@@jonathand7697I don’t think Riot discloses how much the fines are. Zellsis didn’t reveal it, neither did Sadhaak for teabagging. I’m guessing it’s a ridiculous amount or else people wouldn’t stop doing it
The duality of this guy is great. Here he is articulate, well spoken and really on point. Then u watch some yt shorts and he pops up, short off screaming his lungs of to a 13 yr old. Also, he is really good at the game, like he he has a really consistent play style, with reliable results in the pro scene.
@@mawnns nope. One of my favorite characters when I was a kid 7-10 yrs. was Bradley from FMA and Yagami from death note. 100% should not copy or try to be them.
It's also can be translated to "I see our brothers and their org in CS scene got paid more than us and got a lot commisions from their stickers sales and entry of the CS Major, thus now because RIOT finally gave us a chance to get similar thing, then why not? let us get our bag."
Okay fr tho riot is fumbling not having pro signature stickers or stickers in general.. you can’t even trade skins or have different wears.. let people make their weapon unique why skins in valorant so ass 😭
This is very wholesome, I've always thought it must be an honour to have anything about you or your team in the actual game Like how WoW puts NPCs for some people or what riot does with their own games
That’s like a super genuine answer, imo at least. Yeah the money is nice but it’s actually super cool to get a piece of you in the game you play. LoL actually lets the players decide the champion and have their own input in the design and that just sounds like an awesome experience. Hopefully down the road we’ll maybe get player specific skins.
It’s a good incentive to allow the broadcast to remain clean which in turn opens up a wider audience and in turn cast a wider net for advertising. It’s business and there’s nothing wrong with it
@@Millicente I understand that part but like... I'm pretty sure everyone that watches valorant is okay with swearing. I mean, it's a game about shooting people with guns and planting bombs, how are some little swear words too far? Why is it so important to advertisers that it's clean?
@@VI.mp4 Yes, this is an established phenomenon outside of e-sports and exists within e-sports as well. Rated R movies make less profit than movies rated for everyone or PG-13, because of this. I think you're so deep in the sauce you forget that normal people are much more numerous than us Valorant playing, terminally online freaks (description may or may not apply to you), and habitual cursing is not really all that common in professional and social settings (without close friends). Keeping the cursing out abides by professionalism and makes the scene more welcoming and less toxic-seeming
Zellsis was cooking during this monologue. what a goat.
my guy cooked 6 different flavours
Bro only talks in twitch lamguage
everything he made from the bundle is going into that fine lmao
Welp he’s gonna have to sell enough to cover the fine 😂
how much are the fines for cursing?
@@jonathand7697 $20,000 . Not too bad though, pretty light for Sentinels. Considering that's how much they pay TenZ a week.
@@jonathand7697idk but he got fined in the high thousands for doing the gawk gawk motions
@@jonathand7697 I think it's 500 usd
@@jonathand7697I don’t think Riot discloses how much the fines are. Zellsis didn’t reveal it, neither did Sadhaak for teabagging. I’m guessing it’s a ridiculous amount or else people wouldn’t stop doing it
The duality of this guy is great. Here he is articulate, well spoken and really on point. Then u watch some yt shorts and he pops up, short off screaming his lungs of to a 13 yr old.
Also, he is really good at the game, like he he has a really consistent play style, with reliable results in the pro scene.
He could be better though like tenz and zekken they absolutely banged it if everyone at sen comes to that level it should be easy win
Zellsis needs to sell the sen bundle so he has funds to pay the fine for swearing
Riot is so soft to fine people for swearing, the characters in the game literally swear
@@Sai_Zz the difference is. Pro players are irl role models to some people
@@bernarditagarcia6151so you never tried to be like your favorite cartoon or anime character as a kid? 😂 idk if that argument is valid
@@mawnns nope. One of my favorite characters when I was a kid 7-10 yrs. was Bradley from FMA and Yagami from death note. 100% should not copy or try to be them.
I hope they don't fine him. He wasn't even directing the cuss to anyone, unlike the other fines that Riot impose. It was just an expression.
very well spoken
every bit counts for an org good job zellsis
Pls don't fine me ...new slogan😂😂😂
this guy might be an esport org ceo in the future
His dream is becoming one so i was here before it happened
There goes all his cut from selling the SEN bundles. Dude needs to pay that fine😅
It's also can be translated to "I see our brothers and their org in CS scene got paid more than us and got a lot commisions from their stickers sales and entry of the CS Major, thus now because RIOT finally gave us a chance to get similar thing, then why not? let us get our bag."
Okay fr tho riot is fumbling not having pro signature stickers or stickers in general.. you can’t even trade skins or have different wears.. let people make their weapon unique
why skins in valorant so ass 😭
Well spoken, my man.
you could probably fit a couple subway surfer and family guy clip in there
This is very wholesome, I've always thought it must be an honour to have anything about you or your team in the actual game
Like how WoW puts NPCs for some people or what riot does with their own games
And all his earnings gone.....😂
Who s here after they won? 🔥
That’s like a super genuine answer, imo at least. Yeah the money is nice but it’s actually super cool to get a piece of you in the game you play. LoL actually lets the players decide the champion and have their own input in the design and that just sounds like an awesome experience. Hopefully down the road we’ll maybe get player specific skins.
Watch this in 2x its like he's crazy
who's sova clutch was that in the first clip? remember watching that but don't remember who it was
its literally zellsis clips
@@llama_3620yea i thought it was zellsis at first ofc but i couldn't find the clip so I maybe thought it was some1 else and i was misremembering
it was sinatraa or shazam
tarik's stream.. Tarik told him if he clutch then he'll gift 50 subs to him
He handled that really well
gotta buy the bundle so he can pay the fine
CEO Zellsis
0:49 woah woah woah PAUSE
ur back?
welp now he has a reason for promoting the sen bundle XD
Buy the sen bundle tho
Goated
PR TRAINED!!! bro said games i grew up with lol and thats it
I bought the Sen Bundle.
"They're putting so much in to us..."
🤨🏳️🌈?
what kind of soft ass game fines players for cussing,💀cs2 would never the casters drop f bombs.
w
So incredibly stupid players get fined for swearing
It’s a good incentive to allow the broadcast to remain clean which in turn opens up a wider audience and in turn cast a wider net for advertising. It’s business and there’s nothing wrong with it
@@Millicente I understand that part but like... I'm pretty sure everyone that watches valorant is okay with swearing. I mean, it's a game about shooting people with guns and planting bombs, how are some little swear words too far? Why is it so important to advertisers that it's clean?
@@VI.mp4because more people will watch it if its clean, meaning more revenue
@@haarisbutt2075 but as I said is that even true? Are there actually people that refuse to watch because people say shit or fuck occasionally??
@@VI.mp4 Yes, this is an established phenomenon outside of e-sports and exists within e-sports as well. Rated R movies make less profit than movies rated for everyone or PG-13, because of this. I think you're so deep in the sauce you forget that normal people are much more numerous than us Valorant playing, terminally online freaks (description may or may not apply to you), and habitual cursing is not really all that common in professional and social settings (without close friends). Keeping the cursing out abides by professionalism and makes the scene more welcoming and less toxic-seeming