

Modern Warfare needed a pause feature when the game was in development. I know that not all of this is on the CDL itself. The lack of communication and the subsequent stream delay also makes it apparent that this wasn't server hardware issues (which the league also suffered from earlier in the year when going fully online) but likely IP leaks that led to some intrepid people taking out certain players from the games. Read more: Call of Duty League continues to have connectivity issues | Disconnections tarnish CDL playoff results
#Cleanx cod twitter series#
I'm not in any way suggesting that it shouldn't have been fixed - doing something is still better than continuing to let players get kicked out of competitive matches in your championship series - but the fixes should have been communicated and the league should have taken responsibility for Days 1 and 2. And imagine the league not communicating the reasoning for the fix or how this could (and should) have been prevented in the first place. Imagine being the London Royal Ravens or OpTic Gaming Los Angeles and seeing that on Day 3 the streams of the games have been delayed to prevent people from booting players out of matches, as appeared to have happened to players on your team on the second and first days of competition, respectively. More specifically, the players who played in matches during Days 1 and 2 of Champs. What do we think of the decision to delay the stream, why didn't it happen sooner, and why no communication from the league?Įmily Rand: I know people are automatically going to bring up the millions of dollars on the line and memes regarding the Call of Duty League, but I feel badly for the players more than any other people involved in this. It has been one day since we had a disconnect (because the matches were delayed Friday).

Here's another roundtable with highlights and lowlights from the third day of CDL Champs. On Friday, instead of the disconnects we saw in the previous series, we saw a delayed stream with the results leaked by the CDL website itself. The Canadian franchise may be on the lookout for a new head coach to fill his spot, but for now he remains the resident head coach.Not one day of the Call of Duty League Championship has gone by without some sort of hiccup. The coach had been with the Toronto Ultra since August 2019, after he retired from playing competitively in the Call of Duty League a year prior. Mark “MarkyB” Bryceland, Toronto Ultra’s head coach, was previously told he could explore other opportunities in esports during the offseason. Both players join CleanX and Insight, both of whom were integral to the team’s success the past few years. Scrappy, who joins Standy as the second NA player on the Modern Warfare 2 roster, was promoted from the franchise’s NA academy. However, Standy’s signing signaled the second North American addition to the team. The Toronto Ultra’s newest player, Standy, was traded away from the Minnesota RØKKR.įor the past two years, the roster has been a purely European team. The two Black Ops Cold War finalists were moved to the Minnesota RØKKR lineup during the early offseason.

The players had been with the Toronto Ultra since the team franchised in the Call of Duty league. The roster’s inability to produce any notable results led the Canadian franchise to shake up their lineup ahead of the 2023 season.Īt the end of the COD Champa 2022, Cammy and Bance were removed from the team’s lineup.

The team eventually emerged as champions in one tournament, the Kickoff Classic, at the beginning of the year. The lineup comprised CleanX, Insight, Benjamin “Bance” Bance, and Cameron “Cammy” McKilligan.Īlthough the franchise were the runner-up at the Black Ops Cold War CDL Championship, the Toronto Ultra struggled to make runs during the Majors. The Toronto Ultra previously had a tough Vanguard season even though the team retained players from their impressive roster. Introducing your 2023 Toronto Ultra #MWII roster #StrengthInTheNorth #SooUltra /pNCHYX2iqM
