COVID curse strikes again at VALORANT Champions, sending one DRX player to quarantine

We were doing so well.

DRX on stage at LOCK//IN
Photo by Colin Young-Wolff via Riot Games

After a straightforward start to VALORANT Champions 2023 with no major issues, the final VCT event of the year has fittingly had a positive COVID test one more time, right as the second day of playoffs was set to begin.

Recommended Videos

An official announcement from the VALORANT esports team today confirmed that a member of the DRX roster has produced a positive test for COVID after self-requesting the test. Since the player in question feels well enough to play, they will compete against Bilibili today on LAN from an isolated room in a quarantined area, away from his teammates. DRX came out on stage without Kim “MaKo” Myeong-kwan, indicating he was the player who tested positive.

Related: VALORANT Champions 2023: Scores, schedule, and standings

DRX brought a sixth player with them and won both of their group-stage matches with Zest in the starting lineup while Foxy9 stayed on the bench. Theoretically, DRX could have swapped in Foxy9 for the player for MaKo, but the team has opted to play with one of the world’s best controller players while he competes from quarantine.

With this positive test, Champions 2023 joins the list of international VALORANT events that have seen at least one player test positive for COVID. Champions was originally on pace to become the second-straight event without a positive test after Masters Tokyo. Earlier this year, Fnatic were forced to compete with superstar Derke quarantined for their opening match against Sentinels at LOCK//IN, but the Finnish star was able to return to the stage in time for them to win the event.

The announcement noted that the schedule is subject to change, but DRX are currently scheduled to play against Bilibili today at 2pm CT.

Author
Image of Scott Robertson
Scott Robertson
VALORANT lead staff writer, also covering CS:GO, FPS games, other titles, and the wider esports industry. Watching and writing esports since 2014. Previously wrote for Dexerto, Upcomer, Splyce, and somehow MySpace. Jack of all games, master of none.