In the public record of Critical Ops esports, Myx appears as one of those players whose career is easier to trace through tournament pages than through interviews, biographies, or long organizational announcements. That makes him a familiar kind of figure in mobile esports history. Some players left behind highlight reels and personal branding. Others left behind a name in the right bracket, on the right roster, during a period when a young esport was trying to build a reliable competitive calendar.
For Myx, the clearest documented moment is his connection to Flawless Team in the first Critical Ops World Championship era. Liquipedia’s record for Critical Ops World Championship 2022 lists Myx with Flawless Team, a Brazilian roster that also included players such as happen, Gudn, and hey lmao. That listing places him inside the South American side of the game’s first Worlds structure, where Brazilian teams were becoming one of the central stories of Critical Ops competition.
Critical Ops and the Mobile FPS Setting
Critical Ops was built around mobile tactical shooter play, especially its 5v5 defuse mode. Critical Force described the game as a competitive tactical shooter for mobile devices, where two teams battle through teamwork, tactics, and skill. The company also framed Critical Ops as one of the early pioneers in mobile esports, with more than 100 million downloads.
That setting matters when looking at Myx because his record belongs to the period when Critical Ops was trying to connect regional scenes into a world championship structure. In January 2022, Critical Force announced Circuit Season 4 with a USD 20,000 combined prize pool and explained that teams with the most points across Seasons 4 and 5 would be able to move toward the first Critical Ops Worlds Championship.
Flawless Team and the Road to Worlds
Myx’s profile is tied most clearly to Flawless Team, one of the South American rosters preserved in the 2022 Worlds record. Critical Force announced that Critical Ops Worlds 2022 would begin in November 2022 with a USD 25,000 combined prize pool, and that teams from North America, Europe, Asia, and South America had been playing through the year to earn Global Points and qualify.
For a player like Myx, that context is the heart of the story. His name is not preserved because he became the most visible public face of the game. It is preserved because he reached the first World Championship structure during the moment when Critical Ops was attempting to turn its regional circuits into a global esport. That kind of appearance matters. In mobile esports, especially in smaller or less archived games, simply being documented at the world championship level can become the difference between being remembered and disappearing completely from the public record.
Worlds 2022
Critical Ops World Championship 2022 was recorded as an online global tournament organized by Critical Force and MOBILE E-SPORTS, with 16 teams and a USD 25,000 prize pool. Liquipedia records the event window as November 26 to December 11, 2022.
Flawless Team entered that field from the Brazilian and South American side of the scene. Publicly available records do not give Myx the kind of detailed statistical trail that larger esports often provide. There is no clear public full name, no heavily circulated interview, and no easily accessible personal biography that can be used with confidence. What can be said is that Myx’s name is attached to the Flawless Team entry at Worlds 2022, giving him a documented place in the game’s first world championship era.
That is important because Worlds 2022 was not just another online tournament. It was the first Critical Ops world championship project, built out of a year of regional competition and global points. For South America, and especially for Brazil, it represented a chance to prove that the region was not merely participating in the game’s ecosystem, but helping shape its highest level.
The Brazilian Critical Ops Context
Myx’s Flawless Team listing also places him within a broader Brazilian Critical Ops moment. The 2022 World Championship record shows multiple Brazilian lineups and players around the field, including Evil Vision and Flawless Team. Evil Vision’s roster included Brazilian names such as Cool 7, rvfa, HeroS, and Henrico Lee, while Flawless Team’s listing included Myx and other Brazilian players.
That does not mean Myx’s legacy should be folded into someone else’s story. It means his career is best understood as part of the South American depth that made the first Worlds meaningful. A world championship only matters when its regions have real competitive bodies behind them. Myx was one of the names attached to that structure, helping represent a Brazilian scene that had enough talent to send more than one recognizable roster into the game’s global conversation.
Pro League Aftermath and Flawless Team’s Continued Record
After Worlds 2022, Flawless Team remained visible in Critical Ops records. In Critical Ops Pro League Season 1 Americas, the regular season used a single round-robin format with best-of-two matches, and the top four teams advanced to playoffs. Flawless Team finished third in the regular season at 5-1-1, with an 11-3 game record and 16 points.
This later Flawless Team record should be handled mainly as team context rather than as a full claim about Myx’s continued role, since the available public snippets do not clearly establish every player’s participation across every Pro League match. Still, it shows that the Flawless name did not vanish after Worlds. It remained tied to the Americas competitive structure, the same regional ecosystem where Myx’s Worlds appearance had been recorded.
Why Myx Matters
Myx matters because he represents the fragile edge of esports memory. His career is not easy to reconstruct from feature articles or long-form interviews. It has to be rebuilt from tournament listings, team pages, official announcements, and broadcast records. That is common in mobile esports, where competitive history often depends on Liquipedia pages, YouTube VODs, Discord announcements, and scattered community memory.
His documented value comes from appearing with Flawless Team during the first Critical Ops World Championship era. That is enough to make him part of the game’s historical record. The first Worlds was the moment Critical Ops tried to gather North America, Europe, Asia, and South America into one championship structure. Myx was there in the South American record, attached to a Brazilian team during the formative global stage of the esport.
Legacy
The best way to describe Myx’s legacy is as a Brazilian Critical Ops Worlds-era competitor whose public record is narrow but meaningful. He is not preserved as a statistical superstar in the available sources. He is preserved as a Flawless Team player connected to Critical Ops World Championship 2022, the tournament that marked the game’s first major world championship effort.
That makes him worth remembering. Esports history is not only the story of champions, MVPs, and the most visible stars. It is also the story of the players whose names fill out the brackets, carry regions into international play, and prove that a scene had enough depth to become more than a local community. Myx belongs in that record because his name helps preserve the Brazilian side of Critical Ops’ first Worlds era.