Gale Force Esports tops that list of teams, as they have vetted a European RLCS team since April – and after some roster changes post-Season 3, they’ve been one of the teams to beat not only in their region but the world. Shortly after Northern Gaming took the crown of Season 3, GFE looked to reform anew as sights were set on the remainder of 2017 and Season 4 of RLCS.

Rebuilding

According to Jos “ViolentPanda” van Meurs:

Photo: Gale Force Esports

“Going well” is an understatement. GFE earned second place at DreamHack: Summer, with Pierre “Turbopolsa” Silfver as a try-out, first place at the second RLCS Summer Series, then second place at the and DreamHack Atlanta back to back.

“At the start of X Games I said three teams would be good: FlipSide, NRG and EnVyUs.” ViolentPanda tells us, “I thought EnVyUs would be better than NRG but we kind of let it go in the finals. We should have won but we weren’t focused that much.”

Forever Second Place

While it seems they’ve been cursed with second place finishes, you have to consider the amount of work the Europeans have put in while only having a full roster for barely one full month. Considering travel to Sweden in June for DreamHack: Summer, then a small tour in the United States to X Games in Minneapolis and Atlanta for another DreamHack championship, earning second place seems like a pretty good takeaway from the latest competition.

Language Barrier

As a European team, all three members are from differently nationalities. ViolentPanda is Dutch, Courant “Kaydop” Alexandre is French and Turbopolsa is Swedish. With three different players and three different languages, you would think the team would have difficulty with in-game communication. But ViolentPanda says they’ve dealt with the language barrier due to little in-game communication:

Photo: Gale Force Esports

Developer Dedication

Rocket League is unique in the eSports spectrum, so Psyonix doesn’t really have much to go off of when organizing Rocket League eSports. That obviously hasn’t set them back with the outstanding organization for the Rocket League Championship Series, along with countless amounts of third party tournaments announced fairly regularly. Moving into Season 4, Psyonix announced a minor league series would be competing week after week along with the RLCS.

ViolentPanda does’t think the new format will effect the team going into the new season:

Photo: Gale Force Esports

We’re going to practice a lot and we expect to get top eight for season four. We don’t focus on other teams that much, we just prepare for ourselves. Of course we want the finals but I think there will be many more tournaments to focus on other than RLCS."

 

Needless to say the future is looking extremely bright for the European Rocket League team. After they recently took the top spot in Nvidia’s Best Buddy Tournament, the teams’ focus is now set on Season 4 of RLCS, the Universal Open, and the many other tournaments to come throughout the year. It’s safe to say if they stay on this track, Gale Force will quickly become a world contender in Rocket League eSports.