Blacked April Dawn My Rise In The Ranks Part 2
Patterns emerged. I was over-peeking. I was playing too aggressively after first-blood kills. I was ignoring my support players’ positioning. In short, I was playing like a lone wolf in a team game. The next phase of Blacked April Dawn: My Rise in the Ranks Part 2 was unglamorous. It was drills. It was aim trainers at 7 AM. It was VOD reviews with a coach I found on a Discord server with only 200 members.
That sting didn’t fade. It calcified into something harder. I realized that my rise in the ranks wasn’t going to be a straight line. It was going to be a bloody, zigzagging crawl through valleys of self-doubt. The biggest lesson of Part 2 is this: mechanical skill alone doesn’t get you into the top 100. You need game sense so sharp it borders on precognition. blacked april dawn my rise in the ranks part 2
Part 3 will document my run from top 200 to top 50—including the tournament qualifier that almost ended my career, the teammate betrayal that went viral on Twitter, and the moment I had to decide whether “Blacked April Dawn” would become a brand or just a memory. If you’re grinding ranked right now, stuck in a division you feel you don’t belong in, remember this: every player in the top 100 has a Part 2 story. They have a losing streak that almost broke them. They have a moment where they changed their entire playstyle. They have a night where they sat alone, humbled and angry, and chose to learn instead of quit. Patterns emerged
It was a best-of-three series against a stacked team featuring two former pro players. We lost the first map badly—3-0. My teammates were tilting in voice chat. Someone typed “gg go next” before the second map even started. I was ignoring my support players’ positioning
The wins started stacking. Not because I was carrying harder, but because I was dying less . My KDA (Kill/Death/Assist) ratio went from 2.1 to 4.7. My damage-per-life stat became one of the highest in the regional leaderboards.
I also started studying the top Blacked April Dawn players (yes, there are a handful of us who share the name prefix). Their movement was different. They weren't faster—they were calmer . They let the enemy make the first mistake. I adopted a new motto: “Don’t outplay. Out-wait.” You can’t have a “rise in the ranks” story without a near-fall. On a rainy Tuesday in October, I lost 14 consecutive ranked matches. Fourteen. My MMR tanked from 4,180 to 3,650 in a single evening.