Noah ‘Justin’ Smith, a former player for the Immortals and 100 Thieves Valorant has been called out on Twitter for his BattleBit montage in which he makes fun of individuals who believe he is hurting casual gaming. Because of a BattleBit montage posted by a former Valorant pro named Justin, the conversation around casual gaming and the mindset of “always trying your hardest” has overtaken Twitter again.
The former player of 100 Thieves and Immortals has been broadcasting gameplay of the newly released blocky shooter online, and he has received many comments complaining that he is spoiling the gaming experience for everyone else on the server. The current college Valorant player decided to compile a video of some of his greatest highlights and intersperse them with the given responses. Consequently, swarms of casual gamers have responded to his tweets and retweeted his quotes. When this article was written, the Tweet had over 3,000 retweets and over 1,000 responses.
One person on Twitter expressed their opinion: “I’m going to go out on a limb and say people like this are one of the main reasons the FPS gaming genre is dying.” The ‘Pro’ export min-maxing dweebs are the equivalent of anime tourists in the gaming world.
They go from one franchise to another, wreaking havoc on the player base everywhere they go by transforming something enjoyable into an oppressively hot and sticky hell hole. Another person said that they are similar to locusts.
BattleBit montage performed by a Valorant player provokes rage online
The former Valorant pro revealed that he was attempting to poke fun at himself by giving the post “dominating blue-collar workers in BattleBit” more than he was trying to make fun of anybody else. He made this admission after the post went viral on Twitter. It’s easy to ‘dominate’ the guys I’m competing against since they have a limited amount of talent. Nevertheless, Justin said, “It’s still a cool game to have clips in because it has rapid movement, and you can do flashy target-switching in it.”
Currently, he is contending for a spot at Maryville University and working toward earning his degree. He has competed in VCT tournaments, and his most recent appearance was on Gen.G just before the corporation transferred its Valorant activities to South Korea.
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