my favorite players, and he was truly a legend. Gonna miss him.
I think it was the 2012 GSL when KeSPA players first were allowed into GSL, it was Taeja vs Rain was incredibly fun to watch (even as a Terran player that hates Protoss). And their matches afterwards in the other tournaments. Rain was the ultimate defense and Taeja just had the star sense and positioning to drag out these super long style games that he was known for. It wasn't mechanically impressive as someone like Maru but they were so smart in every move, just amazing to watch.
Excellent writing as usual, Stuchiu. While I was never the biggest fan of Rain, I did respect his skill, but I can also respect his decision to leave while on a very high level. Not everyone needs to decline to dishwasher level before retiring (not saying that everyone who retires does; I think both Flash and Fantasy had some oomph left in them).
I had always hated the style of most top protoss before him, and when I finally saw him play it was kind of a "THIS IS WHAT I'VE BEEN WAITING FOR" moment. Sad to see him go.
On December 30 2015 02:53 Chaggi wrote: I think it was the 2012 GSL when KeSPA players first were allowed into GSL, it was Taeja vs Rain was incredibly fun to watch (even as a Terran player that hates Protoss). And their matches afterwards in the other tournaments. Rain was the ultimate defense and Taeja just had the star sense and positioning to drag out these super long style games that he was known for. It wasn't mechanically impressive as someone like Maru but they were so smart in every move, just amazing to watch.
On December 30 2015 02:31 Ej_ wrote: "Yet rather than them, it was the rising stars of BW that really brought the thunder. Players like Soulkey, INnoVation, herO, Zest and soO."
no fuck no, herO[jOin] was anything, but a rising star
I sort of remembered him being a very standard, very defensive protoss when it was still early in his sc2 career, and i wasn't really a fan of his style back then.
But like the article mentioned, he has really evolved his play style and his gsl victory this year was really impressive.
My personal moment of real appreciation for Rain actually came when he beat my favorite player. If that's not enough to show the respect I had for him then I don't know what is.
this is a really good write up, really give me some holes and feelings in my heart. What if he stays for a couple more years. He was at the height of his strength too. He's going to be missed.
When Rain rose in SC2, I could not not like this protoss player, as he played on a different level. No cheese, no funny stuff, just high-level play which left no opening for the opponent to exploit.
My first ever favorite Protoss. Even at times when i hated Protoss with a fiery passion, i never had anything but the utmost respect for this guy. The fact that he leaves us in the midst of his prime, at a time when new peaks were still absolutely within his reach, is just salt in my wounds.
...one of my favourite players of all time: I followed him starting with sc2 (in bw he had too little time) and he has always been innovative in his style of play and mecanically flawless: in some later tournaments he may have been a little off but in a years-long-career you cannot be always on top... his skill in timing attacks while macroing like a madman in the background still leaves me with my mouth wide open: even when I now watch some of his oldest sc2 performances (in a sort of evening nostalgia time), I sometimes make the video back and forward to see a particular battle or moment or macro build and think "wow, this is insane, how did he do it?" and only after I remember myself that some years passed between then and now and he did those "moves" as one of the firsts to do them, before they became standard meta (for the pros at least)... impressive, impressive skill and, as seen in hsc, a nice guy who seems to have kept his feet on the Earth.
The defining memory of 2014 for me was Rain's unreal attempt to hard carry SKT to the Proleague title. He was pretty damn good most of the time, but for those last few weeks it was a foregone conclusion that he'd win. It was a moment of dominance that's been matched before or since by only a handful of people
It was creator who solved WoL PvP, and he has the WCS kr 2012 trophy to prove it. It was his double forge builds and robo builds that stabilized the matchup and it makes me sad that nobody remembers the great things he did.
Dont get me wrong, rains one of the best, but let creator have his piece of history, he deserves it
For me, the best protoss to ever grace the game and my favorite player. While he is back on Afreeca, his model play in SC2 will still be missed T_T
I remember, when KeSPA first switched, Rain's PvZ and PvT builds would never change until like, the 10th minute, and it was only with Solar's crazy 3 overseer build on Newkirk that Rain's PvZ actually showed a crack with its predictability. His late game was just so solid that he could take a later third than every other protoss in the scene yet still somehow accumulate other advantages and win...
I remember his first GSL. One of the most stacked and one that almost gave us a double royal road. Rain in that ro16 group...I was convinced he was to be the champion of Kespa we all feared was coming. Truly a legendary player. All the best.
I sat two feet behind him watching him play his bracket matches at Inferno in Sthlm (for DH). I wanted to have my picture taken with him but even when he got up he always seemed so focused I didn't want to bother him.
Good luck, Rain. Thanks for the games. I will remember you for your consistency and your loss to BabyKnight on Cloud Kingdom lmao and for being hyped way too much for someone who weren't playing as extraordinarily well as Zest, $O$ bringing their a-game.
As I said in his retirement thread, Rain wasn't a favorite player of mine, but he was someone I wished my favorite players never had to face off against. I'm happy for him though; he had an amazing career from start to finish. The fact that he retired on his own terms both saves him from suffering and adds to his legacy as one of the all-time greats. I think he and MC are the two most legendary protosses to ever grace SC2.