OpTic Ace

Ace
Aaron Elam
Status Active
Born (1993-04-02) April 2, 1993
Hometown Florence, Kentucky
Current team OpTic Gaming
Games Halo
Championships Halo 4 Global Championship
Professional career
2006-2008 Various Teams
2008-2008 Breaking Point
2009-2011, 2013-2013 Status Quo
2012-2012 Shady Halo Kids
2012-2012 Dynasty
2013-2013 Believe the Hype
2014-2014 eXcellence Gaming
2014 - Aug 2015 OpTic Gaming
Aug 2015 - Apr 2016 Team Liquid
Apr 2016 - present OpTic Gaming

Aaron Elam (born April 2, 1993),[1] better known by his in-game name Ace, is an American professional Halo player who currently plays for OpTic Gaming.[2] He won the Halo 4 Global Championship FFA after beating Justin "iGotUrPistola" Deese in the finals, where he won $200,000.[3][4][5] He is well known for his time on Status Quo and Team Liquid.[6]

Ace and Team Liquid finished 5-8th at X Games Aspen 2016.

His older brother Kyle "ElamiteWarrior" Elam is a retired professional Halo player.

Biography

Aaron Elam was born on April 2, 1993. He is the younger brother of Kyle "ElamiteWarrior" Elam. The Elam brothers are from Florence, Kentucky.

Halo 2

Aaron "Ace" Elam started his professional Halo career as a member of Team Boy Crazy attending MLG New York 2006 and finishing top 15 with Ogre 3, Spye and iHosh.

For MLG Charlotte 2007 he joined FSK with Dasteez, Hi Value and Killzone placing top 48. He would repeat the placing in Meadowlands, now as a member of Haxz Taco Stand with Haxz, Helluva and Swordey. He and Haxz would then join Gandonator and Ray ebz on Team Seize the Day, again placing top 48, this time in Dallas. He would head to Chicago to place top 48 again, now with Bushido, Lies and D3monhunti2. He joined gPorter, Squirrel and ghostatackiswak on Gporter's Guitar for Orlando, getting 28th before joining TBLOTOS pN alongside Detach, Monkey and old teammate Ogre 3, for a top 15 placing in Vegas.

Halo 3

He rejoined Helluva and Ray ebz for MLG Meadowlands 2008 now playing with Overshield as the Coconut Rebels. They secured a 20th-place finish. He and Overshield then left to join Team Breaking Point with Chig and Clutch, for a 9th-place finish in San Diego and 11th in Orlando. Clutch and Overshield would then be swapped for Lowkin and Mudvayne before Toronto, where they again finished 11th. Ace would finally earn himself a 10th-place finish in Dallas after swapping Lowkin for Poweezy.

Ace then joined Totz and Flamesword to form the unchanging core of Status Quo for 2009. They attended both Meadowlands and Columbus with Strongside, placing 7th in both events. Strongside was swapped for Clutch heading into Dallas, where they finished 10th. They played the final two tournaments of the year in Anaheim and Orlando with LegendPimps, finishing top 8 and then 9th respectively.

2010 saw Totz leave for Enable and LegendPimps swapped for Assault, to create a team that would last two full years. They came in 4th in Orlando, Columbus and Raleigh before placing 7th in D.C.. They would end the year with a 2nd-place performance in Dallas.

Halo: Reach

The same roster played at MLG Dallas 2011 and won, netting Ace his first tournament victory and only one to date. The roster then came in 7th at MLG Columbus 2011 before securing 2nd place in Anaheim. The group managed a 5th place showing in Raleigh and 4th in Orlando before ending the year with a 7th-place finish in Providence.

For the MLG Winter Championship 2012 Ace finally departed Status Quo for the team Shady Halo Kids with Best Man, Hysteria and his legendary older brother ElamiteWarrior for a 5th/6th-place finish.

Halo 4

Ace defeated iGotUrPistola in the finals of the Halo 4 Global Championship FFA to win $200,000. Later in 2012, Ace attended the MLG Fall Championship 2012 Halo 4 event as a member of Dynasty, placing top 24.

After MLG dropped Halo 4 from the pro circuit, Ace returned to Status Quo, attending AGL 7 Knoxville and UMG Chicago 2013 and placing 2nd and 4th, respectively. Ace then attended AGL 9 Atlanta as a member of Believe the Hype, again placing 4th.

Halo 2: Anniversary

Ace attended the pre-release PAX Prime Showdown 2014 as a member of eXcellence Gaming, placing 1st. He then signed with eSports powerhouse OpTic Gaming and attended the ESL MCC Launch Invitational, placing top 6. Ace remained on OpTic Gaming to start off the inaugural HCS season. They placed 3rd at Iron Games Columbus 2014, and 4th at UGC St. Louis 2015 with the same roster. They have since made a team change, replacing Aries with ContrA, and placed 2nd in HCS Online Cups #6 and #7 before taking 3rd place at Gamers For Giving 2015. OpTic then attended the season finals at PAX East 2015 where they finished a disappointing top 8.

OpTic underwent a roster change in the offseason, swapping out ContrA for Maniac. The new roster's first event together was Iron Games Atlanta 2015, where they finished 6th. They improved slightly on their placing at HCS Indianapolis, finishing 5th, but closed out the season with another 6th-place finish at the HCS Season 2 Finals.

Halo 5

Ace and OpTic were the only North American team invited to compete at the Gamescom Invitational 2015 four-team event. They were defeated in the first round by Supremacy, finishing in the bottom two. On August 27, 2015, Team Liquid announced that they had signed Ace to play alongside Ninja, Chig and Mikwen, with Ace's brother Elamite coaching. For Iron Games Daytona 2015, Ace and Elamite formed Liquid Vibe with Legit and LegendPimps. During the tournament weekend, Legit was attacked outside the venue, leaving him unable to compete for Sunday. Legit was replaced by Clutch, and the team ended up finishing in the top 8. The Liquid roster went through major revisions during the Halo World Championship 2016 qualifying stage, eventually being finalized as Ace, UnLegit, APG and Heinz and qualifying for the NA Regional Finals as the 4th seed.. Liquid were invited to the X Games Aspen 2016, where they finished 5th - 8th. At NA Regionals, Liquid finished top 8, qualifying for Halo World Championship 2016.

On April 10, Ace announced his return to OpTic Gaming alongside Flamesword, MaNiaC and Naded.

Tournament results

Team Liquid

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/7/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.