Life (gamer)

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Life
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Lee Seung-Hyun at the MLG Fall Championship
Personal information
NameLee Seung-Hyun
Nickname(s)Life, The Ling King, L'Enfant Terrible
Born (1997-01-11) January 11, 1997 (age 25)
NationalitySouth Korean
Career information
GameStarCraft
Team history
2011 - 2012ZeNEX
2012 - 2015StarTale
2015 - 2016KT Rolster
2016 -Afreeca Freecs

Lee Seung-Hyun (Korean: 이승현) is a former professional StarCraft II player from South Korea who played Zerg under the alias Life. He was on the Korean team Afreeca Freecs,[1] which he joined in January 2016. He has also played for StarTale and KT Rolster.

On April 21, 2016 South Korean prosecutors announced that they were charging Life, along with Bbyong, with matchfixing.[2][3] He was convicted and sentenced to eighteen months in prison, suspended for three years, and fined 70,000,000 South Korean won. His WCS Championship was also stripped from him by Blizzard Entertainment, the publisher of Starcraft. ESPN named his match fixing the most disappointing event in ESports in 2016.[4]

Major Achievements[]

  • 2012 TeamLiquid StarLeague 4 - Runner-up
  • 2012 GSL Season 4 - Winner
  • 2012 MLG Fall Championship - Winner
  • 2012 GSL Blizzard Cup - Winner
  • 2013 Iron Squid – Chapter II - Winner
  • 2013 MLG Winter Championship - Winner
  • 2013 DreamHack Open: Bucharest - 3rd-4th place
  • 2013 IEM Season VIII - New York - Winner
  • 2013 DreamHack Open: Winter - Runner-up
  • 2013 ASUS ROG: NorthCon - 3rd-4th place
  • 2014 Global StarCraft II League Season 1 - 3rd-4th place
  • 2014 DreamHack Open: Bucharest - Winner
  • 2014 IEM Season IX - Toronto - 3rd-4th place
  • 2014 WCS Global Finals - Championship revoked after match fixing conviction.[4]
  • 2014 DreamHack Open: Winter - Runner-up
  • 2015 IEM Season IX - Taipei - Winner
  • 2015 GSL Season 1 - Winner

References[]

  1. ^ http://www.thescoreesports.com/news/5919
  2. ^ "Archived copy". The Daily Dot. Archived from the original on 2016-04-22. Retrieved 2016-04-21.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  3. ^ "Starcraft 2: E-sport stars charged with match fixing". BBC News. 25 April 2016. Retrieved 4 June 2020.
  4. ^ a b "2016 ESPN Esports Awards - Biggest Disappointment". ESPN.com. January 7, 2017. Retrieved January 7, 2017.
Preceded by StarCraft II World Championship Series winner (revoked after conviction for match fixing)
2014
Succeeded by
Kim "sOs" Yoo Jin


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