Perkz
Luka Perković, better known as Perkz (previously stylized as PERKZ and before that as PerkZ), is a Croatian professional League of Legends player who as of May 2020 is the bot laner for G2 Esports of the LEC.[1] He was named Rookie of the Split for the 2016 Spring EU LCS, which G2 won.[2] He is the only European professional player to hold seven EU LCS / LEC[lower-alpha 1] titles.
Perkz | ||||||||||||||||||||
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Luka Perković | ||||||||||||||||||||
Personal information | ||||||||||||||||||||
Born | 30 September 1998 | |||||||||||||||||||
Hometown | Zagreb, Croatia | |||||||||||||||||||
Nationality | Croatian | |||||||||||||||||||
Nickname(s) | Uma Jan | |||||||||||||||||||
Career information | ||||||||||||||||||||
Status | Active | |||||||||||||||||||
League | LEC | |||||||||||||||||||
Current team | G2 Esports | |||||||||||||||||||
Games | League of Legends | |||||||||||||||||||
Role | Bot | |||||||||||||||||||
Career history | ||||||||||||||||||||
2014 | GSI Gaming | |||||||||||||||||||
2015 | Gamers2 | |||||||||||||||||||
2015 | Millenium | |||||||||||||||||||
2015 | Gamers2 | |||||||||||||||||||
2015–present | G2 Esports | |||||||||||||||||||
Career highlights and awards | ||||||||||||||||||||
Honors
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Career
2014 Season
PerkZ joined GSI Gaming midway through the season, and there played alongside P1noy and Hiiva, among others. With the team, he competed at DreamHack Summer 2014, though they did not make it past the group stage.[4] PerkZ also won EpicGear Cup 16 and came 2nd in EpicGear Cup 17 with the team before they disbanded later on in the year.
2015 Season
At the start of the season, PerkZ joined Gamers2. He participated at International Invitational Tournament 4 with the team and later the EUCS Spring Qualifier on the same roster as beansu, Obvious, Kobbe and kaSing, though they were beaten by Team Nevo in the final of their qualifier bracket. He then left the team, joining Millenium soon after.
With Millenium, PerkZ and the roster finished 2nd at Gamers Assembly 2015 behind only Origen, though he stopped playing with the team before DreamHack Tours 2015 due to exams. Not long after, PerkZ officially left the team.
At the start of the next month it was announced that PerkZ would be rejoining Gamers2, who had retained their Challenger Series spot for the EUCS Summer Season. In October, Gamers2 rebranded themselves to G2 Esports.
2016 Season
G2 Esports quickly rose to prominence and recognition in the EU LCS. Perkz was playing well in the mid lane, G2 being consistently tied for first place after each week until the end of the split, when they held first place. The playoffs also saw them strong, as they defeated both Fnatic and Origen 3–1 to win the season and secure an invitation to the 2016 Mid-Season Invitational.[5]
Going into MSI, G2 Esports was seen not to win, but to come in second place to the Korean representatives, SK Telecom T1.[6] However, the team lost their first four games of the round robin and ultimately finished in fifth place, ahead of only SuperMassive eSports, and out of playoff contention—importantly, this placement meant that Europe would forfeit their Pool 1 seed at the World Championship. In a statement published partway through the second day of play, G2 stated that their players had taken vacation time after a "rigorous Spring Split. AD carry Emperor later stated that there had been an internal conflict within the team one day prior to the start of the event.
2019 Season
Caps was traded from LEC rival Fnatic to G2, resulting in two mid lane players on the same team. Perkz swapped to the AD Carry position, replacing his teammate Hjarnan.[7] G2's 2019 season was very successful, with the team winning the Mid-Season Invitational and making it to the 2019 League of Legends World Championship finals, where Perkz and the rest of G2 were defeated by FunPlus Phoenix.
2020 Season
For the 2020 season, Perkz moved back to the mid lane, swapping positions with Caps.[8] After the spring split had ended, Perkz swapped back to the bot lane.[1]
Tournament results
G2 Esports
- 1st — 2016 Spring EU LCS
- 5th–6th — 2016 Mid-Season Invitational
- 1st — 2016 Summer EU LCS regular season
- 1st — 2016 Summer EU LCS playoffs
- 1st — 2017 Spring EU LCS regular season
- 1st — 2017 Spring EU LCS playoffs
- 2nd — 2017 Mid-Season Invitational
- 2nd — 2017 Summer EU LCS regular season
- 1st — 2017 Summer EU LCS playoffs
- 2nd — 2018 Spring EU LCS regular season
- 2nd — 2018 Spring EU LCS playoffs
- 3rd–4th — 2018 League of Legends World Championship
- 1st — 2019 LEC Spring regular season
- 1st — 2019 LEC Spring playoffs
- 1st — 2019 Mid-Season Invitational
- 1st — 2019 LEC Summer playoffs
- 2nd — 2019 League of Legends World Championship
- 1st — 2020 LEC Spring regular season
- 1st — 2020 LEC Spring playoffs
References
- Explanatory notes
- The LEC was known as the League of Legends European Championship (EU LCS) until a rebrand in early January 2019.[3]
- Sources
- https://www.oneesports.gg/lol/g2s-perkz-and-caps-will-once-again-swap-roles-for-lec-summer-split/
- Volk, Pete (6 June 2016). "5 things you need to know from the first week of LCS".
- https://www.engadget.com/2019-01-18-riot-lec-league-esports-design-rebrand.html
- AB, DreamHack. "Dreamhack DreamHack Summer 2014".
- Sport1.de,. "League of Legends MSI 2016: G2 Esports im Portrait".
- "PerkZ on G2's lack of MSI prep: 'We decided...taking that vacation would be maybe better for us'".
- https://dotesports.com/league-of-legends/news/the-biggest-league-of-legends-roster-swaps-of-the-offseason
- https://www.espn.com/esports/story/_/id/28497433/g2-perkz-caps-swap-positions
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