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At Long Last - soO's IEM triumph

Forum Index > SC2 General
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At Long Last - soO's IEM triumph

Text byTL.net ESPORTS
March 16th, 2019 17:08 GMT

At Long Last

by Mizenhauer

I’ve been looking forward to writing this article for a very, very long time.

Hell, I’m sure a lot of (Wiki)soO fans have been waiting to read it for even longer. This is a moment we’ve all been praying would arrive for years. It's a moment, I think, a lot of us were starting to doubt would ever arrive at all.

In 2013, soO lost his first GSL Code S finals, which marked the start of StarCraft II's greatest tragedy. In the following years, soO would reach six more major tournament finals and lose in every single one of them. When he lost to Rogue in the finals of BlizzCon 2017, it seemed like the story would end for good. Yet, each of the six times soO had been knocked down, he had picked himself up to fight again. The seventh time around, he rose as a champion.

When you trace soO’s story back to its roots, the defining emotion is disappointment. As much as we admired his play and consistent excellence, it was the tragedy that drew us to him. I wrote articles to share his experiences with anyone who would listen. Other fans added to his myth with memes and nicknames. We respected and supported him, but we mocked and teased him as well. What better way to cope with being a fan of StarCraft's most tragic star than with gallows humor?

Disappointment might have been the defining emotion around soO, but we all imagined a world where it was replaced by triumph. We dreamed about that long awaited moment, but even tens of thousands of hopeful fans could not will it into reality. We knew that only soO was capable of ending his nightmare.

[image loading]


I first spoke to soO in November of 2016, a few weeks after I started writing for Team Liquid. At the time, Maru was my favorite player. I had followed competitive StarCraft II from the beginning, but 2015 had been the first year I watched Proleague. I had become a full blown Jin Air fan boy—a devotee of Rogue, sOs, and even Cure.

soO had crept up on me as a close second, though. I had always been impressed by his four consecutive GSL finals appearances in 2013-2014. I couldn’t fathom how someone had been so incredibly consistent and had remained at the top of a hyper competitive scene for so long. As a Zerg player, it was impossible not to admire his prowess. His peerless inject timing, the brazen way he'd take fights, and his wide breadth of strategies made him the perfect Zerg in my eyes.

I started talking to soO by sending him a Battle.net message out of nowhere. I told him I had written a preview article predicting that he would sweep the upcoming Olimoleague finals. Surprisingly, he replied in decent English. Even more surprisingly, he told me he had noticed the article. After a month or so of talking, I became a moderator during his very first Twitch stream. It wasn't long before he replaced Maru as my favorite player. As our conversations began to frequently drift to topics other than StarCraft, I started to feel that maybe, I wasn't just a fan, but also a friend.

The link between fan and athlete is tenuous. Their life stories are presented to us for our entertainment, but what do we really know about them? Few fans ever get to meet their heroes in person, or talk to them as anything but as representatives of a multi-million dollar industry. In a way, they're more idols and ideals then people. The more soO and I talked the more I got a glimpse into his life, learning about the things that sparked happiness and those which caused him grief.

When I visited Korea in the summer 2017, I decided I'd use the opportunity to interview soO in the week leading up to his final against GuMiho. I was thankful for the opportunity to help tell what I considered to be the most compelling story in esports, but I also ended up hanging out with him on a purely personal basis.

soO took me out to a Korean BBQ joint in Gangnam, manning the grill personally for his foreign guest. Later, I sat in on a practice session, talking to him during breaks between ladder matches. He asked me if there were any builds he thought he should try against GuMiho. I told him that GuMiho loved unorthodox tank pushes and that he'd try to take advantage of the low-ground nook on Odyssey. I said the best thing to do would be nip it in the bud and proxy hatch him first. soO nodded, not revealing his hand. Imagine my surprise when a few days later, he dropped a proxy-hatchery at GuMiho’s third base on Odyssey, winning his first map of the series.

I still can’t quite believe he took time out of his GSL finals preparation to hang out with someone he'd never met before, or that he even gave my opinions a fair hearing out. But the moment that resonated most from my stay in Korea was a moment I didn't even experience in person. That was because I stormed out of the AfreecaTV studio immediately after soO surrendered the last GG to GuMiho in the finals. As I saw later through VODs, soO stood there, watched GuMiho kiss the trophy, and then took the mic. The entire build-up to the finals had focused on soO and his sixth runner-up finish, and the audience had more pity for soO than enthusiasm for GuMiho. soO reminded everyone that the moment belonged to GuMiho, who’d finally won the first championship of his career. I had run away because I was too scared and angry to watch soO fail again, but soO had stayed and congratulated the player who had taken away the thing he wanted most.



People talk about progaming as being this blessed dream job we all wish we had, where you get paid to do what you enjoy. Maybe it actually is that way for the preternaturally talented. But soO’s job is testing the limits of his mental endurance amid unforgiving competition, and endlessly practicing in the face of seemingly inevitable finals defeats. His job is assessing his own inadequacies with brutal honesty and trying to overcome them. His job is knowing that failure awaits all but one player in the end, but still thrusting his charred hands into the fire to try and pick out an ember of triumph.

Many fans said they would have loved to have had soO’s success (nearly $400,000 in prize winnings alone before IEM), or that the majority of players would have gladly swapped places with soO and his decorated career. Then again, only soO knew the pain of coming close to a championship and failing so many times.

"If anyone gets second place five times in a row they would understand what it does to you. Getting second place once didn’t affect me that much ... But once it started piling up, the suffering increased tenfold. I began losing faith in my skills and my self-esteem plummeted ... Before, I believed becoming a good player alone was enough to garner respect from the fans. Instead I received their insults and pity."


Simply being a progamer was soO's dream when he began his career, and it still is today. But as time went on, it must have been harder and harder to go back to that well of naivety for solace.

Yet, soO kept picking himself up over and over. Instead of falling into a pit of defeatism or self-pity, he grew even stronger. Every time soO lost a final I felt like I’d been punched in the gut. It must have been a thousand times worse for him. But he was always there in the next tournament, head held high, even joking about his finals losing streak like it was nothing. He kept chasing a goal that so many of us would have long since given up on. In doing so, he became an icon, a beacon of perseverance and hope.


I was ready to count soO out early on in IEM Katowice, when he started the group stage by losing his first three matches. Just a year ago I’d watched as he failed in the IEM Katowice Open bracket, even though he had entered that tournament as one of the favorites. Another failed campaign in 2019 would have just been par for the course—he would persevere, learn, and try again.

It just goes to show that you can never be certain how a story will end. After losing the first three matches of his group, soO swept his last two matches and squeaked into the Round of 12. His playoff draw was unfriendly, but I was starting to feel those old vestiges of hope.

I was worried he’d have trouble with Zest, though those fears turned out to be totally unfounded with the series ending in a 3-0 sweep. With his old nemesis out of the way, I was actually pretty confident soO could take out Serral. soO's ZvZ was one of the strongest match-ups in StarCraft history (his 67.9% win-rate is the seventh highest of any player in any match-up in Code S), and one finals loss to Rogue at BlizzCon had not diminished that fact. But even in my wildest dreams I didn’t expect he’d do so in such spectacular fashion.

Serral’s ascent had suggested that good old fashioned Korean ZvZ had stagnated in its isolation. soO dispelled that notion, playing a relentlessly aggressive style of Hive-less Zerg focused on producing Roaches and taking constant engagements, rather than out-executing the opponent with advanced tech like lurkers and vipers. The non-stop fighting consistently ended with soO escaping with a small advantage over the Global Champion, with Roaches seemingly favoring their true master. Game three was the crown jewel of them, an encounter which had soO joking he’d never make a Hive again.



The semifinal was brief and anticlimactic in comparison, with the wild-card herO having no chance against the combined forces of soO and destiny. After a year and a half, soO had made it to another finals. I remembered seeing soO taking center stage after losing to GuMiho. I remembered how he scratched his head in stunned silence after losing to Rogue at BlizzCon. When I saw him take the stage to face Stats in ANOTHER final I wasn’t just awed—I was inspired. But I also had a voice in my head that was saying “This is where everything goes wrong.”

I’ve said for a long time that when soO wins a final it won’t matter who he faces off against or how well they play. The enemy has always been the finals itself. It’s always been about himself. After two quick, brutal games soO found himself down 0-2. We had been thrust back into the same nightmare all over again. Two years ago, he’d lost three straight maps against Stats in their Code S finals encounter. As game three began I couldn’t banish the feeling of emptiness that I had been left with after that final. I had blankly stared forward and told myself that he’d be okay.

'I'll get over it.'

'He'll find a way to get over it.'

'We'll all move on.'

I readied myself for what was coming next.

But he won game three. Then he won game four as well. I had turned off the sound—I couldn't bear to hear someone else remind me about soO's history of failure—but I could tell something seismic had shifted. soO was putting together the perfect compositions. He was defending harassment smoothly and counter-attacking at the exact timings he wanted. He was scouting meticulously, sniffing out Stats’ every move.

As I watched him take a 3-2 lead I started to believe I wasn't watching the same soO who had lost all those finals. I never actually believed soO was a choker—I've always made the paradoxical claim that soO was a winner who loses finals. I'm not a very spiritual person, but I believed that soO's collapses on the biggest stage couldn't just be the result of mere human frailty—there had to be some kind of cosmic force fighting against him.

This version of soO was a revelation—unburdened and in total command of his craft. This was the soO who has gone 13-1 in Code S quarter and semifinals, the soO who’d beaten Life and Zest at their absolute peaks in some of the most breathtaking series in StarCraft history. This was the soO who had shown me what the perfect Zerg player should be.

Game six was on Year Zero, the biggest map in the pool. The stage was set for Stats to patiently force soO into a split-map situation, where he would have a clear advantage against a notoriously poor late-game player. That’s how it goes, right? Even if this was truly a different soO, fate wouldn't let things be easy. I'd be forced to sweat it out until the very end, with one, final game seven filled with all my dread and hope.

The game went by in a blur. I remember Stats marching across the map. I remember checking soO’s supply and seeing his uncomfortably thin lead as the all-in knocked on his door. I remember the force-fields, my anxiety, the way my hope swelled and crashed back to earth with every warp in.

'He’s really doing it, isn’t he?' I realized as Stats retreated the tattered remnants of his army beneath a lonely Warp Prism. soO’s ragtag army closed in and dealt the final blow. I still couldn’t believe it, not even after the final GG was typed.

I had shouted like a mad man when soO beat TY in GSL Season 1 2017, and I cheered like crazy when soO made the finals at BlizzCon later that year. This time, there wasn’t any of that.

I imagined I'd freak out and start shouting like I did when he beat Serral, but I simply didn't know what to say. I had always believed soO could win a championship, but even seeing it with my own eyes, I could barely believe it. It was the closest I had come to understanding progamers when they say their mind goes blank after winning a championship, unable to process what they've just accomplished. I felt numb as I did when he lost, but without the crushing sadness. Instead, it was jubilant disbelief. I was just so happy for him.

This wasn’t Maru making history by winning Code S for the third straight time or Serral breaking the mold by winning BlizzCon. It wasn't about being excellent at StarCraft II, or really even about StarCraft II at all. This was about the simplest and most relatable of all struggles, the one we go through every day. It was about confronting fear and doubt, and knowing that the chance of failure is never a reason to stop chasing joy.



When I spoke to soO a few weeks before IEM Katowice, I got the feeling that while he still wanted to win a championship as badly as ever—and it was the main reason he was continuing his progaming career—a part of him had come to peace with the idea that it might never happen. It seemed that he had gotten enough out of StarCraft that he'd be able to reflect fondly on his time playing the game, even without that crowning moment.

He had made his first final all the way back in 2013. After losing, he had been convinced he could make it back, and win another final if he kept his nose to the grindstone. He managed to make it back on multiple occasions, only to earn embarrassment and grief instead of trophies.

I like to think that soO's trials and ordeals transformed him into the man he is today. soO might not see it that way, but it’s the story I’ve been spinning for more than two years. Maybe the idea that we can learn important life lessons from sports is somewhat contrived, but my respect for his perseverance is 100% real.

The brash twenty-one-year-old who proclaimed he'd beat Dear 4-0 grew into one of the most respected figures in the scene. He could have packed it up and gone to military after 2016, 2017, or 2018. He could have moved on, content that he’d lived out his dream for more than a decade. Instead, he became the icon who stood on stage and reminded us that even in this tiny video game where he looms so large, the triumphs of others should never be overshadowed by his struggles.

On March 3rd, 2019, soO became a StarCraft II champion, but I had admired him long before that for his grace, tenacity, and bravery that transcended StarCraft. Whether soO is remembered as a Kong, a champion, or the paragon of perseverance isn’t what’s important. What matters is that he’s happy. I felt so sad and empty every time soO lost, but I never cried. This time, though, soO, me, Smix, you, we all had tears in our eyes. GG. Take a moment to let it sink in. soO’s finally a champion.

[image loading]




Credits and acknowledgements

Writers: Mizenhauer
Editor: Wax
Photos: Bart Oerbekke, Adela Sznajder via ESL
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TL+ Member
The_Red_Viper
Profile Blog Joined August 2013
19533 Posts
March 16 2019 17:34 GMT
#2
I cried as well, what a beautiful moment it was when soO finally took the big win, trophy in his hands and then the interview with smix just killed me with joy on top of that. Best esports moment of 2019 so far and i doubt anything will surpass it.
IU | Sohyang || There is no God and we are his prophets | For if ‘Thou mayest’—it is also true that ‘Thou mayest not.” | Ignorance is the parent of fear |
ArtyK
Profile Joined June 2011
France3143 Posts
March 16 2019 17:42 GMT
#3
On March 17 2019 02:34 The_Red_Viper wrote:
I cried as well, what a beautiful moment it was when soO finally took the big win, trophy in his hands and then the interview with smix just killed me with joy on top of that. Best esports moment of 2019 so far and i doubt anything will surpass it.


Not just 2019 :>
Sup dood ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ KiWiKaKi | SLush | uThermal | PtitDrogo | SortOf | Clem ~ "I told my mom she should vote for me in Nation Wars, she said 'I dunno, I kinda want Finland to win'" – Luolis ~ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m_NScWV9h8k#t=1h01m
TL+ Member
starkiller123
Profile Joined January 2016
United States4030 Posts
March 16 2019 17:57 GMT
#4
yeah it really was such an emotional moment, the interview killed me
Akio
Profile Blog Joined January 2019
Finland1838 Posts
March 16 2019 19:35 GMT
#5
Thank you for this beautiful article Mizen, it really takes it on another level when you follow a player for so long not only as a fan, but a friend as well. And you're not wrong, we all shed a tear, whether that be in the account of overwhelming joy, disbelief, or both.

On a more lighter note, the primitive second place memer in me let out a hearty chuckle:
I had become a full blown Jin Air fan boy—a devotee of Rogue, sOs, and even Cure.

soO had crept up on me as a close second, though.
Mine gas, build tanks.
Lambertus
Profile Joined February 2010
South Africa966 Posts
March 16 2019 19:46 GMT
#6
Good article and yes I cried as well, real tears, it was a joy
The only known Reverend on TL playing SC2 and BW (http://www.teamliquid.net/forum/viewmessage.php?topic_id=409226)
EvilSusan
Profile Joined June 2013
South Africa73 Posts
March 16 2019 20:26 GMT
#7
I cried when I watched this live.

I cried again when I rewatched the finals a couple of days later.

You just made me cry again.

GGWP soO, GGWP mizenhauer <3
"It's 144hz. I tested it. It works." -Richard "R1CH" Stanway
ZigguratOfUr
Profile Blog Joined April 2012
Iraq16955 Posts
March 16 2019 22:00 GMT
#8
We can say what we want about Game 3 against Serral being easily winnable if soO had just tech-ed up, or comparing the relative strengths and prestige of KeSPA Cup, IEM, and GSL Code S, but the article puts it well. soO has won, soO is happy and we're happy for him.
fronkschnonk
Profile Joined November 2011
Germany622 Posts
March 16 2019 22:29 GMT
#9
On March 17 2019 07:00 ZigguratOfUr wrote:
We can say what we want about Game 3 against Serral being easily winnable if soO had just tech-ed up, or comparing the relative strengths and prestige of KeSPA Cup, IEM, and GSL Code S, but the article puts it well. soO has won, soO is happy and we're happy for him.

Is that so? I mean, ok, he could've gotten better upgrades.
But part of the reason why soO was able to win was because he stayed on lower tech while Serral used higher tech without benefiting much from it. Serral with his vipers always had a smaller actual fighting army and only very seldomly was able to take advantageous fights because of blinding clouds. Thus soO was able to take more beneficial fights with superior fighting army size to work with, which resulted in soO being able to build up a bank while Serral partially spent his fewer ressources for more expensive units which soO didn't allow to pay for themselves.
Furthermore, I consider that some kind of Code A must be reestablished.
shadow4723
Profile Joined October 2018
87 Posts
March 16 2019 22:40 GMT
#10
some tears again
stevemachine17
Profile Joined April 2017
45 Posts
March 16 2019 23:07 GMT
#11
I've cried twice in my life watching others achieve in sports. The first time was seeing LeBron James win the championship for the city of Cleveland after starting at another defeat vs the warriors. The other time was watching soO finally reach the Pinnacle of sc2! I loved the moment so much
Darkn3ssFallz
Profile Joined April 2013
Australia114 Posts
March 17 2019 00:24 GMT
#12
I was so happy when I realised soO was about to win. Couldn't stop shouting. Such a great moment :D
[SKT1.Rain] is the Postman Protoss, because by.Sun or by.Rain he delivers.
RealityTheGreat
Profile Joined January 2018
China564 Posts
March 17 2019 04:55 GMT
#13
Hope soO win GSL champion this year.
Betrayed, forgotten, abandoned.
Mun_Su
Profile Joined December 2012
France2063 Posts
March 17 2019 10:32 GMT
#14
Beautiful
INno <3 - TY - Maru - Taeja - Rain <3 - Classic <3 - Stephano <3 - soO <3 - Soulkey - Dark - SERRAL =O / END REGION LOCK
IArako
Profile Joined June 2015
Germany195 Posts
March 17 2019 12:09 GMT
#15
This is why i love SC2.
Special Tactics
DSK
Profile Blog Joined February 2015
England1110 Posts
Last Edited: 2019-03-17 12:58:42
March 17 2019 12:57 GMT
#16
I was shouting, clapping and cheering so loudly at the end of the finals that my neighbours were banging on the wall. I'd like to think that iloveoov had a smile on his face after seeing the news that one of his former proteges finally took a championship, despite not being able to help him do so when SKT1 was together (I believe he mentioned that in an interview where he won an award for best ProLeague coach).

soO is an inspirtation.

[Also that GSL 2014 S1 series against Life is a must watch]
**@ YT: SC2POVs at https://www.youtube.com/c/SC2POVsTV | https://liquipedia.net/starcraft2/SC2POVs @**
ubikz
Profile Joined March 2015
69 Posts
March 17 2019 15:46 GMT
#17
sc is such a nice game
DomeGetta
Profile Joined February 2012
480 Posts
Last Edited: 2019-03-17 16:16:06
March 17 2019 16:10 GMT
#18
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1Lubh7kyoi1DYM-lqf2p6al2TOAL6dN-8id8N-4_10b0/edit?usp=sharing

Wanted to post this here:

Huge thanks to Miz for getting the OK from SoO and lining up a translator. This is a translation of soO victory stream celebration where he goes over some of the replays from IEM and answers fans questions. Youll have to be a sub to get the vod but well worth it imo. Some pretty fun stuff with his sisters dog Mochi going nuts every now and then lol. You can see how happy he is going through it.. as a huge fan of him since his first second place it was so nice getting to experience this with him. Thanks again Miz you're a legend!
sneakyfox
Profile Joined January 2017
8216 Posts
March 17 2019 17:05 GMT
#19
On March 17 2019 07:00 ZigguratOfUr wrote:
We can say what we want about Game 3 against Serral being easily winnable if soO had just tech-ed up, or comparing the relative strengths and prestige of KeSPA Cup, IEM, and GSL Code S, but the article puts it well. soO has won, soO is happy and we're happy for him.


Honorouble Korean no-Hive ZvZ > foreigner ZvZ

soO confirms as much in the excellent translation from his stream posted above:

Q: Why didn’t you go Hive in the 3rd map?

A: Hive? I have a specific philosophy when it comes to ZvZ. I just win with the power of money.
I have a specific example regarding this. I had a lot more money than Serral, and I won on the the basis of my income. But did anyone see the game between Dark and Solar? The 3rd map? Dark had 5K minerals. Solar had the earlier tech. But Dark tried to kind of clumsily catch up and go Hive, and that’s why Dark lost. If it was me, I would have made all roaches with the 5K minerals and totally razed the center.
I would have just converted all the money to roaches and done a 360 surround. That’s much better.


"I saw what sneakyfox wrote on TL.net and it made me furious" - PartinG
darktruth
Profile Joined March 2019
1 Post
March 18 2019 08:31 GMT
#20
he finally did it
good job soo!
pvsnp
Profile Joined January 2017
7676 Posts
Last Edited: 2019-03-18 09:29:53
March 18 2019 09:28 GMT
#21
soO was never my favorite player, but he has the best storyline hands down. His is the story that we all want to believe exists in reality, not just in fairytales. And now it does. Tears were shed at that moment.

Congratulations soO, you've earned it seven times over.
Denominator of the Universe
TL+ Member
agsub
Profile Joined May 2012
Singapore368 Posts
March 18 2019 16:20 GMT
#22
Thank you for writing this =)
Executer08
Profile Joined June 2015
Germany163 Posts
March 18 2019 21:40 GMT
#23
great article about a great player and person!

or that the majority of players would have gladly swapped places with soO and his decorated career. Then again, only soO knew the pain of coming close to a championship and failing so many times.


this is kinda funny, especially considering soO's infamous "better fail than 2nd place" tweet, but interestingly enough he was actually asked during Hanjin's and ToD's AMA with him whether he'd prefer 1 championship and dropping out early 5 times or 6 2nd places and he said he'd choose the 2nd places. it was a tough call though and he added that he sees it that way now that he has that big championship and that he might have answered differently before.

soO's story and his personal developement is truly something else
"You have the image of being a robotic, stoic player among foreign fans. What do you think about that?" - "I don’t think it’s incorrect." || letodSWAG
Penev
Profile Joined October 2012
28463 Posts
March 18 2019 22:37 GMT
#24
Reading about this SC2 esport occurrence still brings a smile to my face. And maybe a little more than that.

I Protoss winner, could it be?
Waxangel
Profile Blog Joined September 2002
United States33250 Posts
Last Edited: 2019-03-19 00:46:32
March 19 2019 00:46 GMT
#25
On March 19 2019 06:40 Executer08 wrote:
great article about a great player and person!

Show nested quote +
or that the majority of players would have gladly swapped places with soO and his decorated career. Then again, only soO knew the pain of coming close to a championship and failing so many times.


this is kinda funny, especially considering soO's infamous "better fail than 2nd place" tweet, but interestingly enough he was actually asked during Hanjin's and ToD's AMA with him whether he'd prefer 1 championship and dropping out early 5 times or 6 2nd places and he said he'd choose the 2nd places. it was a tough call though and he added that he sees it that way now that he has that big championship and that he might have answered differently before.

soO's story and his personal developement is truly something else


Yeah, obv someone can change their mind and feel differently about something over the course of several years. It did seem like he was making peace with the idea of never winning the championship toward the end, and maybe winning this surprise IEM trophy retroactively changes his POV again.
AdministratorHey HP can you redo everything youve ever done because i have a small complaint?
veniss
Profile Joined August 2018
73 Posts
March 25 2019 05:31 GMT
#26
"So my conclusion is -- Serral is only human, too." from: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1Lubh7kyoi1DYM-lqf2p6al2TOAL6dN-8id8N-4_10b0/edit
bastiensky
Profile Joined April 2013
France6 Posts
March 25 2019 10:22 GMT
#27
i was so full of emotions when soO won this tournament and this great article is reviving all of them !
deacon.frost
Profile Joined February 2013
Czech Republic12129 Posts
March 25 2019 10:50 GMT
#28
On March 25 2019 14:31 veniss wrote:
"So my conclusion is -- Serral is only human, too." from: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1Lubh7kyoi1DYM-lqf2p6al2TOAL6dN-8id8N-4_10b0/edit

Holy hell Nice, thanks for the link, I somehow missed it.
I imagine France should be able to take this unless Lilbow is busy practicing for Starcraft III. | KadaverBB is my fairy ban mother.
alpenrahm
Profile Blog Joined December 2010
Germany628 Posts
April 02 2019 20:53 GMT
#29
well. this was a long time coming.
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