Toyz (gamer)

Kurtis Lau Wai-kin[1] (Chinese: 劉偉健; born June 9, 1992), better known by his in-game name Toyz, is a retired professional League of Legends player, best known for winning the Season 2 World Championship as the mid laner for the Taipei Assassins.[2] Following his second retirement in late 2015, he transitioned to several coaching and managerial roles for esports teams in his native Hong Kong.

Toyz
Personal information
Born (1992-06-09) June 9, 1992
British Hong Kong
HometownHong Kong
Career information
StatusActive
Current teamnone
GamesLeague of Legends
RoleCoach
Mid Laner (formerly)
Career history
As player:
2011–2012CrossGaming
2012–2013Taipei Assassins
2014–2016Hong Kong Esports
As coach:
2014Fnatic
2016–2017Raise Gaming
2017–2019G-Rex
Career highlights and awards
Chinese name
Traditional Chinese劉偉健
Simplified Chinese刘伟健

Career

After starting his competitive career by playing for the amateur team CrossGaming in 2011,[3] Toyz was recruited by the Taipei Assassins in April 2012, with whom he went on to win the Season 2 World Championship.[2][4] Although he was successful while playing for the Taipei Assassins, in June 2013 he was forced to retire from professional play because of carpal tunnel syndrome.[3]

In 2014, he coached for the European team Fnatic during their run in the 2014 World Championship,[5] which ended in the group stage.[6] However, Toyz returned to professional play in 2015, forming the Hong Kong Esports team together with former Taipei Assassins teammate Wang "Stanley" June Tsan.[7] Toyz left Hong Kong Esports on 30 October 2015, after making a lengthy post on his Facebook account accusing the team's CEO, Derek Cheung, of match fixing.[1]

On 12 September 2016, Toyz founded Raise Gaming to compete in the Elite Challenger Series (ECS), the secondary league of the League of Legends Master Series (LMS), with the goal of qualifying for the promotion tournament. Under Toyz's coaching the team placed first in the 2017 ECS Spring regular season and second in playoffs. The team qualified for the LMS after defeating Team Yetti in the promotion tournament. When the team rebranded to G-Rex on 15 September 2017, Toyz remained as a coach, before becoming the organisation's Director of Esports in mid-2018. He left G-Rex at the end of 2019.

Tournament achievements

Date Event Placing Final game
2012-04-30 NVIDIA Game Festival 2012 2nd Taipei Assassins 1–2 World Elite
2012-05-29 Go4LoL Pro Asia Season 1 1st Taipei Assassins 2–0 World Elite
2012-06-17 StarsWar 7 1st Taipei Assassins 2–1 World Elite
2012-07-15 IGN Pro League Season 5 Taiwanese Qualifiers 1st Taipei Assassins 2–0 Corsair
2012-09-01 Season Two Taiwanese Regional Finals 1st Taipei Assassins 2–0 Corsair
2012-10-13 Season 2 World Championship 1st Taipei Assassins 3–1 Azubu Frost
2012-11-17 2012 Garena Premier League Season 1 1st Taipei Assassins 3–1 Singapore Sentinels
2012-12-02 IGN Pro League Season 5 3rd Taipei Assassins 0–2 Fnatic
2013-04-21 2013 Garena Premier League Spring 1st Taipei Assassins no playoffs
2013-05-19 NVIDIA Game Festival 2013 3rd Taipei Assassins 2–1 OMG
2013-05-26 All-Star Shanghai 2013 – Mid Lane Skill Competition 1st Toyz 1–0 Misaya
2013-08-29 2013 Garena Premier League Championship 2nd Taipei Assassins 0–3 ahq e-Sports Club
2015-07-26 2015 League of Legends Master Series Summer 2nd Hong Kong Esports 0–3 ahq e-Sports Club

References

  1. Cheung, Karen (30 October 2015). "Local League of Legends gamer leaves eSports team; suggests manager fixed tournaments". Hong Kong Free Press (HKFP). Retrieved 24 April 2020.
  2. "Taipei Assassins Crowned League of Legends Champions". IGN. 16 October 2012. Retrieved 24 April 2020.
  3. Wong, Tsui-kai (November 17, 2014). "Toyz' story: Kurtis Lau wants to take HK Esports to the world championship of League of Legends". Young Post. South China Morning Post Publishers. Retrieved December 2, 2015.
  4. Parkin, Simon (July 6, 2014). "A league of their own". Eurogamer. Gamer Network. Retrieved December 2, 2015.
  5. Kulasingham, Nilu (September 8, 2014). "Fnatic picks up Toyz as a coach for the Season 4 World Championship". onGamers. CBS Interactive. Retrieved December 2, 2015.
  6. "League of Legends World Championships week two round-up". PC Gamer. Future plc. September 28, 2014. Retrieved December 2, 2015.
  7. Chen, James (November 26, 2014). "Hong Kong Esports Reintroduces Toyz and Stanley to Competitive Play". LoL Esports. Riot Games. Retrieved December 2, 2015.


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