Godsonits built his name in the small but fiercely competitive world of Critical Ops as part of the first truly global generation of mobile FPS professionals. A Turkish player whose real name is not widely public, he came to international attention with a world championship podium in 2022 and a second place run in the European Circuit finals, then kept that momentum alive through ranked Elite Ops grind and Pro League appearances that he documented on his own channel. In a scene where teams often vanish between seasons and many players leave almost no trace, his results, country ranking and video archive give a rare continuous look at what a dedicated Critical Ops pro’s career looks like across several years.
Turkish contender in a global mobile FPS
When Critical Force and Mobile E-Sports relaunched the World Championship structure for Critical Ops in the early 2020s, they finally gave mobile teams a stable world stage to aim at. The Critical Ops World Championship 2022 ran online across several weeks with a 24,000 dollar prize pool and sixteen teams from Europe, South America, North America and Asia, capped by a playoff bracket that brought together some of the strongest lineups the game had seen.
For Turkey the flagship squad in that tournament was CrossFire, an all Turkish roster built around Exi 69, Godsonits, HakimOyuncu2, reax and Twirll. The team carved a path to the semifinals and then finished third overall, behind champions Reign and Brazilian runners up Evil Vision in what would become the opening chapter of the modern Critical Ops world era.
That podium result put both CrossFire and its individual players into the statistical record. EsportsEarnings lists the CrossFire lineup with 3,000 dollars in total prize money from the event and credits 600 dollars to each of the five players, including Godsonits. In the context of Critical Ops, where only a handful of tournaments have carried significant prize pools, that single finish is enough to place him among the top fifty players of all time by recorded earnings and inside the top fifteen for the 2022 season.
Within Turkey his standing looks even stronger. On the EsportsEarnings country list for Critical Ops, he appears tied for third among Turkish players, trailing only Naxera and teammate Exi 69 in total documented prize money from the game. Even if the exact roles and statistics from those early matches are not preserved in public databases, the combination of team placement and earnings confirms that he was not a peripheral substitute but a fully credited member of the core CrossFire roster at the world championship.
CrossFire and the World Championship bronze
The 2022 world championship marked the moment when Critical Ops’ long running regional rivalries intersected on a single official stage again. The event brought the Brazilian superteam Evil Vision, European champions Reign and multiple regional contenders into the same bracket, and it was in that setting that CrossFire and Godsonits built their legacy.
CrossFire’s third place finish meant that they exited behind only Reign and Evil Vision, two organizations that would go on to dominate the next years of the world circuit. Reign’s core players later won multiple world titles in succession, while Evil Vision remained a fixture of deep playoff runs. For CrossFire and its Turkish lineup the 2022 bracket became a reference point, proof that a roster drawn entirely from one emerging region could stand up against the most heavily hyped teams in the game.
Earnings records and roster listings show that CrossFire’s world championship core of Exi 69, Godsonits, HakimOyuncu2, reax and Twirll stayed together long enough to secure that result before dispersing into other projects. In that sense, the roster’s lifespan resembles many early mobile esports teams. Seasons were short, players often balanced school or work with competition, and the world championship served as both the peak and in some cases the end of a particular lineup’s life. For Godsonits, however, this run became the starting point rather than a final chapter.
Team G9 and the Critical Ops Circuit Season 5 finals
After the 2022 world championship, Godsonits turned up again on a different brand of stage: the Critical Ops Circuit. The Circuit’s fifth European season culminated in an online finals bracket with four teams, a double elimination structure and a 3,500 dollar prize pool.
There he appeared on the roster of Team G9, alongside Turkish teammates Fair and Crux plus Swedish player MasterSadok. That lineup played through the upper and lower brackets to reach the grand final against Invictus EU. Liquipedia’s event page lists Team G9 as the second place finisher, with Invictus EU taking the title in a best of five series.
Team G9’s run through the Circuit finals echoed CrossFire’s earlier performance. Once again Godsonits sat inside a lineup that was not expected to dominate but still reached the last rounds of play. Hammers Esports, Valorous Gaming and Invictus EU rounded out the field, yet it was Team G9 that fought through elimination matches to secure the silver medal and a significant piece of the prize pool.
For a mobile FPS specialist, these results add up to a rare combination: a world championship podium and a separate regional finals appearance under different banners. They also help explain why tournament databases group him with other well known players from Turkey such as Exi 69 and Naxera, even though his own public profile is more understated.
Elite Ops ladders and Pro League appearances
Tournament brackets only capture a fraction of a Critical Ops player’s time in game. Much of the day to day work happens in ranked queues, scrims and league matches that never appear in official statistics. In Godsonits’s case, his personal YouTube channel functions as a window into that side of his career.
Posting under his in game name, he has uploaded a small but telling set of videos built around Elite Ops ranked lobbies, Pro League games and scrims against well known teams. Titles like “Critical Ops Elite Ops, Pro League Highlights” and “Critical Ops Pro League Gameplay versus E8” show him presenting his own perspective in high level matches, while another video titled “Critical Ops but I turn into Lebron James against MFA in tourney” underlines that these are not just casual games but organized competitions with recognizable opponents.
Even without full match statistics, the existence of these uploads matters. They confirm that after his world championship and Circuit performances he remained active in both the Elite Ops ranked ladder and tournament play, and that he did so over multiple years. They also place him in the broader culture of Critical Ops mobile content creators, a group that helps keep the game visible between official events by publishing highlight reels, full match VODs and educational clips.
The channel’s modest subscriber count and limited number of videos stand in sharp contrast with his competitive résumé. Where other esports players pivot fully into content once their peak competitive years pass, his uploads read more like a personal archive, preserving particular matches and moments that mattered to him rather than serving as a full time streaming career.
Place in the Critical Ops esports story
Mobile FPS titles often cycle rapidly through metas, publishers and tournament organizers, and many rosters disappear with barely a bracket page or a VOD to remember them by. In that environment, Godsonits stands out as one of the players whose footprint can be traced across multiple parts of the ecosystem.
On paper his total prize money, 600 dollars, looks modest next to PC or console esports. Yet in Critical Ops terms it puts him inside the top tier of historical earners and solidly among Turkey’s most successful players. Combined with a world championship bronze and a second place Circuit finish, those numbers mark him as a genuine fixture of the game’s early world era rather than a one event specialist.
His teams also situate him inside one of Critical Ops’ most important storylines. CrossFire’s third place in 2022 is part of the larger arc that runs through Reign’s era of dominance and the successive world tournaments in 2023 and 2024, while Team G9’s Circuit run shows how European lineups outside the main world podium teams continued to push the meta and cultivate new rosters.
As the official tournament circuit has expanded, with the continued World Championship series and complementary events like Pro League Globals, the early rosters that made those first finals help define what Critical Ops competition looks like. Godsonits’s presence in those brackets, his place in the earnings record and his own efforts to document Elite Ops and league matches through his channel together build a legacy that is larger than any single scoreboard. He represents a particular archetype in mobile esports: the national level specialist whose best work appears not in one viral clip but in a steady run of high pressure series and recorded matches that future players can point to when they talk about how the game’s competitive history began.