Is FlyQuest the favorite to win the LCS in 2023?

We're not giving them the trophy already, but it's not that wild to pin FlyQuest as NA's strongest contender.

Image via FlyQuest

Completely building a team from scratch in the span of one offseason is rare in League of Legends, but it’s nothing new. When it does happen, the team that takes the massive undertaking of completely overhauling its starting five usually draws eyes and instantly enters the championship conversation. 

Recommended Videos

For FlyQuest, the expectations are no different going into 2023. The team bid farewell to all five of its 2022 starters and will bring in a new starting lineup ahead of next season, one that features a strong mix of proven domestic veterans, exciting names coming to the LCS from overseas, and young players who can serve as the foundation of the organization’s future—three ingredients all commonly found in championship teams.  

For the past two seasons, FlyQuest has been in the middle of an ongoing rebuild. After losing all five of the players who took the team to the League World Championship in 2020, FlyQuest dedicated itself to finding younger, more inexperienced players to build its next generation of championship-caliber teams. 

Over the course of the last two LCS seasons, 13 different players donned the FlyQuest jersey on the LCS stage. This year, though, FlyQuest hopes to slam the revolving door shut by gathering a contingent of players and staff members who could very well win the LCS altogether. 

Why FlyQuest’s 2023 roster could excite

FlyQuest’s totally revamped roster places a focus on winning the LCS now. From top to bottom, the starting lineup features a stark combination of experienced domestic players and exciting international stars. That tried-and-true method of combining experience with potential has worked in the past, most recently last season when Evil Geniuses combined its pre-existing veterans with some of NA’s most promising rookies to win the LCS Spring Split

This season, FlyQuest will look to do the same. At the carry positions, FlyQuest will debut upstart LCK transfers VicLa and Prince in North America, who played for KT Rolster and Liiv SANDBOX, respectively, last season. With neither of those teams making Worlds, those two players remained some of the best-kept secrets to Western fans. 

Prince, in particular, was one of the best players in the LCK last season, and one could make the argument that he was the best player in the world to miss the World Championship. His 6.2 Summer Split KDA was the third-highest among all LCK players, according to League stats site Oracle’s Elixir

Beyond its Korean-imported carries, FlyQuest stayed domestic at all other positions, giving a full-time job to Liquid’s one-time top prospect Eyla at the support position and bringing in two former LCS champions in Impact and Spica to man the top lane and jungle roles, respectively. But FlyQuest won’t have Eyla to start their 2023 campaign, the team announced on Jan. 17. In his stead, Winsome will be FlyQuest’s starting support to kick off the 2023 LCS Spring Split.

Related: Same mission, new wings: MVP jungler completes supercharged FlyQuest LCS roster, featuring legendary top laner and LCK rising stars

The mere notion of these five players playing together is enough to make any fan of pro League perk up. The fact that the roster came together in the span of just one offseason makes it that much more intriguing. And finally, when you slap a FlyQuest jersey on these five guys, it’s borderline unbelievable considering how the franchise has marred in the midsection of the LCS for the better part of the last two years. Practically overnight, the franchise has gathered enough talent to transform itself from fringe candidate to title contender. 

Bolstering the staff

Photo by Colin Young-Wolff via Riot Games

Perhaps the most pivotal factor in FlyQuest’s offseason turnaround is the restructuring of the organization’s front office. After the organization was purchased by the Viola family, owners of the NHL’s Florida Panthers, FlyQuest almost immediately brought in former 100 Thieves general manager Chris “PapaSmithy” Smith to spearhead the team’s lightning-paced rebuild going into 2023. During his tenure with 100 Thieves, he brought the team to two consecutive World Championships, while winning the LCS outright in 2021. 

Related: ‘Natural progression’: PapaSmithy joins FlyQuest as new president and chief gaming officer

Apart from PapaSmithy, FlyQuest also brought in a sincere World Championship-caliber coach in former DRX head coach Ssong. The veteran head coach led DRX to the Summoner’s Cup just two months ago and subsequently parted ways with the organization in the biggest blow-it-all-up-after-a-championship move in esports history. Now, with Ssong at the helm in his second North American stint (he previously coached four LCS teams between 2017 and 2020), FlyQuest could have the necessary brainpower to not only compete domestically but internationally as well. 

Championship aspirations

Photo via Riot Games

With a complete overhaul of its starting lineup, coaching staff, and front office, FlyQuest is entering the 2023 season as the most completely transformed team in North America—maybe even the world. One could easily make the argument that no other team in the global League scene made more replacements to turn themselves from outsider to contender during the 2022-23 offseason. 

And now, the goal for FlyQuest (realistically) shouldn’t be to just compete for an LCS title. This team has gathered enough pieces of a championship-caliber lineup and staff that competing (and winning) internationally should be a goal. Making it to Worlds in 2023 must be the absolute floor for a team that’s brought together players and coaches who have proven they can perform well domestically and make strides internationally. With Worlds-winning names on both the starting lineup and the coaching staff, FlyQuest has slammed the gauntlet down even before the 2023 season has begun. Expecting them to win both at home and abroad isn’t a pipedream—it’s a likely reality.


The 2023 LCS season will begin on Jan. 26, with FlyQuest playing their opening game against another new-look squad in Team Liquid.

Author
Image of Michael Kelly
Michael Kelly
Staff Writer covering World of Warcraft and League of Legends, among others. Mike's been with Dot since 2020, and has been covering esports since 2018.