The popular streamer was reportedly interested in signing Turtle Troop, a free-agent team with Wedid at the helm, which ultimately failed to make the promotion tournament for VCT Americas despite a strong finish to the season.

Negotiations reportedly broke downas xQc“ghosted” the players, but he still paid them for their time from when he was working with the team behind the scenes.

xQc later explained that he backed out of signing the team because theydisagreed on the direction of the roster and other financial reasons.

The Canadian creator touched on the situation again on July 3while watchingTarik ‘tarik’ Celik co-stream VCT Americas matches. He explained that the team did not share his “vision” for the Challengers roster.

“The reality is that I wanted to make a super team. I wanted a super team. I don’t think they wanted that vision. I thought they wanted it but they didn’t want it. They wanted to stay together as a full five, the way that they were,” xQc said.

“And I just thought if that’s the way that they want it, I think they are going to lose, so I’m going to pull out.”

Since xQc pulled out of the deal, Turtle Troop has maintained its spot in the Challengers League despite losing players to Tier 1 teams.

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Wedid replied to the streamer’s comments on social media and confirmed that xQc wanted a super team.

“He wanted a superteam, I wanted to keep my team together. I defended my position and convinced him that synergy is better than just buying players and slotting them in thinking they’re gonna be good together. He agreed to that point and still told me he was gonna go with us,” Wedid said.

Turtle Troop finished that year with a 5-5 record across both Challengers splits and missed the playoffs. The team stayed in the league by re-qualifying through a relegation bracket.

Declan McLaughlin was a Gaming & Esports Writer on Dexerto’s US team, specializing in Valorant and League of Legends. He has bylines at Upcomer and Inven Global.