322

2013Catchphrase / number memeclassic
322 is a 2013 Dota 2 catchphrase from pro player Alexey "Solo" Berezin's $322 match-fixing bet, becoming esports shorthand for throwing.

"322" is a number meme and Twitch chat catchphrase that originated from a June 2013 Dota 2 match-fixing scandal. Pro player Alexey "Solo" Berezin bet $100 against his own team at 3.22 odds, standing to win exactly $322 if they lost3. The number became the Dota 2 community's universal shorthand for throwing a game, and later spread across esports as a whole.

TL;DR

"322" is a number meme and Twitch chat catchphrase that originated from a June 2013 Dota 2 match-fixing scandal.

Overview

322 is a three-digit number that works as an accusation, a joke, and a warning all in one3. Type it in Twitch chat during any competitive game and everyone knows exactly what you mean: somebody just threw. The meme applies to any baffling misplay, whether the player is genuinely match-fixing, choking under pressure, or simply having a catastrophically bad game4. Over time, the Dota 2 community developed its own math around the concept. A "644" (322 × 2) signals a double throw, where one team squanders a lead and then the other team immediately does the same4. A "966" (322 × 3) marks the rare triple throw, a game so chaotic it swings multiple times before anyone actually closes it out4.

On June 14, 2013, RoX.KIS faced zRAGE in the final group stage match of StarLadder StarSeries Season 63. Neither team had anything to play for. RoX.KIS sat outside playoff contention, and zRAGE came in with a 3-11 record, already playing with two stand-ins2. The match should have been a forgettable footnote.

Instead, it became esports' most infamous scandal. At the ten-minute mark, the kill score sat at roughly 8-84. Then RoX.KIS started falling apart. Players teleported into lost teamfights just to die again. Buybacks turned into instant deaths. By the end of the 28-minute game, RoX.KIS had given up 50 kills in a 50-22 blowout loss3.

StarLadder investigated almost immediately2. They discovered that Solo, the team's captain, had placed a bet on zRAGE to win using his girlfriend's account on a gambling site6. The wager was $100 at odds of 3.22, which would return exactly $3225. Solo had used his in-game leadership position to call plays designed to lose, picking poor heroes and directing his team into bad engagements, all without telling his teammates about the bet1.

Origin & Background

Platform
StarLadder (esports tournament), Twitch (viral spread)
Creator
Unknown
Date
2013
Year
2013

On June 14, 2013, RoX.KIS faced zRAGE in the final group stage match of StarLadder StarSeries Season 6. Neither team had anything to play for. RoX.KIS sat outside playoff contention, and zRAGE came in with a 3-11 record, already playing with two stand-ins. The match should have been a forgettable footnote.

Instead, it became esports' most infamous scandal. At the ten-minute mark, the kill score sat at roughly 8-8. Then RoX.KIS started falling apart. Players teleported into lost teamfights just to die again. Buybacks turned into instant deaths. By the end of the 28-minute game, RoX.KIS had given up 50 kills in a 50-22 blowout loss.

StarLadder investigated almost immediately. They discovered that Solo, the team's captain, had placed a bet on zRAGE to win using his girlfriend's account on a gambling site. The wager was $100 at odds of 3.22, which would return exactly $322. Solo had used his in-game leadership position to call plays designed to lose, picking poor heroes and directing his team into bad engagements, all without telling his teammates about the bet.

How It Spread

The fallout came fast. On June 16, 2013, StarLadder banned Solo for life and suspended the rest of the RoX.KIS roster for three years. The organization itself got a one-year ban. Vanskor, who hadn't played in the match, was the only team member to escape punishment.

Solo confessed to the scheme on June 21 and was immediately removed from RoX.KIS. His team manager, Dennis "PODOX" Pestretzoff, issued a statement confirming that Solo had kept the bet secret from his teammates and manipulated the game through hero picks and shot-calling. Many in the community questioned whether the rest of the team was truly innocent given the 50-death scoreline, though Solo maintained he'd acted alone.

By June 23, StarLadder reduced Solo's ban to just one year and freed the other players from their suspensions. Other tournament organizers piled on: joinDOTA announced plans to extend Solo's ban to The Defense, Bigpoint Battle, and other events.

Within weeks, "322" was everywhere in Dota 2 circles. Twitch chat started spamming the number whenever a team made a suspicious or terrible play. Casters picked it up by 2014, using it as casual shorthand for throwing on broadcast. The fact that Solo risked his entire career for just $322 made the meme stick. The number was small enough to be absurd, yet specific enough to be instantly recognizable.

The meme jumped beyond Dota 2 quickly. In late 2014, Malaysia's Arrow Gaming was caught match-fixing in a Dota 2 tournament, and a tournament organizer publicly referenced "322" when describing the incident. That same year, the iBUYPOWER CS:GO scandal saw players betting against their own team in a near-identical scheme, and media outlets explicitly invoked "322" in their coverage. In League of Legends, the term began appearing after Korean player Cheon "Promise" Min-Ki revealed his coach had coerced players into fixing matches.

Solo himself returned to competitive Dota after serving his ban. He rebuilt his career through stints on Team Empire and Vega Squadron before becoming captain of Virtus.pro in 2016, leading one of Dota 2's most dominant rosters. He won multiple Major titles, earned a Mercedes-Benz E-Class Sedan as the first-ever Dota 2 Mercedes MVP at ESL One Hamburg 2017, and accumulated over $1.9 million in career tournament winnings. In a Russian interview, he reflected: "Nobody knew that esports would be such a big deal. So I succumbed to this little temptation and regretted it very much. It was a necessary measure at the time to continue pursuing esports because there was nothing to eat, no money, and no money for rent" (translated from Russian).

How to Use This Meme

The standard use is straightforward. Whenever a player or team makes a terrible play in a competitive game:

1

Type "322" in Twitch chat or a game lobby

2

If the other team then throws the lead right back, type "644"

3

For the extremely rare scenario where the throw ping-pongs a third time, type "966"

Cultural Impact

The 322 scandal did more than create a Twitch chat staple. It forced esports to confront match-fixing as a systemic problem.

Valve, the developer of Dota 2 and CS:GO, issued lifetime bans to match-fixers for the first time in March 2015. Over the following years, more than 50 Dota 2 players received lifetime or indefinite bans for match-fixing or related corruption. Riot Games followed with multi-year and lifetime bans for League of Legends match-fixers.

In 2016, the Esports Integrity Commission (ESIC) was formed as a third-party watchdog to combat cheating, doping, and betting fraud across competitive gaming. The inconsistent punishments that followed Solo's one-year ban made clear that the industry needed standardized enforcement.

High-profile cases kept the 322 reference alive for over a decade. In 2016, StarCraft II world champion Lee "Life" Seung Hyun was arrested in South Korea for fixing matches. In 2020, former TI-winning Newbee players, including TI champion Zeng "Faith" Hongda, were caught fixing and received lifetime Valve bans. In early 2023, Valve banned 46 Chinese players in a single sweep, with 21 receiving lifetime bans. In 2024, former OG player Tommy "Taiga" Le faced match-fixing allegations backed by leaked audio recordings and payment receipts.

By early 2021, the FBI's sports betting unit had begun assisting in U.S. esports match-fixing investigations. By 2018, lifetime bans for match-fixers were standard practice across major tournament organizers including Valve, ESL, and DreamHack.

Perhaps the most ironic dimension of 322 culture: fixers learned to weaponize the meme itself. Because Twitch chat spams "322" constantly as a joke, genuine accusations of match-fixing get lost in the noise.

Fun Facts

Solo never actually received the $322. The fix was discovered before he could cash out.

The International 2013 (held weeks after the scandal) had a prize pool of $2,874,380. By the following year, TI's prize pool topped $10 million, making Solo's $322 gamble look even more absurd in hindsight.

Solo became the oldest player to compete at The International in 2023 at age 33, and the oldest player at the Esports World Cup in July 2025 with Team Yandex.

At ESL One Hamburg 2017, Solo won a Mercedes-Benz E-Class Sedan as the first-ever Dota 2 Mercedes MVP award winner, a far cry from his $322 payday years earlier.

The FBI's sports betting unit began assisting in U.S. esports match-fixing investigations in early 2021.

Derivatives & Variations

644 / 966:

Mathematical extensions where 644 (322 × 2) marks a double throw and 966 (322 × 3) a triple, used when a game swings back and forth between teams[4].

"322 mafia":

A term for organized match-fixing rings in esports betting, coined in the aftermath of multiple scandals that followed Solo's original incident[3].

Taiga spam:

After Tommy "Taiga" Le's 2024 match-fixing allegations, his name started appearing alongside "322" in Twitch chat as a secondary throw callout[4].

Frequently Asked Questions

322

2013Catchphrase / number memeclassic
322 is a 2013 Dota 2 catchphrase from pro player Alexey "Solo" Berezin's $322 match-fixing bet, becoming esports shorthand for throwing.

"322" is a number meme and Twitch chat catchphrase that originated from a June 2013 Dota 2 match-fixing scandal. Pro player Alexey "Solo" Berezin bet $100 against his own team at 3.22 odds, standing to win exactly $322 if they lost. The number became the Dota 2 community's universal shorthand for throwing a game, and later spread across esports as a whole.

TL;DR

"322" is a number meme and Twitch chat catchphrase that originated from a June 2013 Dota 2 match-fixing scandal.

Overview

322 is a three-digit number that works as an accusation, a joke, and a warning all in one. Type it in Twitch chat during any competitive game and everyone knows exactly what you mean: somebody just threw. The meme applies to any baffling misplay, whether the player is genuinely match-fixing, choking under pressure, or simply having a catastrophically bad game. Over time, the Dota 2 community developed its own math around the concept. A "644" (322 × 2) signals a double throw, where one team squanders a lead and then the other team immediately does the same. A "966" (322 × 3) marks the rare triple throw, a game so chaotic it swings multiple times before anyone actually closes it out.

On June 14, 2013, RoX.KIS faced zRAGE in the final group stage match of StarLadder StarSeries Season 6. Neither team had anything to play for. RoX.KIS sat outside playoff contention, and zRAGE came in with a 3-11 record, already playing with two stand-ins. The match should have been a forgettable footnote.

Instead, it became esports' most infamous scandal. At the ten-minute mark, the kill score sat at roughly 8-8. Then RoX.KIS started falling apart. Players teleported into lost teamfights just to die again. Buybacks turned into instant deaths. By the end of the 28-minute game, RoX.KIS had given up 50 kills in a 50-22 blowout loss.

StarLadder investigated almost immediately. They discovered that Solo, the team's captain, had placed a bet on zRAGE to win using his girlfriend's account on a gambling site. The wager was $100 at odds of 3.22, which would return exactly $322. Solo had used his in-game leadership position to call plays designed to lose, picking poor heroes and directing his team into bad engagements, all without telling his teammates about the bet.

Origin & Background

Platform
StarLadder (esports tournament), Twitch (viral spread)
Creator
Unknown
Date
2013
Year
2013

On June 14, 2013, RoX.KIS faced zRAGE in the final group stage match of StarLadder StarSeries Season 6. Neither team had anything to play for. RoX.KIS sat outside playoff contention, and zRAGE came in with a 3-11 record, already playing with two stand-ins. The match should have been a forgettable footnote.

Instead, it became esports' most infamous scandal. At the ten-minute mark, the kill score sat at roughly 8-8. Then RoX.KIS started falling apart. Players teleported into lost teamfights just to die again. Buybacks turned into instant deaths. By the end of the 28-minute game, RoX.KIS had given up 50 kills in a 50-22 blowout loss.

StarLadder investigated almost immediately. They discovered that Solo, the team's captain, had placed a bet on zRAGE to win using his girlfriend's account on a gambling site. The wager was $100 at odds of 3.22, which would return exactly $322. Solo had used his in-game leadership position to call plays designed to lose, picking poor heroes and directing his team into bad engagements, all without telling his teammates about the bet.

How It Spread

The fallout came fast. On June 16, 2013, StarLadder banned Solo for life and suspended the rest of the RoX.KIS roster for three years. The organization itself got a one-year ban. Vanskor, who hadn't played in the match, was the only team member to escape punishment.

Solo confessed to the scheme on June 21 and was immediately removed from RoX.KIS. His team manager, Dennis "PODOX" Pestretzoff, issued a statement confirming that Solo had kept the bet secret from his teammates and manipulated the game through hero picks and shot-calling. Many in the community questioned whether the rest of the team was truly innocent given the 50-death scoreline, though Solo maintained he'd acted alone.

By June 23, StarLadder reduced Solo's ban to just one year and freed the other players from their suspensions. Other tournament organizers piled on: joinDOTA announced plans to extend Solo's ban to The Defense, Bigpoint Battle, and other events.

Within weeks, "322" was everywhere in Dota 2 circles. Twitch chat started spamming the number whenever a team made a suspicious or terrible play. Casters picked it up by 2014, using it as casual shorthand for throwing on broadcast. The fact that Solo risked his entire career for just $322 made the meme stick. The number was small enough to be absurd, yet specific enough to be instantly recognizable.

The meme jumped beyond Dota 2 quickly. In late 2014, Malaysia's Arrow Gaming was caught match-fixing in a Dota 2 tournament, and a tournament organizer publicly referenced "322" when describing the incident. That same year, the iBUYPOWER CS:GO scandal saw players betting against their own team in a near-identical scheme, and media outlets explicitly invoked "322" in their coverage. In League of Legends, the term began appearing after Korean player Cheon "Promise" Min-Ki revealed his coach had coerced players into fixing matches.

Solo himself returned to competitive Dota after serving his ban. He rebuilt his career through stints on Team Empire and Vega Squadron before becoming captain of Virtus.pro in 2016, leading one of Dota 2's most dominant rosters. He won multiple Major titles, earned a Mercedes-Benz E-Class Sedan as the first-ever Dota 2 Mercedes MVP at ESL One Hamburg 2017, and accumulated over $1.9 million in career tournament winnings. In a Russian interview, he reflected: "Nobody knew that esports would be such a big deal. So I succumbed to this little temptation and regretted it very much. It was a necessary measure at the time to continue pursuing esports because there was nothing to eat, no money, and no money for rent" (translated from Russian).

How to Use This Meme

The standard use is straightforward. Whenever a player or team makes a terrible play in a competitive game:

1

Type "322" in Twitch chat or a game lobby

2

If the other team then throws the lead right back, type "644"

3

For the extremely rare scenario where the throw ping-pongs a third time, type "966"

Cultural Impact

The 322 scandal did more than create a Twitch chat staple. It forced esports to confront match-fixing as a systemic problem.

Valve, the developer of Dota 2 and CS:GO, issued lifetime bans to match-fixers for the first time in March 2015. Over the following years, more than 50 Dota 2 players received lifetime or indefinite bans for match-fixing or related corruption. Riot Games followed with multi-year and lifetime bans for League of Legends match-fixers.

In 2016, the Esports Integrity Commission (ESIC) was formed as a third-party watchdog to combat cheating, doping, and betting fraud across competitive gaming. The inconsistent punishments that followed Solo's one-year ban made clear that the industry needed standardized enforcement.

High-profile cases kept the 322 reference alive for over a decade. In 2016, StarCraft II world champion Lee "Life" Seung Hyun was arrested in South Korea for fixing matches. In 2020, former TI-winning Newbee players, including TI champion Zeng "Faith" Hongda, were caught fixing and received lifetime Valve bans. In early 2023, Valve banned 46 Chinese players in a single sweep, with 21 receiving lifetime bans. In 2024, former OG player Tommy "Taiga" Le faced match-fixing allegations backed by leaked audio recordings and payment receipts.

By early 2021, the FBI's sports betting unit had begun assisting in U.S. esports match-fixing investigations. By 2018, lifetime bans for match-fixers were standard practice across major tournament organizers including Valve, ESL, and DreamHack.

Perhaps the most ironic dimension of 322 culture: fixers learned to weaponize the meme itself. Because Twitch chat spams "322" constantly as a joke, genuine accusations of match-fixing get lost in the noise.

Fun Facts

Solo never actually received the $322. The fix was discovered before he could cash out.

The International 2013 (held weeks after the scandal) had a prize pool of $2,874,380. By the following year, TI's prize pool topped $10 million, making Solo's $322 gamble look even more absurd in hindsight.

Solo became the oldest player to compete at The International in 2023 at age 33, and the oldest player at the Esports World Cup in July 2025 with Team Yandex.

At ESL One Hamburg 2017, Solo won a Mercedes-Benz E-Class Sedan as the first-ever Dota 2 Mercedes MVP award winner, a far cry from his $322 payday years earlier.

The FBI's sports betting unit began assisting in U.S. esports match-fixing investigations in early 2021.

Derivatives & Variations

644 / 966:

Mathematical extensions where 644 (322 × 2) marks a double throw and 966 (322 × 3) a triple, used when a game swings back and forth between teams[4].

"322 mafia":

A term for organized match-fixing rings in esports betting, coined in the aftermath of multiple scandals that followed Solo's original incident[3].

Taiga spam:

After Tommy "Taiga" Le's 2024 match-fixing allegations, his name started appearing alongside "322" in Twitch chat as a secondary throw callout[4].

Frequently Asked Questions