Giants completes 2023 VALORANT roster with former G2, NAVI players

A new look for Giants.

Photo by Colin Young-Wolff/Riot Games

On what’s already been a busy day for partnered EMEA VALORANT teams, Giants Gaming is adding to the excitement building up for VCT 2023 with the official announcement of its starting roster.

Recommended Videos

Giants, which completed in EMEA VCT in 2021 and the VRL Spain league in 2022, has rebuilt around long-standing Spanish player Adolfo “Fit1nho” Gallego, with Žygimantas “nukkye” Chmieliauskas and Aaro “hoody” Peltokangas from G2, Kirill “Cloud” Nehozhin from NAVI, and Emir “rhyme” Muminovic from Gen.G. Giants also picked up former G2 coach Daniil “pipsoN” Meshcheryakov.

G2 had been planning to move to the Americas league for 2023, meaning both nukkye and hoody were going to be available regardless of the Carlos Rodriguez and Andrew Tate controversy eventually costing G2 a VALORANT partnership spot. NAVI also made Cloud available as the organization pursued a stacked roster of the former FPX core and former world champion cNed. Rhyme, a European player who played in NA for Gen.G this past year, left before Gen.G left NA for the Pacific league.

The G2 core joining Giants will bring a wealth of international LAN experience to the Giants team. Fit1nho will take on the primary duelist role, rhyme will be in-game leader and controller, Cloud will be the primary initiator, hoody will play the sentinel role, and nukkye will fill the flex role.

While almost all the teams in the Americas and Pacific leagues have announced their full rosters, half of the teams in EMEA have still not finalized their teams. Liquid, Vitality, Karmine Corp, Heretics, and KOI have not confirmed their respective rosters, and both NAVI and Fnatic only finalized theirs yesterday.

All 30 partnered teams will compete at the VCT 2023 Kickoff event in Sao Paulo, Brazil in February.

Author
Image of Scott Robertson
Scott Robertson
VALORANT lead staff writer, also covering CS:GO, FPS games, other titles, and the wider esports industry. Watching and writing esports since 2014. Previously wrote for Dexerto, Upcomer, Splyce, and somehow MySpace. Jack of all games, master of none.