FunPlus Phoenix’s Doinb takes center stage at League of Legends World Championship

Kim “Doinb” Tae-sang stared straight ahead at the camera, speaking rapidly in Mandarin.

The only time he looked away was to listen to the questions in English from interviewer Laure “Bulii” Valée. While waiting for translation from Clement Chu, answering the questions himself, and waiting again for them to be translated into English for the broadcast audience, he continued to face forward, staring with a smile. His team, FunPlus Phoenix, had just qualified for the League of Legends World Championship quarterfinals.

His bottom lip curled upward, giving his chin a slight dimple, transforming his face into a half-grimace.

Doinb was at once the gregarious, outgoing mid laner and disapproving in-game leader of FunPlus. Their group stage performances had been subpar, well below his and the audience’s expectations. He stood still throughout the interview, a stark contrast to his emotional onstage outbursts after important wins in China’s League of Legends Pro League, all flailing limbs and screaming. Here, only his fingers twitched unwittingly, clasped together in front of his jersey. There was no rocking back and forth on his heels, no fidgeting. Even when he moved his head, it seemed deliberate, a second language to accompany his verbal responses.

The next question came and went. Doinb interrupted himself, clicking his tongue between his teeth with a chiding sound before continuing with his answer. At the end he laughed broadly. His head shook self-deprecatingly, and his tongue darted out, licking his lips as if to stop himself from clicking it again in mock-disdain.

“I’m not satisfied by my performance,” he said. “A lot of times, I can be quite good, but a lot of times I can be quite bad as well. I really dislike players like that, and by saying that, I really dislike myself right now.”

A more open smile revealed a gleaming row of white teeth. This, too ,was directed forward, at the camera, his captive audience.


Summoner’s Rift is, in a way, a stage. And Doinb, now a centerpiece of the Chinese League of Legends scene, is one of the great performers of our time.

Doinb arrived in China in 2015 never having played professionally for a South Korean team. Instead, he was scouted by a Chinese team from the South Korean solo queue ladder and was part of a large wave of South Korean pro gamers leaving their home country for China, North America and other regions during that time. To this day, that 2014-15 offseason is called the Korean Exodus.

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