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[Interview] ThorZaIN - Becoming a doctor & life after SC2

Forum Index > SC2 General
54 CommentsPost a Reply
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TL.net ESPORTS
Profile Joined July 2011
4 Posts
Last Edited: 2021-06-02 20:08:24
August 08 2020 11:01 GMT
#1
[image loading]

In the summer of 2011, Swedish Terran (Wiki)ThorZaiN went from no-name to superstar overnight, defeating players such as FruitDealer, MC, and NaNiwa to win TeamLiquid Starleague 3. From there on out, ThorZaiN continued to be one of the most popular Terrans of early StarCraft II, even joining the Evil Geniuses-Team Liquid team to play in South Korea's Proleague.

Then, in a move that was as abrupt as it was low-key, ThorZaIN retired from professional play in 2014.

TL.net's Wax caught up with ThorZaIN nine years after his TSL3 run to reminisce about the early days of professional StarCraft II, the anxiety and doubt that simmered beneath all the glory and fame, and how that mental pressure led him down his current path of becoming a doctor.



This interview has been edited and condensed.

You quietly retired from professional StarCraft II back in 2014. Could you give us an overview of what you've been up to?

ThorZaiN: I started medical school in the fall of 2013, and my first intentions were to keep playing. But then, I did that for maybe 10 months-ish, and I kind of lost interest in the game. I still had some time to play—it wasn't like I was completely overwhelmed. But like, if I wanted to be good at playing, the time would have been there if I would have been willing to sacrifice social life. But I was going to a new town, meeting new people, and all that made me feel like I maybe shouldn't be playing that much.

So I didn't play much StarCraft, until like 2016, maybe? I started playing some again, because I had much more free time than before. So that year I played quite a decent amount, and I became pretty good again. But it was temporary, because I had to stop, I had to cut down on it eventually.

I finished med school in January of 2019, and since then I've been doing my internship. Gaming wise, I'm playing a lot of WarCraft III, actually.

I find that some guys who retire, they still have that competitive itch. Is it the same with you?

Yeah, I do, I am a competitive person. You have to be at heart a competitive person to make it as a progamer, so it's pretty natural that could be something that you miss. I find my remedy for the competitiveness these days... I'm playing WarCraft III at a pretty high level, but it's kind of with no strings attached. And that fits me now that I work full time as well.

Isn't it different though? Playing for fun compared to playing at the highest level.

Playing another game, even if it's ranked or whatever, you obviously aren't going to get the same kind of... You don't have the same goals as in StarCraft. When I was a progamer... It was separate, like you had this goal of being a progamer, and also the goals in the game. And nowadays I only have the goals in the game.

But the goals of being a progamer, like, the climbing of the progaming career [ladder] or making a name for yourself—my professional career can take that kind of role in my life.

Did you enjoy that part of progaming? The idea that you're not just trying to win the competition, but also trying to build a career. Did you enjoy that, or was it more stressful?

I think I was, when it comes to the publicity part of my progaming career, I was always very lucky. Because I wasn't the guy who would stream countless hours, I wasn't the guy who would be dramatic, I wasn't the guy who would be extremely humorous live, for example. But my tournament wins, my performances made me really famous in the scene anyway, without me really even having to work that much for it.

So that part came kind of as a bonus to me, so it wasn't really an issue. Like, for example, TSL3, when I made a Cinderella run, winning that tournament gave me so much publicity just because I was a nobody.



Back in 2011, when you qualified for TSL3, what was your mindset? No stress? Just looking to enjoy it?

At the time, when SC2 was released, I had quite recently finished high school and I set out for myself a goal to become a progamer within a year. And if I wouldn't have made it by that time, I probably wouldn't have made it at all. But since so many of my WarCraft 3 colleagues or friends had made it, I felt like "why wouldn't I be able to?"

So I felt somewhat reassured in that, and I wouldn't say that I was filled with performance anxiety at that time, and in the tournaments I had nothing to lose, I was always the underdog. For example in TSL3, I always performed so much better being an underdog.

Like, I remember talking with, I think it was NaNiwa, about it, and he was always the opposite. When he would play against Mvp or someone he was supposed to lose to, he would play worse than he would playing against someone he was supposed to beat, while I was the complete opposite. I think it's different mindsets.

Looking at at TSL3, each round you thought you were the underdog?

I didn't think so against Tyler/NoNy, and I think against Kas I also felt it was pretty even. But not MC and FruitDealer, I definitely felt like the underdog.

When was it the most fun being a progamer?

It's... it's a hard question to answer. MY progaming years were always very up and down. Like, my mental state. Because it was...

You had all these expectations on your shoulders, and I had the anxiety of not being able to do this forever, there was this kind of undercurrent of anxiety and bad mood? Like, really bad mood. Like, at times I would probably have, in retrospect, called myself depressed.

But there were so many extremely joyful moments as well, and it's like hard to... I don't know, even back in 2011, going to all the MLGs, and meeting all the people, and starting this new life, it was really cool. But also the time living in Korea and experiencing a new culture—I can't really pinpoint a specific period that was the best. They all had their moments of ups and downs.

When I think back on it, I have really good memories of like playing the StarCraft II beta with my friends and like being, "we're all gonna succeed and make it big." And then also from like the last couple of months, being at my last HomeStory Cup, everything in between as well, there were so many great moments, so it's hard to say this SPECIFIC period was the best.

Staying in Korea, for example, it was really fun and it was a good experience. But it was also for long stretches, so it wasn't that eventful. But like, when you go to these tournaments every other week in a different part of the world, it's creates for like, more memories I guess. So maybe the IPL, the MLG days, they were special in a way.

What do you miss the most from your full time progaming days?

I guess, the people and the, what do you call it, the freedom of not having a set schedule.

Were you someone who practiced a lot? What was your life like?

I was... I always cared too much about stats and all that shit, so I wasn't the guy who would play tons of games on the ladder. I would only play if I was feeling in the zone. So like, being tired or being hungry, I would not play, so that made me play less than some other people. But, I didn't really have a set schedule for my days, I wasn't up at nine and then playing for six hours and what not.

When you say you miss the people, are you talking about any particular people? Or do you mean the community in general?

Yeah, you always have your personal niche of people. In some ways, I meant the fans too, but also like the friends from back then. All the teammates, I guess if I look back at it, I was probably more close with my Mousesports teammates than my EG teammates. Me and MaNa were really good friends, and it was always a blast hanging out with HasuObs, MorroW, biGs, and the rest.

But also, the Koreans, like MMA and I had a little bromance for a little while, and that was pretty cool, meeting him at tournaments.

He used to called you Zain/Jane.

Yeah, exactly [laughs].

So I guess, yeah, the Koreans I lived with and the Mousesports people. And I mean, the EG guys, it was always a blast. Like me and Ben for example, DeMuslim, we were pretty close. And the other guys in the EG, it wasn't like I was on bad terms with them, but we weren't best friends either.

What made you even start thinking about a transitioning out of StarCraft back in 2012? Were you losing interest, or were you just making long term plans even if you still liked progaming.

It was something like that. I was not as motivated as before, and it started to show in my results as well, so I wasn't performing as well as I used to. And I also had this idea that Starcraft II wouldn't be around that much longer, and I was wrong. But still, that added on some anxiety. It felt like I really had to get going with my life, because I wasn't performing as well as I used to, and StarCraft was declining. And even if it wouldn't have been declining, it wouldn't have been a long-term thing for me, at least.

And I'm talking like, I wouldn't have wanted to still be a progamer, when I was 30.

What made you lose interest in the game?

When I think back on it, I felt the Heart of the Swarm meta wasn't really that interesting. Like, I still played some Legacy of the Void. I watched [some of the esports] and I felt like the game was in a really good state. But Heart of the Swarm wasn't really for me, I guess. I don't really know why—because there were times when it wasn't all about Swarm Hosts and Brood Lords.

You said the anxiety was from not just the life-cycle of SC2, but also because of expectations. Did TSL3 put a lot of undue expectations on your shoulders?

I guess I was struggling with impostor syndrome, because I felt like I saw ... I guess my mind tried to find things proving to myself that I wasn't as good as some of these other players. Like, I know that I had pretty low APM for example, and maybe the Koreans or Naniwa or Idra would have 300, and I would have like 220.

And that must mean that I'm bad, right? That I'm lucky.

I think a lot of my progaming career, it FELT like SOMEWHERE—and I know it's not really the case—but it felt like I was winning a lot because I didn't really play the same way as all the other Terrans in a lot of games. And that other people didn't really, hadn't really caught up with how to play against me. But I know that wasn't really why I was good... But, yeah, the mind can play tricks sometimes.

And even if that's why you were good, what's wrong with that? There were a lot of players who were successful because cause they played different, like Polt.

Yeah, exactly, you can be different and you can be good at the same time. One doesn't have to rule out the other one. And I didn't really get messages from the community that that was the case either, I just, I guess I kinda fabricated it for myself.

Did that make that DreamHack: Stockholm 2012 championship worth more to you? Because you won TSL3, you were really popular after that, but the results were kind of mediocre after that. Did winning DreamHack after that give you some relief?

Yes, it definitely did. I remember at that point I was with Mousesports. I remember at one point, at the tournament, when I was at the bathroom in Stockholm, at the DreamHack tournament, thinking that like, 'Ah man, these last couple of months have been hard results wise. And I don't really pull something out of my ass, maybe I should consider retiring.'

So, that definitely was in my head at the time.

Does that song they played during the trophy ceremony make you feel a certain way still?

Yes, of course. I still get the nerd chills, as Artosis would say, when I hear it. And when I talk with people about my progaming career, and they're interested and they want to know more, that's probably the first video I show them. Because it's like, the atmosphere is so... you can truly tell from the YouTube VOD that it was amazing.



Have you been watching StarCraft II lately?

Yeah, I watched the WCS Global Finals, and everyone once in a while I head onto TeamLiquid and I see "oh there's a tournament with 6,000 ppl watching, let's see what it's about." But it's not like, regular.

What made you decide that a career in medicine was your transition? Did you always have some interest?

No, I didn't know that I was going into medicine before I was a progamer. Part of my anxiety while playing is I didn't really know what to do with my life. So progaming was working at the time, and was buying me time to figure it out.

But, as I said before, at times, I wasn't feeling that well mentally. And, I would look into reasons of me not being that happy at times, and I would come across articles and such written by psychiatrists, so that made me feel like 'oh I want to be a psychiatrist. And that's something, that's a medical specialty, I guess, that's what led me to study.

Now I don't really know if I want to be specifically a psychiatrist, but I'm happy with the choice I made.

Usually here I ask ppl to plug their team, Twitch stream, or whatever. What are we gonna do here? Say, "Hey, come to my hospital?"

*laughs* I guess I could thank everybody for making my esports career so memorable. From those past times, who will read this interview, that I miss them dearly.

And I want to do a shoutout to my WarCraft III team of Soviet War Elites (SWE).

Make sure to watch ThorZaIN play in ESL WarCraft III Pro Tour! If you're wondering where ToD has been, that's where you can find him as well.


You can follow ThorZaIN on twitter at @ThorZaIN_ and the ESL WarCraft 3 Pro Tour at @DreamHackWC3.

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TL+ Member
TheOneAboveU
Profile Blog Joined February 2011
Germany3367 Posts
August 08 2020 11:17 GMT
#2
Actually caught one of Thorzain's games in DH yesterday. Spoon Terran was always one of my favourites, glad he's doing well!
Moderatoralias TripleM | @TL_TripleM | Big Dark Energy!
Pangpootata
Profile Blog Joined January 2011
1838 Posts
Last Edited: 2020-08-08 11:24:59
August 08 2020 11:24 GMT
#3
Master Jane, only foreigner to win proleague award for best player of the round
opterown *
Profile Blog Joined August 2011
Australia54784 Posts
August 08 2020 11:41 GMT
#4
oh cool, thorzain's a doctor. interesting time to be one!
ModeratorRetired LR Bonjwa
TL+ Member
DarkGamer
Profile Joined November 2012
Germany320 Posts
August 08 2020 12:37 GMT
#5
great. thx for the inverview!
MockHamill
Profile Joined March 2010
Sweden1798 Posts
August 08 2020 12:45 GMT
#6
Interesting read. ThorZaiN was always my favorite Swedish programmer.

I always felt he was more talented than Naniwa although maybe not as motivated.
MyLovelyLurker
Profile Joined April 2007
France756 Posts
August 08 2020 13:22 GMT
#7
Minor spelling nit - the second time around, he's a psychia-christ. (Freudian slip ?)
"I just say, it doesn't matter win or lose, I just love Starcraft 2, I love this game, I love this stage, just play like in practice" - TIME/Oliveira
Archerofaiur
Profile Joined August 2008
United States4101 Posts
August 08 2020 14:10 GMT
#8
"I mean the patient is obviously suffering from schizophrenic psychosis. I recommend we initiate him on 50mg thorazine and..."

"Yes?"

"...why do you always do that?"
http://sclegacy.com/news/28-scl/250-starcraftlegacy-macro-theorycrafting-contest-winners
BaneRiders
Profile Joined August 2013
Sweden3630 Posts
August 08 2020 14:30 GMT
#9
On August 08 2020 21:45 MockHamill wrote:
Interesting read. ThorZaiN was always my favorite Swedish programmer.

I always felt he was more talented than Naniwa although maybe not as motivated.


Hehe, I remember watching them play each other in the final of E-Sport SM 2012-2013. Naniwa set out to beat ThorZain in a macro game, but after like 30 minutes or so he was clearly frustrated and gged out , only to win three straight maps with timing attacks. In the interview afterwards he said he wanted to beat ThorZain in a long macro game, but conceded he just couldn't.
Earth, Water, Air and Protoss!
Spinozah
Profile Joined August 2020
2 Posts
August 08 2020 14:35 GMT
#10
Great interview!

Sad to see that for many people SC2 is only a way to escape from reality and once they find themselves they just aren't interested in this game.
“The highest activity a human being can attain is learning for understanding, because to understand is to be free.”
Parser
Profile Joined March 2011
Italy87 Posts
August 08 2020 14:56 GMT
#11
ThorZaiN is the first progamer i was a fan of. Its tournament wins are one of my better sc2 memories
Liquid`MaNa
Profile Joined October 2009
Poland104 Posts
August 08 2020 14:57 GMT
#12
I miss you too Marcus <3 We had a lot of fun together.
Team Liquid
ZigguratOfUr
Profile Blog Joined April 2012
Iraq16955 Posts
August 08 2020 15:14 GMT
#13
Nice interview. There are so many players I wish we would get a life after sc2 interview for.
Kaizor
Profile Joined May 2015
Singapore909 Posts
Last Edited: 2020-08-08 15:37:15
August 08 2020 15:29 GMT
#14
TSL3 was one of the first SC2 tournaments that i watched. Needless to say, i became a huge fanboy of Thorzain after his win.

He might not always have the best results and his spoon terran way can be frustrating at times.

But like when i posted on his facebook when he retired, his TSL3 and Dreamhack wins will forever put him as one of the best foreign SC2 terrans.

Thanks for all the great games and memories Marcus, you made SC2 enjoyable for a lot of us and i am glad you are doing well even now.

** and that Dreamhack Stockholm victory is one of my favorite SC moments as well. Beating a Korean on your home soil when they were winning tournaments everywhere else. Getting all that support from your countrymen, nothing is sweeter than that.

Hit me up if you need chinese translations. soO fighting !!
Bagration
Profile Blog Joined October 2011
United States18282 Posts
August 08 2020 16:09 GMT
#15
Wow a doctor, good for him. I can just imagine the operation - slow and methodical
Team Slayers, Axiom-Acer and Vile forever
chipmonklord17
Profile Joined February 2011
United States11944 Posts
August 08 2020 17:38 GMT
#16
Glad to see he's doing well for himself. Great read
Clazziquai10
Profile Blog Joined August 2011
Singapore1949 Posts
August 08 2020 17:59 GMT
#17
[image loading]

Never forget
Ragnarork
Profile Blog Joined June 2011
France9034 Posts
August 08 2020 18:33 GMT
#18
Still got a special place for ThorZaIN and that TSL3 run in my heart. Great interview with lots of interesting insight.

What are we gonna do here? Say, "Hey, come to my hospital?"


Like, subscribe, donate your healthcare money!
LiquipediaWanderer
deacon.frost
Profile Joined February 2013
Czech Republic12129 Posts
August 08 2020 19:51 GMT
#19
On August 09 2020 03:33 Ragnarork wrote:
Still got a special place for ThorZaIN and that TSL3 run in my heart. Great interview with lots of interesting insight.

Show nested quote +
What are we gonna do here? Say, "Hey, come to my hospital?"


Like, subscribe, donate your healthcare money!

I wish I could. Sadly the last time i wanted to do some charitable thing I was refused, twice.
I imagine France should be able to take this unless Lilbow is busy practicing for Starcraft III. | KadaverBB is my fairy ban mother.
F u r u y a
Profile Joined August 2010
Brazil173 Posts
August 08 2020 20:19 GMT
#20
The Thors fighting against toss in TSL3. Then the quick nerf.

I'm enjoying those interviews.
WombaT
Profile Blog Joined May 2010
Northern Ireland24523 Posts
August 08 2020 20:25 GMT
#21
Why is the medical field so hell bent on stealing SC2 talent?
'You'll always be the cuddly marsupial of my heart, despite the inherent flaws of your ancestry' - Squat
Solar424
Profile Blog Joined June 2013
United States4001 Posts
August 08 2020 20:50 GMT
#22
On August 09 2020 05:25 Wombat_NI wrote:
Why is the medical field so hell bent on stealing SC2 talent?

He's trying to invent medivacs IRL.
Serimek
Profile Joined August 2011
France2274 Posts
August 08 2020 21:38 GMT
#23
Nice read, thank you. If it could be the first of a series of articles, I'm all in. I would be very interested in Stephano, Naniwa, Idra or Sen interviews.
SC2 is the best game to watch and was the best to play before I grew old and slow...
ROOTCatZ
Profile Blog Joined June 2005
Peru1226 Posts
August 08 2020 22:36 GMT
#24
What a great interview, huge fan
Progamerwww.root-gaming.com
UncleVinny
Profile Joined April 2011
United States35 Posts
August 09 2020 01:40 GMT
#25
Please keep the interviews coming! I want to know how Sheth, Nony, MVP, Spanishiwa, Jinro and MC are doing.
<3 Sheth
PartyBiscuit
Profile Joined September 2010
Canada4525 Posts
August 09 2020 03:57 GMT
#26
On August 09 2020 10:40 UncleVinny wrote:
Please keep the interviews coming! I want to know how Sheth, Nony, MVP, Spanishiwa, Jinro and MC are doing.

Agreed, really hoping we get a bunch more interviews of retired players, great read!
the farm ends here
col_jung
Profile Joined October 2017
139 Posts
August 09 2020 04:52 GMT
#27
Loved watching ThorZaiN's games back in the day. Good interview!
bObA
Profile Joined May 2012
France300 Posts
August 09 2020 07:27 GMT
#28
On August 09 2020 05:19 F u r u y a wrote:
The Thors fighting against toss in TSL3. Then the quick nerf.

I'm enjoying those interviews.


I remember the exact same thing !

Happy to read he is doing well and became a doctor.
Nice job !
Musicus
Profile Joined August 2011
Germany23576 Posts
August 09 2020 08:13 GMT
#29
He is really good in wc3, love to watch him play.

Nice interview, thanks for that!
Maru and Serral are probably top 5.
merz
Profile Blog Joined July 2004
Sweden2760 Posts
August 09 2020 09:02 GMT
#30
ThorZaiN!

It saddens me that you too also struggled with imposter syndrome:ish thoughts. I think a lot of the progamers "back then" did.

For what it is worth I always looked up to you as the smartest and most skilled and talented player we had in Sweden. I always tried to learn from you and I was very jealous of the way you could map out builds with such detail and how your decision making always seemed to be so crisp.

I'm glad you figured out yourself that it wasn't any luck. You were truley great! Hope you find success and joy in your medical career
Winners never quit, quitters never win.
BonitiilloO
Profile Joined June 2013
Dominican Republic614 Posts
August 09 2020 11:21 GMT
#31
HasuObs, MorroW, biGs i didn't remember this 3, what are they doing now?
How may help u?
AlgeriaT
Profile Joined April 2010
Sweden2195 Posts
August 09 2020 11:50 GMT
#32
Thorzain

Inc

Proleague

I want the old times back
CORN GIRL + Flash + FanTaSy + CholeraSC + iNcontroL 4 eva <3
Snijjer
Profile Joined September 2011
United States989 Posts
August 09 2020 17:46 GMT
#33
Nice to hear from him again. One of the first seriously good foreign Terrans.
boxerfred
Profile Blog Joined December 2012
Germany8360 Posts
August 09 2020 18:18 GMT
#34
<3
deacon.frost
Profile Joined February 2013
Czech Republic12129 Posts
August 09 2020 18:41 GMT
#35
I hope there will be an interview with both Ras (IDra & Whitera )
I imagine France should be able to take this unless Lilbow is busy practicing for Starcraft III. | KadaverBB is my fairy ban mother.
Superiorwolf
Profile Blog Joined March 2007
United States5509 Posts
August 09 2020 21:43 GMT
#36
Awesome interview wax, was a really great read Fun to reminisce on everything!
Check out my stream at www.teamliquid.net/forum/viewmessage.php?topic_id=315053 and follow me on Twitter @EGSuppy! :)
tommeyliang
Profile Joined December 2015
13 Posts
August 09 2020 22:25 GMT
#37
Thank you for the interview & article. ThorZaiN is also my favorite early-SC2 foreign Terran back in the day. Good to see him doing well by practicing medicine and playing WarCraft III at a leisure level.
Veluvian
Profile Joined December 2011
Bulgaria256 Posts
August 10 2020 07:10 GMT
#38
I remember back in the Summer of 2011 in MLG which was taken by MMA who said that from all the foreigners only ThorZain played really close to the Korean pro level.
Oz; MMA; Rain; sOs; Classic, Soulkey, TY, Dark
Edpayasugo
Profile Joined April 2013
United Kingdom2212 Posts
August 10 2020 07:37 GMT
#39
Nice interview, thanks.
FlaSh MMA INnoVation FanTaSy MKP TY Ryung | soO Dark Rogue | HuK PartinG Stork State
Hot_Bid
Profile Blog Joined October 2003
Braavos36374 Posts
August 10 2020 07:41 GMT
#40
will always remember that game 4 vs mc in TSL3

also mc in the chat after games 1-2 was like who tf is this guy how is he so good
@Hot_Bid on Twitter - ESPORTS life since 2010 - http://i.imgur.com/U2psw.png
M3t4PhYzX
Profile Joined March 2019
Poland4168 Posts
Last Edited: 2020-08-10 10:01:16
August 10 2020 10:00 GMT
#41
Thorzain (HU) vs (UD) Vortix - WC3 ESL Pro Tour Europe Season 1

an oldschool quarterfinal clash coming soon

should be good
odi profanum vulgus et arceo
JustPassingBy
Profile Blog Joined January 2011
10776 Posts
Last Edited: 2020-08-10 12:44:19
August 10 2020 12:43 GMT
#42
On August 10 2020 19:00 M3t4PhYzX wrote:
Thorzain (HU) vs (UD) Vortix - WC3 ESL Pro Tour Europe Season 1

an oldschool quarterfinal clash coming soon

should be good


Did Blizzard fix WC3's connection issues? If yes, I might give it another shot.

I really tried getting in WC3 a few months ago, but the gamebreaking bugs and lack of standard features (e.g. resume from replay) really put me off.
fishjie
Profile Blog Joined September 2010
United States1519 Posts
August 10 2020 16:35 GMT
#43
nice! glad to see thorzain doing well. didn't his thor rush build get thors singlehandedly nerfed in the first sc2 tsl? legend.
glad he found a strong transition into doctor
Chill
Profile Blog Joined January 2005
Calgary25975 Posts
August 10 2020 17:56 GMT
#44
All the best Thorzain! Glad to see you can put on a literal clinic
Moderator
Togekiss
Profile Joined January 2013
Canada154 Posts
August 10 2020 22:47 GMT
#45
Still remember the Day 9 daily devoted to Thorzain's TvT macro build he had used to roll over the likes of Puma...

It's true, Thorzain had the gift to create, refine, and optimize builds in a way that others just couldn't replicate. The attention to detail and his surgical and clinical execution was always a pleasure for me to watch, and something I always tried to emulate in my play.

This guy is a legend, and I'm really happy that things are going well for you TZain!!
yoshi245
Profile Joined May 2011
United States2969 Posts
August 12 2020 02:01 GMT
#46
I am personally ashamed I saw this interview days after it was posted. Tfunk is one of my all time favorite players and I still sport a sig with a quote of his.

Blizzard's ineptitude costed him a win against Moon in War3 Refunded earlier this year too.
"Numbers speak about the past, not the present." -Thorzain
Siggen
Profile Joined November 2011
143 Posts
Last Edited: 2020-08-13 06:32:03
August 13 2020 06:30 GMT
#47
Great to hear from ThorZaIN again! His GSTL three-kill was my favorite moment (starts at 42:11).

Shuffleblade
Profile Joined February 2012
Sweden1903 Posts
August 14 2020 00:06 GMT
#48
Big fan of his, was so cool to have two high level swedish pros with such different personalities battle it out back in the day. Very glad to hear all is going well for him, I hope he can win the TSLs and Dreamhacks of his current field as well!

On August 12 2020 11:01 yoshi245 wrote:
Blizzard's ineptitude costed him a win against Moon in War3 Refunded earlier this year too.

Indeed, that tournament was my first foray back into wc3 and that single thing made me lose all interest.
Maru, Bomber, TY, Dear, Classic, DeParture and Rogue!
Highways
Profile Joined July 2005
Australia6102 Posts
August 14 2020 16:11 GMT
#49
Heart of the Swarm truly killed the SC2 scene.

David Kim and his broodlord/infestor
#1 Terran hater
NiNsofie
Profile Joined May 2011
Sweden11 Posts
Last Edited: 2021-06-01 19:40:53
June 01 2021 19:37 GMT
#50
On August 09 2020 18:02 merz wrote:
ThorZaiN!

It saddens me that you too also struggled with imposter syndrome:ish thoughts. I think a lot of the progamers "back then" did.

For what it is worth I always looked up to you as the smartest and most skilled and talented player we had in Sweden. I always tried to learn from you and I was very jealous of the way you could map out builds with such detail and how your decision making always seemed to be so crisp.

I'm glad you figured out yourself that it wasn't any luck. You were truley great! Hope you find success and joy in your medical career



You were not bad yourself Merz! This interview and reading the comments were so bitter sweet to me. Gosh I miss 2012.

And yes, there were a lot of people around not getting quite the results they could due to imposter syndrome and other physical difficulties. I am working with esport kiddos now and wanna help them with this the best I can. It has always been a main concern for me too.
NiNsofie
Profile Joined May 2011
Sweden11 Posts
June 01 2021 19:46 GMT
#51
On August 08 2020 23:35 Spinozah wrote:
Great interview!

Sad to see that for many people SC2 is only a way to escape from reality and once they find themselves they just aren't interested in this game.



I see what you mean but I do not agree with your conclusion. I have loved SC since -98 but I have had lots of ups and downs with it. Not playing for years at a time. I think it's so intense, and you put so much into it that in order to get out you have to kinda let it go for a while. But it will always drag me, and many more, back in again. It is the best game ever created imo.

It's also a scary game to get back into. You know how much time you have to spend. You also know the level you were at before and it sucks to play worse again after a long break.

It is not as simple as "just a way to escape".
[UoN]Sentinel
Profile Blog Joined November 2009
United States11320 Posts
Last Edited: 2021-06-02 19:33:19
June 02 2021 19:32 GMT
#52
TSL3 still feels like yesterday sometimes. Probably my first tournament in either SC that I watched all the way through
Нас зовет дух отцов, память старых бойцов, дух Москвы и твердыня Полтавы
Luepert
Profile Blog Joined June 2011
United States1933 Posts
June 03 2021 01:31 GMT
#53
Thanks for this great interview. Great to see an ex-pro excelling in a totally different field.
esports
AbouSV
Profile Joined October 2014
Germany1278 Posts
June 03 2021 09:08 GMT
#54
I was wondering why I had a feeling of déjà-vu when reading the interview.

A nice bump anyway!
KT_Parry
Profile Joined May 2021
12 Posts
June 03 2021 20:02 GMT
#55
From Thorzain to ThoraZine
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