Although Viktor’s release was more than three years ago, the Machine Herald has never really emerged as a competitive pick. Played only by the most dedicated of mid lane hipsters, Viktor’s role as a zone-controlling poke mage found him in poor favor when compared to reliable picks like Xerath and Ziggs. Even after Viktor was reworked last year, he still didn't find a place in the meta. However, a few months on, mid laners around the world began selecting him as their mage of choice. How did this come to be?
The First of Many
The GE Tigers have quite the reputation for innovation. In Week 7 of Champions Spring 2015, rather than showing off a fun new uniform, they decided to debut mid laner Lee “Kuro” Seo-haeng’s Viktor against Incredible Miracle. To any viewer, Viktor seemed to be a classic GE pick -- a wacky champion picked against a considerably weaker opponent with the intent of showboating a little.
The match that followed would not do much to dissuade this assumption, as Kuro stormed to two consecutive leads against IM’s Kim “Frozen” Tae-il’s Xerath and Lissandra. The world looked poised to react to Viktor like it had before -- with mild amusement and instant dismissal. Yet, nearly a month later, Viktor has become a mid lane staple.
The champion's meteoric rise to the top was a result of his solo queue traction, according to Gravity mid laner Jang “Keane” Lae-young. Interestingly, Gravity had plans to debut Viktor themselves, but Keane’s day in the spotlight was snatched away at the last minute. “I just randomly tried out Viktor in solo queue, and he felt good, so we tried him in scrims. The next day, the GE Tigers pulled out Viktor in LCK -- right before our LCS game!”
Since then, Viktor picks started emerging almost simultaneously, with Meet Your Makers’ Marcin “Kori” Wolski, Taipei Assasins’ Wong “Chawy” Xing-Lei, Energy Pacemaker’s Ko “Raphael” Jae-hyun and LGD Gaming’s Wei “We1less” Lian all picking him within a week of Kuro’s pick. Therefore, it could be a little erroneous to suggest that Kuro was the driving factor behind Viktor’s popularity. Keane believes that his current popularity is the inevitable product of the continuous nerfs to his competitors. “Viktor’s one of the champions that got into the metagame after all the top-tier champions like Ahri, LeBlanc, and Zed got nerfed," he says.
Analyzing Approach
It’s all well and good to look at how Viktor became popular, but given how unique he is as a champion, it’s hard to describe exactly how he fits in the meta. Gravity Field (W) is great at zoning opponents or chaining crowd controlling in a team fight, but Orianna’s Command: Shockwave is far superior. Death Ray (E) is certainly a strong poke spell, but it lacks in range compared to Xerath’s Arcanopulse. His ultimate Chaos Storm (R) is a great team fight threat, but Lissandra’s Frozen Tomb is way more impactful.
It might be that Viktor’s niche stems from his versatility as an AP carry. Although he cannot hope to match the strengths of other, more specialized, champions, teams looking for an all-purpose mid pick may find what they want in Viktor. Apart from his relative lack of mobility (alleviated somewhat by upgrading his Siphon Power (Q)), Viktor really does offer a lot, and can fit into just about any team composition.
Raphael’s performance on the Machine Herald against Star Horn Royal Club exemplified Viktor’s versatility. Using Gravity Field to trap Lei “Corn” Wen’s Lissandra, he turns on the rest of SHRC with his long-range abilities, weaving in autoattacks in between spell casts (a bonus due to all his spells’ being made the same range).
Viktor’s greatest strength, however, is his upfront AoE burst damage with an upgraded Death Ray and Chaos Storm. Observe Lee “Faker” Sang-hyeok’s play on Viktor in this clip as he turns around a dire team fight, massacring Incredible Miracle over the Dragon wall.
Faker’s play came off a magic penetration power spike, having completed his Sorcerer's Shoes and Abyssal Scepter. Viktor’s damage is incredibly high when building these two items together, as they combine to remove 35 Magic Resistance from opponents -- often dealing true damage to some champions.
That said, Abyssal Scepter is still not an item built universally. Some players like Kori will opt to go straight for the Rabadon’s Deathcap after completing Morellonomicon, and the timing of Hex Core upgrades is still widely debated. Keane urges players not overthink it, and just go with the flow -- as Viktor was intended to be played. “You usually get the first upgrade as soon as possible for the wave clear on Death Ray, then you can upgrade it again whenever you want. It doesn’t really matter.”
While there’s still a lot of room to debate the various aspects of Viktor’s build such as Hex Core upgrades, there’s one thing all the pros agree on: Viktor is a pure damage dealer, and should be built like one. And since you’ll be a laser-shooting, gravity-altering glass cannon, don’t think that you’ll also be able to survive a dive from a Rengar or Zed, even with the shield on Siphon Power. “The best build is to get at least 20% Cooldown Reduction with Morellonomicon or scaling CDR runes, then full AP,” says Keane.
Embrace Progress
It’s unclear just how long Viktor will continue to be a force for, but at the moment he's representative of some sweeping changes that have occurred in the competitive meta since the start of 2015. Six months ago, you may have been called crazy for picking champions like Cho’Gath, Urgot, Viktor, Vladimir, or Yorick. Now, the meta accommodates all kinds of previously unseen champions.
Don’t be afraid to experiment (with the permission of your teammates). Who knows, you could be the next player to start a solo queue trend that makes it into the LCS! In the meantime, give Viktor a shot, and let us know how it goes for you in the comments below.
Champs that are underestimated or under-picked like and even can become carries of a game if used in the best ways. Its sad that *some *people only realized this when an elite player makes a great play...
I'm actually really happy that Viktor is getting quite a bit of popularity right now, since he's one of the healthier mages in the game.
Sure, he has insane burst potential in the mid-late game, but it takes some time for him to scale that damage up. It's also fairly reliant on one skill-shot (his E), especially in the early-mid game. The death ray can also be dodged by champions with higher mobility, especially if it's being shot by a bandwagon Viktor player. He also is heavily screwed over by hard crowd control since his CC isn't instant and his only method of escape is his Q. Mid-ranged abilities in his kit can also make bad Viktors very susceptible to such CC.
Thus, there will be a very clear definition between good and bad Viktor players. Past toxic and unbalanced champions like old Kassadin or LeBlanc took not that much effort in order to use their kits well, and their damage/mobility wasn't in proportion to this. For Viktor, it is.
His laser takes time to use well against smart opponents.
His W takes a fair amount of time to be very effective.
His ultimate is basically a worse version of Annie ult in the early-mid game except for having a slightly wider radius.
His only somewhat reliable escape is bought with 2000 gold.
If Viktor falls behind in terms of gold because of poor cs-ing or lane control, it's hard for him to come back due to his reliance upon gold and lack of ability to play super-safe like a Xerath.
The strengths of Viktor, however, compensate for these weaknesses. He still feels incredibly rewarding to play if you get a snipe with your laser, exact destructive AoE burst with E and R, or pull off incredible kiting in the late-game.
He's fun, flawed, and powerful. That's exactly what we need.
This article basically stated that Viktor is underwhelming compared to all other champions if they weren't nerfed. What people don't realize is Viktor's damage is absolutely disgusting and that other champions can't compare to that.
Used to play Viktor before he was cool. (Hipster B3)
But I still find it surprising that he's in competitive play. Let's see.
Stat-wise, E is capable of doing at max rank 350 + 98% AP. That's a lot more damage than Archanopulse despite lack of range. (Unless the enemy dodges the second part of explosion, which becomes 250 + 70% AP)
Viktor as a champion has burst necessary, but he falls off compared in individual terms. There are champions who does 'better' than him.
If Assassin jumps on you, you are most likely dead if you can't react fast enough. But he is capable of dishing out ridiculous amount of damage. It's a simple trade-off.
I have to say this article is not all that accurate... While he has only just started seeing competitive play vicktor has been incredibly strong since his rework. Even before he was incredibly powerful, he just comes with the ridiculous stigma that you are forced to have his augment in your items. Truth is that augment, for the power it gives, is one of the most cost efficient items in the game.
The real reason Vicktor has not seen play other than his augment is his different targeting style. it takes one additional click in order to use his E. With a bit of practice on auto cast that isnt even a problem though. So if he is so powerful why hasnt he sen play till now? Easy, the pros would rather be lazy and use the exact same champions they always do, and the exact same ones everyone else uses. Why? because it is easier to remember and react to. Thats why these "dark-horse" picks tend to steam roll. It isn't the norm so others wont know exactly how to react.
This brings me to the last point that doesnt have to do with the article. The pro players are getting it off easy when it comes to picking champions during tournaments. with so many champions in the game now it is time to start testing these pro players. Give them a limited roster of champions to choose from that they know about a few weeks before each tournament. See If these players really are the best of the best at the game as a whole and not just at a select few champions in a single role. See if they can adapt to new situations where their best and most powerful picks are taken out of the picture even before the ban phase. My guess is quite a few would flounder.
I knew it was going to eventually happen, but I just hope it doesn't result in nerfs.
Having played Viktor since his release, back when his gravity field had a deploy time, he has gone a long way.
He is indeed my "Screw it I don't know who I am fighting" pick that I have used this season through my placements and everything.
And good lord, there's nothing like 100 to 0 exploding someone who through they were safe with a recently purchased power spike of either deathcap or lichbane...Go on guys, ignore MR it won't hurt because you won't have anything left to feel.
How it always goes:
Champ is deemed utterly useless by most of the community
He's then played by a "pro"
"Oh my god, op, please nerf" etc...
This is really pathetic.
I always liked Viktor, even before the rework. I never played mid too much, but I probably played him more than any other mid laner. It's nice that he's getting some recognition, and putting him on the front page will likely do the trick. Besides, it got Support Brand, Jungle Irelia, Jungle Gragas, and Urgot to be among the top played champs. I'm sure Viktor will see a similar fate :3
I really don't like that they compared Viktor's W to Ori's ult, I mean one's a regular ability and the other's an ult, it'd be ridiculous if his W was better, it's also important to take into account that you can use 5-6 W's for every one Ori ult before cdr, because that's an extremely important distinction that they failed to mention.
Then they compared Xerath's Arcanopulse to Viktor's deathray; Xerath's Arcanopulse admittedly has more range, but it slows you and makes you vulnerable during channeling. Comparatively, Viktor's deathray can be cast while moving with no penalty and has higher base damage AND scaling than Arcanopulse.
His ult is lackluster, but it's part of his burst kit and I feel like it fits him fine.
They also glossed over the fact that Q with Lichbane causes you to do 130% of your AP on a very low cooldown, which is important.
They make Viktor sound like he's made up of inferior parts that make up a passable whole. Really he shines in his own way, and anybody who has fought the terror that is fed Viktor should know this, he's an incredibly strong burst mage. His early game isn't the best, but that's his only real limiter; post 6 he has that true-mage presence in teamfights where he just decimates everything in his burst area.
a great example of how people don't think a champ is good unless a pro uses them is people always thinks hes good but galio is a great champ especially against ap mids. He has great potential but is looked down upon.
One of my friends plays Viktor a lot. He's mained him since season 3. He actually stopped playing him after the rework because he felt like Vik was too strong and wasn't fun to play. Now he mains Swain and Anivia.
Moral of the story? Midlane hipsters will find a new champ to wreck as.
Hello everyone , i wanna say , im kind of a huge viktor player , and the attention that he gets .....scares me......
I really hope he's not gonna get nerfed , or i dont know how long im gonna play this game anymore for.
Laser on!
as a somewhat viktor player this article is one of the few that actually promotes champion usage. Viktor has so much burst as an AP mid champ, and is interesting with his passive giving an item that allows u to upgrade ur 3 abilities(Q,W,E) and (r) the last with final upgrade. Viktor is so OP as a champ finally some spotlight on our creator :D