Id: | s1mple |
Ukrainian: Олександр Костилєв | |
Name Trans: | Oleksandr Kostyliev |
Birth Date: | 2 October 1997 |
Nationality: | Ukrainian |
Team: | Natus Vincere |
Role: | AWPer |
Career Role: | Sniper, Rifler |
Career Start: | 2013 |
Years1: | 2014–2015 |
Team1: | Hellraisers |
Years2: | 2015 |
Team2: | Flipsid3 Tactics |
Years3: | 2016 |
Team3: | Team Liquid |
Years4: | 2016–present |
Team4: | Natus Vincere |
Years5: | 2024 |
Team5: | Team Falcons (loan) |
Highlights: |
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Oleksandr Olehovych Kostyliev (born 2 October 1997), better known as s1mple, is a Ukrainian professional Counter-Strike 2 player for Natus Vincere.[1] He is considered to be one of the best players in Counter-Strike history.[2] [3] [4]
Kostyliev was born on 2 October 1997.[5] He started playing Counter-Strike at four years old at the recommendation of his older brother. S1mple picked up on its release in 2012, joining his first professional team a year later.[6]
S1mple's first team was a team called LAN DODGERS, but he was soon signed by Courage Gaming. Around September 2014, s1mple was signed by a large organisation known as Hellraisers.[7] There, he joined ANGE1, Dosia, Kucher, and Markeloff, who s1mple considers his idol.[8]
In January 2015, s1mple was soon removed from Hellraisers due to his inflammatory comments about Germans, and an ESL wire ban for cheating.[9] S1mple himself says that the ban was from cheating in Counter-Strike 1.6.[10] However, records from ESL show that it was an in-game ban from when S1mple played CS:GO.[11] This ban was also extended to 2016 due to ban evasion.[12] S1mple was soon after signed by Flipsid3 Tactics, but his time in the team would cut short due to the team's semi-final exit at ESWC 2015. At this period in his career, s1mple was known for being quite "toxic", or rude to his teammates.[13] [14]
After a short stint studying Chinese at a university, s1mple moved to Los Angeles, United States in early 2016 and joined Team Liquid. A Team Liquid player, Spencer "Hiko" Martin, was standing in for Flipsid3 at ESWC 2015, and he developed a friendly relationship with s1mple there.[15] Team Liquid surprised at the first major, and reached the semifinals of, before falling to the eventual champions, Luminosity Gaming. Despite this result at the game's biggest tournament, it wouldn't be long before s1mple would leave Team Liquid, citing homesickness. The next major of the year was approaching, and s1mple once again played for Team Liquid.[16] During the semifinals at ESL One Cologne 2016, Valve Corporation added a graffiti on Cache commemorating s1mple's falling AWP play against fnatic.[17] Thus, Team Liquid became the first North American team to reach a major final. They were stopped in the finals by the same Brazilian lineup of SK (formerly Luminosity Gaming).[18] After leaving Team Liquid, he replaced Danylo "Zeus" Teslenko on Natus Vincere.[19] With Na'Vi, s1mple won, and he was awarded the #4 placement in the HLTV top 20.
During the first major of the year, ELEAGUE Major 2017, Na'Vi lost to Astralis during the quarterfinals. After a group stage exit at PGL 2017 Krakow Major Championship, Na'Vi benched Ladislav "GuardiaN" Kovacs and Denis "seized" Kostin while bringing in former member Danylo "Zeus" Teslenko.[20] [21] GuardiaN had been the AWPer for Na'Vi, so s1mple was forced to take up the sniper rifle after his departure. Despite these changes, Na'Vi continued their drought of results, and found a replacement for seized in the form Denis "electronic" Sharipov.[22] s1mple didn't find much success in 2017, but he still kept up his individual form from the previous year. S1mple was awarded the #8 placement in the HLTV top 20 this year, down from #4 in 2016 due to a lack of results in the team.[23]
Na'Vi started 2018 with a semi-final finish at . At the start of 2018, Brazilian organisation MIBR attempted to sign s1mple and . The deal was reportedly very close to being finished, but Na'Vi asked for too high of a buyout, and the deal eventually fell through.[24] After two 2nd-place finishes at Starladder & i-League StarSeries Season 4 and Dreamhack Masters Marseille, Na'Vi won their first event of the year at StarSeries & i-League Season 5; they would follow it up with wins at CAC 2018, and ESL One Cologne 2018. S1mple won MVPs at StarSeries and Dreamhack Marseille, despite his team not winning the events.[25] [26] [27] [28] [29] In the semifinals at Cologne, they beat the best team at the time, Astralis.[30] Na'Vi would lose to Astralis at the second major of the year, . Na'Vi won their final event of the year, BLAST Pro Series: Copenhagen 2018, and s1mple would once again claim the MVP award.[31] Due to s1mple's personal performance,[32] he would be nominated for the #1 spot at the HLTV top 20 players of 2018.[33] According to the statistics from HLTV, s1mple in 2018 achieved the highest individual rating out of all of previous top 20 players. In retrospect, 2018 s1mple is considered by many fans and pundits alike as the best player to ever touch CS:GO.[34] [35] [36] [37]
Na'Vi came 3rd to 4th in the first major of the year. S1mple would keep up his form from 2018,[38] and receive an MVP at StarSeries Season 7. After this, Na'Vi would eventually hit a slump and replace s1mple's long time teammate Ioann "Edward" Sukhariev with Kirill "Boombl4" Mikhailov who was in September 2019 made the team's leader (or IGL).[39]
Na'Vi went into the PGL Major as the heavy favourites after placing first in their regional ranking tournament by reverse sweeping Gambit in the finals.[40] After going undefeated in the Legends stage of the Stockholm Major, Na'Vi proceeded to the playoffs, defeating home favorites NiP in the process.[41] Na'Vi retained their form and won the Major, making history by winning every single map played throughout the tournament.[42] S1mple's individual performance through the Major, including a 2.26 HLTV rating in one of the two maps against Gambit in the semifinals, earned him tournament MVP.[43] [44] At the end of the year, s1mple was named Best Esports Player at The Game Awards.[45]
On 26 October 2023, s1mple announced that he would be stepping away from professional Counter-Strike competition temporarily. He would be replaced by w0nderful on 31 October.[46] [47] Upon the release of Counter-Strike 2, which replaced CS:GO shortly before he stepped away, s1mple was critical of the game, saying that it was a "shit game".[48] The break would ultimately mean he would be on the bench for NaVi during PGL Copenhagen 2024, as they ended up winning their second Major.[49]
s1mple would return to professional Counter-Strike competition on 19 February 2024, signing on a one-month loan with the Saudi-based Team Falcons, which saw him compete at the BLAST Premier Spring Showdown online event. This loan spell would only last 1 match, as Team Falcons lost to Metizport in the first round.[50] [51]
Placement | Tournament | Location | Date | |
---|---|---|---|---|
With Team Liquid | ||||
Columbus, United States | March 29, 2016 – April 3, 2016 | |||
ESL One Cologne 2016 | Cologne, Germany | July 5, 2016 – July 10, 2016 | ||
With Natus Vincere | ||||
New York, United States | September 30, 2016 – October 2, 2016 | |||
StarSeries Season 3 | Kyiv, Ukraine | April 4, 2017 – April 9, 2017 | ||
ESL One Cologne 2017 | Cologne, Germany | July 7, 2017 – July 9, 2017 | ||
Boston, United States | January 12, 2018 – January 28, 2018 | |||
DreamHack Masters Marseille 2018 | Marseille, France | April 18, 2018 – April 22, 2018 | ||
StarSeries Season 5 | Kyiv, Ukraine | May 28, 2018 – June 6, 2018 | ||
CAC 2018 | Shanghai, China | June 14, 2018 – June 18, 2018 | ||
ESL One Cologne 2018 | Cologne, Germany | July 3, 2018 – July 8, 2018 | ||
Atlanta, United States | July 21, 2018 – July 29, 2018 | |||
London, United Kingdom | September 5, 2018 – September 23, 2018 | |||
EPICENTER 2018 | Moscow, Russia | October 23, 2018 – October 28, 2018 | ||
BLAST Pro Series: Lisbon 2018 | Lisbon, Portugal | December 14, 2018 – December 15, 2018 | ||
IEM Katowice 2019 | Katowice, Poland | February 13, 2019 – March 3, 2019 | ||
StarSeries Season 7 | Shanghai, China | March 30, 2019 – April 7, 2019 | ||
ESL One Cologne 2019 | Cologne, Germany | July 2, 2019 - July 7, 2019 | ||
DreamHack Masters Malmö 2019 | Malmö, Sweden | October 1, 2019 - October 6, 2019 | ||
ESL Pro League Season 10: Finals | Odense, Denmark | December 3, 2019 - December 8, 2019 | ||
ICE Challenge 2020 | London, United Kingdom | February 1, 2020 - February 6, 2020 | ||
BLAST Premier: Spring 2020 Regular Season | London, United Kingdom | January 31, 2020 - February 16, 2020 | ||
IEM Katowice 2020 | Katowice, Poland | February 24, 2020 – March 1, 2020 | ||
ESL Pro League Season 12: Europe | Europe (Online) | September 1, 2020 - October 4, 2020 | ||
IEM Beijing-Haidian 2020: Europe | Europe (Online) | November 6, 2020 - November 22, 2020 | ||
IEM Global Challenge 2020 | Europe (Online) | December 15, 2020 - December 20, 2020 | ||
BLAST Premier: Global Final 2020 | Europe (Online) | January 19, 2021 – January 24, 2021 | ||
BLAST Premier: Spring Groups 2021 | Europe (Online) | February 4, 2021 - February 14, 2021 | ||
DreamHack Masters Spring 2021 | Europe (Online) | April 29, 2021 – May 9, 2021 | ||
Blast Premier: Spring Finals 2021 | Europe (Online) | June 15, 2021 - June 20, 2021 | ||
IEM Cologne 2021 | Cologne, Germany | July 6, 2021 - July 18, 2021 | ||
ESL Pro League Season 14 | Europe (Online) | August 16 - September 12, 2021 | ||
PGL Major Stockholm 2021 | Stockholm, Sweden | October 26, 2021 - November 7, 2021 | ||
Blast Premier: Fall Finals 2021 | Copenhagen, Denmark | November 24, 2021 - November 28, 2021 | ||
Blast Premier: World Final 2021 | Copenhagen, Denmark | December 14, 2021 - December 19, 2021 | ||
PGL Major Antwerp 2022 | Antwerp, Belgium | May 9, 2021 - May 22, 2021 | ||
BLAST Premier: Spring Finals 2022 | Lisbon, Portugal | June 15, 2021 - June 19, 2021 | ||
IEM Cologne 2022 | Cologne, Germany | July 7, 2022 - July 17, 2022 | ||
IEM Katowice 2023 | Katowice, Poland | Feb 4th - Feb 12th 2023 |
Rankings
Other awards