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Knights and EHOME Players Amongst 46 Banned From Dota 2 Pro Circuit

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Highlights
Valve and Perfect World have issued a joint statement banning multiple players from the Chinese Dota 2 Pro Circuit for "interfering with fair competition." This includes bans for players from Knights and EHOME.
46 players in total have been banned, with 21 permanent bans, 13 two-year bans, and 12 one-year bans. This raises concerns about the integrity of the competitive scene in China as a whole.
Banned players from Knights and EHOME had also competed in the recently concluded Lima Major

Earlier today, Valve and Perfect World issued a joint statement banning multiple players competing in the Chinese Dota 2 Pro Circuit (DPC) for ‘interfering with fair competition’. These include permanent bans for players from Knights and EHOME who recently competed in the Lima Major 2022. While Knights has been under suspicion in the eyes of the Dota 2 community after it was accused of match-fixing at the Major and using cheats during official Dota 2 Pro Circuit games, the inclusion of EHOME’s players is a big surprise for the Dota 2 community and has raised questions about the integrity of the Dota 2 Pro Circuit.

Perfect World and Valve Issue Joint Statement Announcing the Bans

Perfect World and Valve have imposed bans on 46 players, including 21 permanent bans, 13 two-year bans, and 12 one-year bans, prohibiting them from participating in any of their hosted events. The situation is concerning as a significant number of these players are part of the Dota 2 Pro Circuit, raising doubts about the integrity of the competitive scene in China as a whole.

The full list of the banned individuals can be found below:

Banned PlayerTeam (if any)Duration of Ban
Luo "eGo" BinKnightsPermanent
Vincent "AlaCrity" HiewKnightsPermanent
Su "Flyby" LeiKnightsPermanent
Chong “FelixCiaoBa” Wei LunKnightsPermanent
Xiao "XCJ" ChaojianKnightsPermanent
Wong "mks" Sim AnEHOMEPermanent
Xu "Lin" Ziyang (aka mmm)Team MystiquePermanent
Yang "Yp" Yuepeng (aka Helios)LBZSPermanent
Zhan "guoguo" YaoyangLBZSPermanent
Kim "Unknown-" Jit PinTeam FlowPermanent
123-Permanent
Star-Permanent
BANG-Permanent
Dev1ce-Permanent
Xyz-Permanent
Re:0-Permanent
新手上路-Permanent
贝贝-Permanent
darly-Permanent
Chillin-Permanent
farewell-Permanent
Pan "yChen" Shuaifang (aka Knight)EHOME2 Years
Tang "Salad" Xiaolei (aka CatYou)EHOME2 Years
Liu "Lww" WeiweiEHOME2 Years
Pu "zone-" JunyuTeam Mystique2 Years
Law "Nj" Chee HoongTeam Mystique2 Years
Raymond "rayy" ThenTeam Mystique2 Years
Jin "pp" PengLBZS2 Years
Somsak "Nevermine" ChanthavisoukTeam Flow2 Years
ShareHeatbeat-2 Years
sss-2 Years
慕容鱼
HuiHui-2 Years
ghost-2 Years
Lee "X1aOyU" Qian YuEHOME1 Year
Tan "TrazaM" Kai SoonTeam Flow1 Year
Yang "Ms" YongjieDawn Gaming1 Year
Liu "ex" ShaojunDawn Gaming1 Year
Lin "Son Goku" ShiyangDawn Gaming1 Year
He "Docres" ErcongDawn Gaming1 Year
tomorrow-1 Year
Fantasy--1 Year
Hy-1 Year
Kygo-1 Year
Mercader-1 Year
lost-1 Year

Valve and Perfect World's decision to issue a joint statement announcing the bans has sent shockwaves throughout the Dota 2 community, with many fans and players expressing their concerns about the future of the game's competitive scene in China. The move follows a series of controversies that have plagued the Chinese Dota 2 Pro Circuit over the past few months, including allegations of match-fixing and cheating.

The banned players' absence will undoubtedly have an impact on the Dota 2 Pro Circuit, as many of them are key members of teams competing in the Lower and Upper Divisions of the DPC. Fans are now left to wonder what the future of the Chinese Dota 2 Pro Circuit will look like without these players and whether the bans will be enough to restore the integrity of the competitive scene.


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Vignesh has been covering the esports industry for nearly 5 years starting with the early days of the DPC. His industry expertise includes experience in Dota 2, CS:GO and Mobile Esports coverage.
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