Ogre 2
Tom Ryan (born August 3, 1986), known under the pseudonym Ogre 2, is a retired professional Halo player from Columbus, Ohio, widely considered to be the greatest Halo player of all time. He and his twin brother Dan ("Ogre 1") are known as the "Ogre Twins". In 2005, he and his brother won the gold medal in Halo 2 at the World Cyber Games.[1] His eSports tournament history includes in Halo: Combat Evolved, Halo 2, Shadowrun, Halo 3, Halo: Reach, Halo 4, Halo 5: Guardians, Halo 2: Anniversary, and Call of Duty: Ghosts.
OGRE 2 | |
---|---|
Tom Ryan | |
Personal information | |
Born | August 3, 1986 |
Hometown | Pickerington, Ohio |
Nationality | United States |
Nickname(s) | OGRE 2 |
Career information | |
Status | Retired |
League | Major League Gaming |
Games | Halo Call of Duty Shadowrun |
Career prize money | $288,643.42 |
Career history | |
As player: | |
2003–2004 | Shoot to Kill |
2004–2004 | Domination |
2005 | Shoot to Kill |
2005–2006 | Team 3D |
2006–2011 | Final Boss |
2011–2012 | Instinct |
2014 | Shoot to Kill |
2014–2016 | Counter Logic Gaming |
2016 | Team EnVyUs |
2016 | Denial eSports |
As coach: | |
2017 | Evil Geniuses |
2017–present | Team Reciprocity |
The "Ogre Twins" are a highly accomplished pair, having won many national Halo: Combat Evolved and Halo 2 tournaments.[2] Tom has played for many professional teams, including Instinct, Shoot to Kill, Team Domination, DtO, Final Boss, and Team3D.[3] In June 2006, he signed a three-year contract with Major League Gaming. He was shown on many of the Boost Mobile MLG Pro Circuit episodes on USA Network in 2006.[4] and briefly sponsored by NBA player Gilbert Arenas. He later went on to be sponsored by organisations such as Red Bull, Stride Gum and Eon. He was a member of Counter Logic Gaming from 2014 to 2016.
Gaming career
The OGRE Twins Era
The following content may be biased. Tom Ryan began his professional gaming career playing at small local tournaments along with Dan Ryan, his twin brother. The two got involved with professional gaming after much success.[5] Ogre 2’s 4v4 teams in Halo CE finished first on multiple occasion,and were regarded among the best players. However, for 2v2’s, Ogre 2 played mostly with his twin brother, and they became the best duo in the history of halo. They became so unstoppable that the level "Chill Out" was nicknamed Ogre City. They won many events together, and quickly stamped their names as the best players in Halo. Since then, Tom has been a member of Halo: Combat Evolved and Halo 2 teams, some of which have garnered media and gamer attention for their impressive showings. These teams include Team 3D's Halo 2 team,[6] Team StK, Team Domination, Final Boss, Team Instinct, a revived STK, and CLG. Tom and his brother also represented the United States in the Halo 2 competition at the 2005 World Cyber Games in Singapore, defeating team Canada team to secure a first-place finish.[7] When Ogre 2 teamed up with Walshy in Halo CE, they became an unstoppable force that would not be beaten. To cap off the end of Halo CE, Ogre 2 took home Nationals in 2004 for 2v2’s.
They won countless Halo 2 tournaments after the transition to the new game, which also saw them add another dominant Halo CE player, Saiyin, and team Domination was born. The team was considered unbeatable and although they lost a few events, they never fell below 2nd place. They soon changed their names to Final Boss due to their persistent presence in tournament finals. As the key member of Final Boss, Ogre 2 lead his team to win the first Halo 2 Nationals and two consecutive Major League Gaming National Championships in 2004 and 2005.[8] It wasn’t until the emergence of Team Carbon that Final Boss struggled to continue their reign of dominance. Carbon and Final Boss would soon develop what was the biggest rivalry in Halo. At the 2006 Nationals, Final Boss ran into Carbon in the finals. They finished the 2006 season by placing second to Team Carbon in a close 4–6 match. The OGRE twins and their team Final Boss dominated MLG tournament play in both Halo CE and Halo 2, finishing in the top 2 in 38 consecutive tournaments (winning 30 of these), including 10 tournament wins in a row between 2004-2005 and 9 tournament wins in a row between 2005-2006.[9] They also have an older brother Marty, OGRE3, who served as a coach for Final Boss at several tournament.[10] With the last season of Halo 2 quickly approaching in 2007, the team made a change. They dropped Saiyin, who had lost interest in the game, and picked up Strongside from Carbon. This proved to be an amazing trade for Final boss as they became more dominant than before, including a loss free tournament. In the 2007 Nationals Final Boss ran all over the competition, and Final Boss took home the 100k check. This was one of the biggest winnings in competitive gaming history at the time. Ogre 2 and Ogre 1 had some of the highest winnings among players as well.
The Best Ever
As the 2008 Halo 3 season started, it seemed as if Final Boss would pick up where they left off, winning MLG Meadowlands by defeating Team Classic. In a surprising move, after placing dismally at the next two events, Final Boss dropped longtime captain Walshy to pick up another high-profile player from Str8 Rippin, Neighbor. Walshy would go on to join former Halo 2 rivals Carbon. Going into 2009, Strongside departed for the newly formed Status Quo and Tom’s brother Dan moved to Australia, leaving Final Boss. This left Ogre 2, the only original remaining member of Final Boss, to recreate his team alongside pro players Mackeo, Fearitself, and Victory X. The next season brought a variety of new additions, including the aforementioned Mackeo, Fearitself, Victory X, along with Neighbor, Sypher and Totz. After a disappointing 8th-place finish at the end of the 2009 season with a roster of Ryan, FearItSelf, Totz and Victory X, the team improved to a 3rd-place finish to a very good Instinct team.
Still not satisfied, Final Boss dropped Totz to pick up Justin "iGotUrPistola" Deese, part of the Triggers Down squad that had dominated the 2009 MLG circuit. With this pickup Final Boss started clicking, finishing 2nd behind Instinct and then going on to win the next tournament outright. With this win, Ogre 2 passed his brother and became the winningest player in MLG history. Final Boss continued to dominate Halo 3 in 2010, winning three tournaments straight, including the national championship. This gave Ogre 2 the unique distinction of becoming the only player to become national champion of every game in the Halo series, exiting every Halo title as a National Champion (a streak he would continue in the next title, Halo Reach)[11] and all but secured his legacy as the greatest competitive Halo player of all time.
The God Squad
In 2011, Halo: Reach made its debut on the Pro Circuit at MLG Dallas. Final Boss, came in as the highest seeded team, but lackluster results left Tom with a 10th-place finish; for him, a career low. After this event, Ogre 2 and his teammate Pistola decided to leave Final Boss and join up with another set of gaming twins, Roy and Lunchbox, and coach Towey of Team Instinct. There was discussion if the Final Boss team name would be returned to Ogre and possibly change Victory X/FearitsSelf’s team name to The Agency, a team Victory played on in Halo 2, but it never came to be. After this merger, many dubbed this team as the "God Squad" because all five members are considered to be among the very best in the game. Each player had won a Halo 3 national title in the last two years before, with Roy and Pistola fighting for “Best Player” by taking MVP after MVP. During online scrimmages, teams quickly realized the squad was almost impossible to beat, and the nickname God Squad stuck. In their first event, MLG Columbus 2011, Team Instinct only dropped one game out of 22 on their way to winning the event. They went undefeated in the following event at Anaheim, taking their win-loss record to 43-1. As they continued to win, teams around the league tried to create their own super teams to try to take down Instinct. Everyone was shocked when newly formed Infamous team, ranked 13th, beat Instinct in the finals. Following this event, Orlando showed the same lack of show of their earlier success. After being upset by Status Quo in the loser bracket, Instinct took 5th, their worst placing as the God Squad. The team practiced hard for the nationals and they came back to win the national title at MLG Providence. This made Ogre a 5 time national champion, being the only player to win a national championship in every single Halo and winning the last tournament for MLG in every Halo.
The End of Halo
In 2012, Ogre 2 and his team Instinct continued to compete at Halo: Reach and did so at the next MLG Event in Columbus, Ohio. They placed 2nd, losing to team Status Quo. From there, he and his team competed in several smaller scale events, taking first at an Arena League Gaming event. Several months later, Halo 4 was released and Instinct once again competed in Dallas, Texas for a pre-release MLG tournament. Some players illegally obtained the game early, however, and members of Instinct didn't think of it as a real event.[12]
Call of Duty & Retirement
In 2013, with the competitive Halo scene all but finished due to the dwindling popularity of the series and MLG pulling the franchise from their line-up, Ogre 2 made the transition to competing in rival game Call of Duty: Black Ops 2. Ogre 2's new team, Rage, consisted of all eSports veterans who had been successful at other competitive games.[13] In 2014, Ogre 2 continued with the franchise and moved on to Call of Duty: Ghosts, playing at multiple events with other former Halo pros, after reviving and competing under the Final Boss name. In March 2014, Ogre 2 announced his retirement from competitive gaming, citing a lack of enjoyment as the primary reason.[14] He ended his career with over 100 tournaments attended, including winning 5 out of the 8 year ending MLG National Championships (across 4 different Halo titles).[15]
The Return of Halo and OGRE 2
After nearly 3 years effectively in the esports wilderness, Halo made a return to the Competitive Gaming scene after the announcement of Halo: The Master Chief Collection, and more specifically, Halo 2: Anniversary, the remake of arguably the most popular competitive Halo title. OGRE 2 brought back the name StK and competed at the developer run Launch Invitational, finishing in 3rd place. After the success of this tournament, the Halo Championship Series [16] was announced, again endorsed by developer 343 Industries, and hosted by Electronic Sports League.[17] OGRE 2 and his team mates were picked up by League of Legends organization Counter Logic Gaming,[18] who were making their first splash into competitive Halo. The first HCS event was in Columbus, hosted by Iron Gaming, and once again OGRE 2 took home a 1st-place finish,[19] with a hard-fought win over Evil Geniuses, making Halo 2: Anniversary the sixth gaming title he has a 1st-place finish in (his fifth within the Halo franchise), and his 40th national/global level tournament win,[20] spanning over a decade. After holding onto the number one seed for the majority of the season, a second-place finish to Evil Geniuses at Gamers 4 Giving pushed them back for the first time since the season started. Evil Geniuses continued their dominance and took PAX nationals away from CLG in the finals, leaving CLG to take home 20K.
With season 2 about to start up, CLG saw differently from whole season 1 teammates Heinz. Heinz was sent over to Denial for the talents of Cloud. CLG seemed to have a more slayer oriented team, placing in the top 4 in the first two preseason online cups. However, their weaknesses showed when CLG took a disappointing 5th place at the first LAN event of the new season. The team struggled after this by taking 5th/6th in the next online cup. Soon after, Ogre 2 left for Hawaii to attend his brothers wedding, which overall showed on the CLG team. As a replacement CLG snagged Clutch, which didn’t work out for CLG’s favor. They placed poorly for most of the cups and moved down in the HCS standings as a result. Upon the return of Ogre 2, the rust was still not shaken off for Ogre 2 and CLG. CLG had their worst placing in the 4th online cup, but soon changed by taking 3rd in the next two cups. CLG was facing a lot of questions going into HCS Indy due to the fact they were not as dominant and a 5th seed. Wins in the first couple rounds would pair them against a more aggressive Cloud 9 and an unstoppable Evil Geniuses who were almost unbeatable during season 2. After being beat by Cloud 9, CLG fought through the loser bracket only to take 2nd just behind EG. Much like season 1, CLG was beat by EG in the winners bracket and fought through the losers bracket to meet back up with EG back in the finals. It seems as if CLG could take the championship after taking the first series, but EG came clawing back to 3-0 CLG in the second series.
Despite CLG taking 2nd, they became one of the top 2 best teams to have played in H2A. Tom, via Twitter, showed some desire to compete in halo 5.
Halo 5 and the World Championships
After MLG announced they wanted to take the reins of Halo 5 after its release, people quickly became interested in the new potential the game had. The prize pool quickly jumped to a million dollars and is now residing somewhere on the plus side of two million dollars. CLG was one of the few teams to stay together after the offseason of H2A. After a short time, Cloud was kicked from the team and was replaced by Frosty. Royal and Frosty took the main slayer roles and Snakebite could then be moved to objective/support, which seemed to suit him better. Ogre continued to play the support role and CLG was looking like one of the better teams. Going into the online qualifiers, CLG got the bad end of luck and got a higher seed. They played EG early in the bracket and finished 5th-8th. Upset with their placing, they came out hot, taking 3rd-4th, losing to the winning team Allegiance, and 1st, beating Allegiance in the following tournament. The next tournament seemed to have effect on the other players of CLG after another 3rd-4th finish. This placing would lead to Ogre being removed from his team for the first time ever on January 24 and would later join Mikwen, former teammate Pistola and Arkanum on team EnVyUs.[21] Due to a last minute team change, EnVyUs was unable to play for Xgames and Ogre had to sit out and watch his previous team CLG make it to the finals. This wasn’t as bad as the finish at the NA qualifiers which ultimately ended in them not qualifying for the World Championship.
Going into the next season which was picked up by ESL, Ogre was struggling to find a team. He originally ran games with Ninja and the Renegades squad, but that ended up not working out. As the Summer Pro League started to come closer, Ogre teamed with Seduce, Arkanum, and Nemassist on team Denial. Denial took 2nd in the Invitation online qualifier which gave them an invite to the Summer Qualifier. However, Denial failed to qualify for the Last Chance Qualifier. After another unsatisfying result, Ogre decided to take a break from Halo and find other spots in the Esports world.
He announced his retirement from professional gaming on May 21, 2016.[22][23]
He later became a coach for the Evil Geniuses organization following previous coach, Towey's, transition to Call of Duty. He remained a coach until EG disbanded their Halo roster.
On August 26th Ogre2 joined the Florida Mutineers Call of Duty team as general manager.[24]
Tournament History
Individual Competitions (Halo: Combat Evolved)
- 2nd place MLG Philadelphia 2004
- 2nd place MLG Chicago 2004
- 2nd place MLG Seattle 2004
- 2nd place MLG New York City National Championships 2004
- 7th place MLG Dallas 2004
- 2nd place Halo 50K2
- 3rd place Halo 50K3
- 7th place AGP 3
- 3rd place AGP 6
Individual Competitions (Halo 2)
- 1st place MLG Dallas 2006
- 1st place MLG Washington DC 2005
- 1st place MLG Los Angeles 2005
- 1st place MLG Atlanta 2005
- 2nd place VGL Orlando 2005
- 4th place MLG San Francisco 2005
- 7th place MLG Houston 2005
- 9th place MLG Orlando 2005
- 3rd place MLG New York 2006
- 6th place MLG Anaheim 2006
- 3rd place MLG Meadowlands 2007
- 1st place CPL Winter 2008
2v2 Competitions (Halo: Combat Evolved)
- 2nd place MLG Philadelphia 2004 (Ogre2 & DM Gestapo)
- 1st place MLG Dallas 2004 (Ogre2 & Strangepurple)
- 2nd place MLG Chicago 2004 (Ogre2 & Strangepurple)
- 1st place MLG Atlanta 2004 (Ogre1 & Ogre2)
- 3rd/4th place MLG Seattle 2004 (Ogre2 & Walshy)
- 3rd place AGP 5 (Ogre2 & Walshy)
- 1st place AGP 6 (Ogre2 & Walshy)
- 1st place Halo 50K2 (Ogres)
- 1st Place Halo iGames 2v2 Nationals (Ogres)
- 1st place Halo 50K (Ogres)
Team Competitions (Shadowrun)
2004
- 1st place MLG Philadelphia 2004 (Team StK)
- 1st place MLG Dallas 2004 (Team StK)
- 2nd place MLG Chicago 2004 (Team StK)
- 2nd place MLG Atlanta 2004 (Team StK)
- 1st place MLG Seattle 2004 (Team Domination)
- 1st place MLG New York City National Championships 2004 (Team Domination)
- 1st place AGP 3
- 1st place AGP 5 (Team Domination)
- 1st place AGP 6 (Team Domination)
- 1st place Halo 50K2
- 3rd place Halo 50K
2005
- 1st place World Cyber Games (Team 3D)
- 1st place VGL Orlando
- 1st place AGP 7 D.C.
- 1st place CPL Dallas
- 1st place Halo 50K4 Atlanta
- 1st place MLG Washington D.C. 2005 (Team Shoot to Kill)
- 1st place MLG San Francisco 2005 (Team Shoot to Kill)
- 1st place MLG Houston 2005
- 1st place MLG Orlando 2005
- 1st place MLG St. Louis 2005
- 2nd place MLG Philadelphia 2005
- 1st place MLG Los Angeles 2005 (Team 3D)
- 1st place MLG Atlanta 2005 (Team 3D)
- 1st place MLG Chicago 2005 (Team 3D)
- 1st place MLG New York City National Championships 2005 (Team 3D)
2006
- 1st place MLG New York 2006 (Team Final Boss)
- 1st place MLG Dallas 2006 (Team Final Boss)
- 1st place MLG Anaheim 2006 (Team Final Boss)
- 1st place MLG Chicago 2006 (Team Final Boss)
- 2nd place MLG Orlando 2006 (Team Final Boss)
- 2nd place MLG New York City Playoffs 2006 (Team Final Boss)
- 2nd place MLG Las Vegas National Championships 2006 (Team Final Boss)
2007
- 1st place MLG Charlotte 2007 (Team Final Boss)
- 1st place MLG Meadowlands 2007 (Team Final Boss)
- 2nd place MLG Dallas 2007 (Team Final Boss)
- 1st place MLG Chicago 2007 (Team Final Boss)
- 2nd place MLG Orlando 2007 (Team Final Boss)
- 1st place MLG Las Vegas National Championship 2007 (Team Final Boss) Note: They didn't drop a single game the entire tournament.
- 1st place MLG Canada Open 2007 (Team Final Boss)
2008
- 1st place MLG Meadowlands 2008 (Team Final Boss)
- 7th place MLG San Diego 2008 (Team Final Boss)
- 5th place MLG Orlando 2008 (Team Final Boss)
- 3rd place MLG Toronto 2008 (Team Final Boss)
- 3rd place MLG Dallas 2008 (Team Final Boss)
- 4th place MLG Las Vegas National Championship 2008 (Team Final Boss)
2009
- 5th place MLG Meadowlands 2009 (Team Final Boss)
- 3rd place MLG Columbus 2009 (Team Final Boss)
- 5th place MLG Dallas 2009 (Team Final Boss)
- 9th place MLG Anaheim 2009 (Team Final Boss)
- 8th place MLG Orlando National Championship 2009 (Team Final Boss)
2010
- 3rd place MLG Orlando 2010 (Team Final Boss)
- 2nd place MLG Columbus 2010 (Team Final Boss)
- 1st place MLG Raleigh 2010 (Team Final Boss)
- 1st place MLG Washington D.C. 2010 (Team Final Boss)
- 1st place MLG Dallas National Championship 2010 (Team Final Boss)
2011
- 10th place MLG Dallas 2011 (Team Final Boss)
- 1st place MLG Columbus 2011 (Team Instinct) Note: They only lost one game at this event.
- 1st place MLG Anaheim 2011 (Team Instinct) Note: They didn't lose a single game the entire tournament.
- 2nd place MLG Raleigh 2011 (Team Instinct)
- 5th place MLG Orlando 2011 (Team Instinct)
- 1st place MLG Providence National Championship 2011 (Team Instinct)
2012
- 2nd place MLG Columbus 2012 (Team Instinct)
- 1st place AGL Columbus 2012 (Team Instinct)
2012
- 8th Place MLG Dallas 2012 Pre-Release Tournament (Team Instinct)
2014/2015
Season 1
- 3rd place Halo MCC: Launch Invitational (Team Shoot to Kill)
- 1st place HCS Pre-Season Cup #1 (Counter Logic Gaming)**
- 1st place HCS Pre-Season Cup #2 (Counter Logic Gaming)**
- Top 128 HCS Season Cup #1 (Counter Logic Gaming)**
- 1st place HCS: Iron Gaming Columbus 2014 (Counter Logic Gaming)
- 5th place HCS Season Cup #2 (Counter Logic Gaming)**
- 2nd place HCS: UGC St. Louis 2014 (Counter Logic Gaming)
- 1st place HCS Season Cup #3 (Counter Logic Gaming)**
- 4th place HCS Season Cup #4 (Counter Logic Gaming)**
- 3rd place HCS Season Cup #5 (Counter Logic Gaming)**
- 5th place HCS Season Cup #6 (Counter Logic Gaming)**
- 5th place HCS Season Cup #7 (Counter Logic Gaming)**
- 2nd place HCS: G4G 2015 (Counter Logic Gaming)
- 2nd place HCS: Season 1 Finals (Counter Logic Gaming)
Season 2
- 4th place HCS Pre-Season Cup #1 (Counter Logic Gaming)**
- 2nd place HCS Pre-Season Cup #2 (Counter Logic Gaming)**
- 5th place HCS: Iron Gaming Atlanta 2015 (Counter Logic Gaming)
- 5th/6th HCS Season Cup #1 (Counter Logic Gaming)**
- 7th/8th HCS Season Cup #4 (Counter Logic Gaming)**
- 3rd HCS Season Cup #5 (Counter Logic Gaming)**
- 3rd HCS Season Cup #6 (Counter Logic Gaming)**
- 7th/8th HCS Season Cup #7 (Counter Logic Gaming)**
- 2nd place HCS: PGL Indianapolis 2015 (Counter Logic Gaming)
- 2nd place HCS: Season 2 Finals (Counter Logic Gaming)
2016
- 5th-8th place HWC Online Cup #1 (Counter Logic Gaming)**
- 3rd-4th place HWC Online Cup #2 (Counter Logic Gaming)**
- 1st place HWC Online Cup #3 (Counter Logic Gaming)**
- 3rd-4th place HWC Online Cup #4 (Counter Logic Gaming)**
- 16th-32nd place HWC Online Cup #5 (Team EnVyUs)**
**Online event
Awards
- "Best Overall Player" - 2005 MLG Pros' Choice Awards
- "Best Overall Player" - 2006 MLG Pros' Choice Awards
- "Best Overall Player" - 2007 MLG Pros' Choice Awards
- "Best Strategist" - 2010 MLG Pros' Choice Awards
- "Best Leader" - 2011 MLG Pros' Choice Awards
- "Boost Mobile Season MVP " - 2007 MLG
- "Most Valuable Player" - MLG Charlotte 2007
- "Most Valuable Player" - MLG Meadowlands 2008
- "Matador Bold Player" MLG D.C. 2010
References
- America Takes World Gaming Crown
- Character Profile: Ogre 1 Archived 2006-12-17 at the Wayback Machine
- Official Pro Website
- Ogre 2 on USA Network Archived 2006-12-17 at the Wayback Machine
- Moore, Kurt (2005-10-16). "Big Knob". The Marion Star. pp. 7A.
- GotFrag eSports - Halo 3 News Story - Halo 2 Team Leaves 3D Archived 2007-03-14 at the Wayback Machine
- Return of the Kings: US Gamers Sweep World Cyber Games - The winners are going home - Softpedia
- MLG Signs Four-Man Halo 2 Team for $1 Million Contract - Xbox Archived 2007-01-11 at the Wayback Machine
- "Ogre 2: The Greatest Player of All Time?".
- Magee, Kyle (September 8, 2006). "Pro Player – OGRE 1". Major League Gaming. Retrieved May 20, 2015.
- Waddell, Jason (2011-11-17). "An Ode to Ogre 2". Major League Gaming. Retrieved 2018-10-21.
- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1HZ9b0HiBk0
- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K4R72g_3puA
- Tom Ryan [@TomRyanOGRE2] (27 March 2014). "Retiring:" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
- Tom Ryan [@TomRyanOGRE2] (27 March 2014). ""Placings Summary" I had done: Mostly updated anyways- 30+ local/small events not included in all of this I'm sure" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
- "Halo Championship Series".
- "Halo Championship Series | ESL Play".
- "CLG".
- "Iron Gaming Columbus Placings | Beyond Entertainment".
- Tom Ryan [@TomRyanOGRE2] (15 December 2014). "That was the big # 40 for me (4v4 national level event). Still kickin at 28 and 1/2! Also <3 my team @Royal_2 @SnakeBiteFPS @RichieHeinz :)" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
- "Halo comes to the X Games: Preview". 2016-01-28.
- "OGRE 2 Was the World's Greatest Spartan".
- "The Greatest Halo Player of All Time Retired Today". 2016-05-23.
- "Florida Mutineers".
External links
- OGRE 2's Twitter Page
- OGRE 2's Halo Stream
- An ode to OGRE 2
- OGRE 2 - The Greatest Player of All Time
- Esports Amped - Boss Battle: Carbon vs. FB
- 2006 MLG Pro's Choice Awards
- "So you wanna be a professional video game player?" by ESPN's Patrick Hruby
- OSU Lantern "A Slacker's Dream" - By Jared Chaney
- Ogre 2 wins Halo 2 MVP award
- MLG Canada 2007 Wrap Up
- MLG Player Interview OGRE 2
- Congratulations to Instinct
- Instinct Wins AGL Columbus 2012