The roster
The players who carried the FURY crest across four Call of Duty titles, from the founding core to the 2019 World Championship five.
Player profiles
Each profile ties the player back to the events where public records list them on FURY, with source links preserved on the profile page.
TeddyRecKs
Ted Kim
Ted “TeddyRecKs” Kim came up on the amateur and Challengers circuit with teams like Lethal Gaming before joining FURY for the 2019 Black Ops 4 season and its run to the World Championship. After FURY he stepped off the server, joining Seattle Surge as an analyst in late 2019.
DraMa
Anthony Padilla
Anthony “DraMa” Padilla competed across a string of amateur orgs from 2016 on. His standout run was the 2019 season with FURY, where the team qualified for the CWL Championship. He retired from competition around early 2021.
Ramby
Vlad Sanchez
Vlad “Ramby” Sanchez had already played alongside several FURY teammates on Lethal Gaming and Team WaR before the 2019 run to Champs. He briefly coached Athaim in early 2020, then kept competing in Challengers, peaking with a 2021 Elite stage title.
GloFrosty
Hamza Shaikh
Hamza “GloFrosty” Shaikh (once known as “Oreo”) is a controller player with a long Challengers career that began in 2018. FURY and the 2019 Worlds run were an early highlight; he went on to Team Sixth Gear and years of A-tier results, staying active deep into the 2020s.
Demise
Devin Faircloth
Devin “Demise” Faircloth bounced through amateur orgs from 2015 before the peak of his career: the 2019 Black Ops 4 season with FURY. He was the longest-tenured of the Worlds roster and retired from competition after the stint.
CBALL
Luke Dugan
Luke “CBALL” Dugan was part of FURY’s founding core, playing two separate stints with the org between 2016 and 2018 before reuniting with teammates on Reign NA. A tier-3 competitor with no prize results documented — the kind of grinder a roster is built on.
Shipping
Brian Juarez
Brian “Shipping” Juarez was a long-haul founding member, on the roster across Infinite Warfare and WWII from 2016 to 2018. After FURY he played Final Feature Gaming and Reign NA. His best documented result is a 7–8th at the 2018 WorldGaming Canadian Championships.
Stevey
Steven Moclair
Steven “Stevey” Moclair was part of FURY’s founding core from 2016 to 2018 with a long amateur résumé behind him. He later competed collegiately for Humber Esports and won the 2019 College Call of Duty League — the only FURY core member whose page records a championship.
Hanzo
Hanzo was on FURY’s early Black Ops 3 roster for roughly two months in mid-2016. Beyond that single line in the org’s roster history he is undocumented — no real name, no other teams, no results on record.
Aries
Aries Inglot
Aries Inglot is a journeyman amateur who passed through many tier-3 teams from 2014 on. He had a brief stint with FURY in late 2016 before moving to VAULT in January 2017. No major-event finishes are documented.
NinjaZ
NinjaZ was on FURY’s early roster — including the Dec 2016 CWL Atlanta open-bracket lineup alongside Shipping, Stevey and CBALL — into early 2017. No dedicated wiki page exists and no real name or results are documented. (Not the same person as the Brazilian CS player of the same handle.)
Bounds
Ethan Cordero
Ethan “Bounds” Cordero competed across numerous tier-3 teams during 2016–2018. He played for FURY in March 2017 before joining eRa Gaming that summer. No major-event results are documented.
Kazmo
Kyle Koupaie
Kyle “Kazmo” Koupaie spent most of his career with EZG eSports across 2015–2017 and was associated with FURY in spring 2017 per the org’s records. No documented major tournament results.
Diabolic
Steven Rivero
Steven “Diabolic” Rivero is the most accomplished player to pass through FURY, with ~$30K in career earnings across 25 events. His peak came with Dream Team — 2nd at the 2016 NA CWL Stage 2 Playoffs — and he later played Echo Fox and Enigma6 before retiring in 2019.
Hec
Hector Crespo
Hector “Hec” Crespo is a now-retired amateur who competed through 2017. He joined InControl Gaming after his FURY stint and wrapped up a short career later that year. No major-event results are documented.
Miyagi
Danny Ho
Danny “Miyagi” Ho — handle borrowed from The Karate Kid — peaked in the Advanced Warfare era, reaching the MLG CoD League Season 3 Playoffs final with Noble eSports. His FURY stint in July 2017 came late in his career.
Tempo
Bryan Marrero
Bryan “Tempo” Marrero played for FURY during the WWII season, from November 2017 to January 2018. The org roster confirms his real name, but he has no dedicated player page, no earnings, and no other teams on record. (Not to be confused with the pro “Temp,” Donovan Laroda.)
Remy
Remington Ihringer
Remington “Remy” Ihringer is a CoD veteran who cycled through FURY twice amid a long pro career. His highlight long predates FURY: 2nd at the 2015 Call of Duty Championship with Team Revenge, worth $50,000 — by far the most decorated name on this roster. He later moved into streaming.
Jintroid
Jaylen Maye
Jaylen “Jintroid” Maye’s FURY stint was a one-day fill-in on July 13–14, 2019. His real career came after: a strong Challengers run with Hybrid Gaming and Sixth Gear, including multiple A-tier first-place finishes in 2020–2021.
Beyond Call of Duty
The crest across other titles — a women's Female Pro League roster, FIFA, H1Z1 and more. The multi-game years that grew FURY into a community org.
Britt
Britt competed for FURY’s Female Pro League Call of Duty roster — on the board across 2017–2018 against teams like Reign, Pnda and Most Wanted as the org backed a women’s lineup.
Selly
Selly was part of FURY’s Female Pro League Call of Duty roster across the 2017–2018 run, competing in the women’s circuit under the FURY crest.
Pinku
Pinku represented FURY on the Female Pro League Call of Duty roster, part of the women’s lineup the org fielded across 2017–2018.
Lethal
Lethal competed for FURY’s Female Pro League Call of Duty roster during the org’s 2017–2018 women’s run.
Doxy
Doxy carried the FURY crest in the org’s FIFA division on FIFA 20 — the #FuryFifa run, as FURY expanded past Call of Duty into 2020.
Creanak
Creanak, an H1Z1 Pro League player, scrimmed and represented FURY at 2017 events as the org branched into battle royale.
Front office
The people who built and ran the org behind the crest.
Spoozerr
John Beecroft
John “Spoozerr” Beecroft founded FURY Gaming in 2015 — out of the first apartment he shared with his lifelong friend Jordan, now the org’s CFO — and built it from a Camarillo, California startup into a North American Call of Duty organization that competed across four titles and reached the 2019 World Championship. He grew FURY past Call of Duty into a community-driven, multi-game org — a Female Pro League team, FIFA, H1Z1 and PUBG squads, and a content arm — and competed himself under the handle Spoozerr. In 2020 he joined Elevate as its operations manager, a role he held into 2021.
Chance Maynard
Chance Maynard is a co-founder of FURY Gaming and its COO — running operations alongside founder John Beecroft and leading the org’s community, culture and #FuryFam Discord across the Call of Duty run and the multi-game years, from 2016 on.
Teegs
Joel
Joel “Teegs” directed FURY’s content — most notably “The Journey,” the underdog series that became the org’s signature, following the team from the open circuit toward the main stage.
exorcistWZ
Tyler
Tyler (exorcistWZ, formerly tylerrfarris) coordinated FURY’s streams and casting during the 2019 run, part of the inner circle around the org’s biggest year.
Slide
Jordan Slider
Jordan “Slide” is FURY’s CFO — and one half of the friendship the whole org was built on. He and founder John Beecroft have been close since they can remember: kids grinding GameBattles together since Call of Duty 4, with Halo in the mix. When the two moved into their first apartment, FURY started running out of it — and Jordan was there from the very first event, MLG Anaheim 2016, handling the org’s money and operations ever since.
StallionROCKY
Jorge
Jorge (StallionROCKY) handled graphic design for FURY across the org’s run.