On October 6, 2022, Rogue announced a merger with KOI, an esports organisation owned by Ibai Llanos and Gerard Piqué. This will result in the existing Rogue teams rebranding to KOI.[9] Following Infinite Reality's split with KOI in 2023, the team was reestablished.[10]
For the 2019 LEC Spring Split, Rogue signed Kim "Profit" Jun-hyung, Mateusz "Kikis" Szkudlarek, Chres "Sencux" Laursen, Martin "HeaQ" Kordmaa and Kim "Wadid" Bae-in.[11] On December 21, 2019, Rogue announced a partnership with Polish esports organization x-kom AGO in the Ultraliga, with Rogue remaining responsible for the team itself and x-kom AGO responsible for "establish(ing) a training presence in Warsaw and a dedicated marketing approach."[12]
Following a 10th place finish in their first split, Rogue promoted a majority of their academy team players for the 2019 LEC Summer split.[13] This resulted in significant improvement, going from a 2–16 record in their first split to 7–11 in their second and qualifying for playoffs, where they lost a 1–3 game against Schalke 04 Esports. Building on this improvement, Hans Sama was brought in to replace Woolite.[14] This saw the team compete for the top spot for the first time, notably placing first in the 2020 LEC Summer regular season. Despite a 2–3 loss against G2 Esports, Rogue qualified for the 2020 World Championship, where they finished 13–16th with just a single win in their group, against PSG Talon.[15]
Ahead of 2021, Rogue saw several changes to their roster. Odoamne was signed from Schalke 04 Esports, while Trymbi was promoted from the academy team.[16] This resulted in the team climbing up the ladder in the region, finishing second in the 2021 LEC Spring Split, losing against MAD Lions in the grand finals by being reverse swept in the finals.[17] With the same roster for Summer, Rogue finished 3rd following a 1–3 loss against Fnatic, handing them the third seed at the 2021 League of Legends World Championship. They were put in the group along DWG KIA, FunPlus Phoenix, and Cloud9, where they finished third and were eliminated following a tiebreaker loss against Cloud9.[18]
Inspired left the team in the off-season, joining North American side Evil Geniuses.[19] French botlaner Hans Sama was acquired by Team Liquid.[20] Joining as their replacements were Malrang from DWG KIA and Comp from Team Vitality.[21] This roster would start off the season without losses in the first round robin stage[22] but would place second in playoffs following an 0–3 loss against G2 Esports. In Summer, the team performed less strong in the regular season by placing 3rd, but managed to win their first LEC title by beating G2 Esports.[23] They became the only Western team to make it to the 2022 League of Legends World Championship Knockout Stage, where they fell against JD Gaming to finish 5–8th in their final event.[24]
Current roster
Rogue League of Legends roster
Players
Coaches
Role
Handle
Name
Nationality
Top
Finn
Wiestål, Finn
Sweden
Top
Szygenda
Jensen, Mathias
Denmark
Jungle
Markoon
van Woensel, Mark
Netherlands
Mid
Larssen
Larsson, Emil
Sweden
Bot
Comp
Stamkopoulos, Markos
Greece
Support
Zoelys
Le Scornec, Théo
France
Mid
Blueknight
Jannet, Nico
Germany
Head coach
Simon "fredy122" Payne
Assistant coach(es)
Christoph "nRated" Seitz
Legend:
(I)Inactive
(S)Suspended
Substitute
Injury / Illness
Latest roster transaction: 23 April 2024.
Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six Siege
On August 24, 2017, Rogue signed the former roster of Vertical Gaming:[25] John "Avian" Ackerly, Tyler "Ecl9pse" McMullin, George "KingGeorge" Kassa, Spencer "Slashug" Oliver, Austin "Yung" Trexler, and Tristan "Ranger" Perhson. Four days later, Yung left Rogue to return to Continuum; he was replaced with Bryan "Bryan" Agema on September 12.[26] Kevin "Easilyy" Skokowski joined on December 22 after KingGeorge benched himself and eventually left due to family issues.[27][28]
On March 19, 2018, Emilio "Geo" Leynez Cuevas joined the team to replace Avian.[29][30] On September 3, Geo and Bryan both left Rogue and were later replaced by Aaron "Shuttle" Dugger and Seth "supr" Hoffman, though supr would leave two months later.[31][32] Franklyn "VertcL" Cordero replaced Supr on November 28, three days after the latter left.[33]
Rogue finished first at Dreamhack Valencia 2019 and qualified for the Six Major Raleigh 2019.[34] At the Six Major 2019, Rogue placed ninth to twelfth after defeating Cyclops Athlete Gaming while losing to Team Secret twice in the group stage. After disappointing results at the Six Major Raleigh 2019, Ranger left the team and was replaced by the team's analyst, Eric "Reaper" Nohl. Taylor "Redeemer" Mayeur, an ex-Spacestation Gaming player, joined the team as a coach on October 9, 2019.
After the team was relegated to Challenger League, Ecl9pse, VertcL, and Slashug all left and joined different teams and causing the disbanding of the team.[35][36][37] This left Rogue without a spot in Challenger League due to the rule requiring 3/5 players to retain a spot.
Shortly after though, on January 6, 2020, Rogue announced their buy out of the Vodafone Giants roster and the release of the remaining members of the North American roster. The buy out of the new roster had given them a spot in the European Rainbow 6 Pro League Season XI and the Six Invitational 2020. The team placed last at the Six Invitational 2020 after losing to Natus Vincere and eventual champions, Spacestation Gaming.
In 2021, with the add of Prano they avoided relegations by placing fourth in EUL Stage 3 and they qualified for the Six Sweden Major.
The victory over Team oNe in the quarterfinals gave Rogue a spot for the upcoming S.I. In August 2022 Rogue won against Faze Clan in the Six Major Berlin grand final, earning the EU region its first international Trophy since 2019.[38]