Luka “Perkz” Perković, one of the most decorated League of Legends players in European history, is learning that coaching a team through adversity is a very different game than carrying one from mid lane. His G2 Esports squad was eliminated 2-0 by Dplus KIA at the Esports World Cup on July 16, 2026, and the new head coach pointed to something deceptively simple as a root cause: the team was tired.
That fatigue, Perkz explained, traces back to G2’s run at MSI 2026, where the team finished fourth after a brutal 0-3 lower-bracket semifinal loss to LYON. The emotional and physical hangover from that defeat carried into the next tournament.
From player legend to coaching reality
Perkz was officially appointed G2’s head coach on July 10, 2026, replacing Dylan Falco after a post-MSI performance review. For context, this is a player who won multiple LEC championships with G2 between 2015 and 2020 before retiring from professional play in 2025. He joined the organization as a positional coach earlier in 2026 before getting the top job.
Perkz has been vocal about the challenges he inherited, criticizing initial scrim conditions and stressing the need for a culture where constructive feedback actually lands. Administrative delays reportedly prevented Perkz from fully implementing his coaching philosophy before competition began at EWC.
G2’s earlier 6-0 record against Korean teams during the First Stand tournament in 2026 made the exit sting even more. This was a roster capable of beating the best, just not consistently enough when it mattered.
Why crypto and digital asset investors should care about esports org stability
G2 Esports has a documented history of engagement with digital assets, from previous investments to sponsorship agreements with crypto-adjacent platforms. Organizational stability matters enormously in that equation. Sponsors evaluate teams based on competitive performance, audience engagement, and leadership credibility. A team in flux, struggling with morale and inconsistent results, is a harder sell to the marketing department at a Web3 startup looking to drop six or seven figures on a partnership deal.
The crypto industry’s relationship with esports has cooled somewhat from the peak mania of 2021 and 2022, when exchanges like FTX were plastering their logos on everything with a pulse. Organizations that demonstrate stability, strong leadership, and consistent performance are the ones that will attract the next wave of digital asset partnerships.
The fatigue factor and what it means for esports’ schedule problem
Perkz’s comments about MSI travel fatigue affecting EWC performance highlight a structural issue the esports industry hasn’t solved. The competitive calendar is increasingly packed, with major international events stacked close together. When a five-player roster has no meaningful bench depth and the same individuals are expected to grind scrims, travel internationally, and compete at peak performance every few weeks, burnout isn’t a risk. It’s a certainty.
G2’s situation is a case study in real time. The same roster that went 6-0 against Korean competition earlier in the year couldn’t take a single map off Dplus KIA at EWC.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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