Insaneramzes ((free))

Insaneramzes

Insaneramzes is an imagined persona and concept that blends intensity, cryptic artistry, and a rebellious spirit. This piece presents a concise portrait and a short creative vignette to capture its voice.

2. The “House Elves are NOT Happy Slaves” Essay

InsaneRamzes wrote a widely-copied essay arguing against J.K. Rowling’s portrayal of House Elf enslavement as benign.

3. The “Order of the Phoenix was Incompetent” Essay

This essay systematically lists every tactical and strategic failure of the adult wizards in Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix. insaneramzes


The Fall: Position Swap and Identity Crisis

In a shocking move, Ramzes left VP for Natus Vincere (Na`Vi) in late 2019. But more shocking was his role swap: from the best carry in the world to an offlaner (position 3).

It was a disaster. The aggressive, farm-heavy mentality that made him a legendary pos-1 translated poorly to the sacrificial, space-making offlane. Na`Vi became a shadow of its former glory, failing to qualify for any Major. Ramzes looked lost, frustrated, and visibly miserable. The experiment lasted barely seven months. Insaneramzes Insaneramzes is an imagined persona and concept

He returned to carry... but the magic was gone. The meta had shifted. New players had risen. And Ramzes had acquired a reputation: toxic, inflexible, and impossible to coach.

The Tragedy of TI: The Unconquered Mountain

For all his dominance, there was one demon Ramzes could never slay: The International (TI). Thesis: Dobby is the exception because he was

Virtus.pro entered every TI as the heavy favorite. And every year, they collapsed in spectacular fashion.

The mental toll of these failures shattered the team. The "VP Dynasty" ended not with a bang, but with a whimper. Accusations of "choking" haunted Ramzes. He was the general of an army that conquered everything except the one war that mattered.

The Modern Era: Ghost of a Legend

Today (as of 2024-2025), Ramzes is no longer a tier-1 mainstay. He has bounced through stack-based teams, struggled to qualify for Division 1 leagues, and occasionally flashes brilliance in tier-2 tournaments. He streams, he memes, and sometimes he reminds you of the 17-year-old who once made Miracle- look human.

His recent stints—like playing for Nigma Galaxy or his own stack "Ramzes Gang"—have produced moments of vintage play (a 25-0 Terrorblade game here, a Ramzes classic Lycan there). But consistency is gone. The hunger seems diminished.