Sometimes a series tells you everything you need to know about two teams in under an hour. That’s exactly what happened when FlyQuest faced Disguised in LCS 2026 Spring Week 2, delivering one of the most dominant performances we’ve seen this split.
FlyQuest didn’t just win — they sent a message. Game 1 ended 23-5 in kills after 30 minutes. Game 2 was even more brutal at 19-3 in just 26 minutes. That’s a combined 42-8 kill advantage that left Disguised looking completely outclassed.
“Disguised vs. FlyQuest / LCS 2026 Spring – Week 2 / Post-Match Discussion” — u/Yujin-Ha on r/leagueoflegends
The numbers tell the story, but watching Gryffinn work was pure art. The FlyQuest jungler earned Player of the Game honors in both matches, and it wasn’t even close. His Nocturne in Game 1 went 3-1-10, creating picks and controlling vision like a seasoned veteran. When he switched to a different pick in Game 2, the result was the same — complete jungle dominance that left Disguised’s KryRa looking lost on Skarner.
What made this series so impressive wasn’t just the scoreline. It was how clean FlyQuest looked in every phase of the game. Their early game setup was perfect, their mid-game teamfighting was surgical, and their late game execution left no room for comebacks. This is what championship-level League of Legends looks like.
FlyQuest’s bot lane deserves serious credit too. Massu’s Corki performance in Game 1 was absolutely insane — 11 kills and 2 deaths with 7 assists. That’s the kind of carry performance that wins you titles. Meanwhile, Cryogen on Nami provided the perfect support foundation with 17 assists and just one death. The synergy between these two players looks like it’s reaching new heights.
On the other side, Disguised has some serious soul-searching to do. Getting held to just 5 kills in a 30-minute game is rough. Getting held to 3 kills in 26 minutes is devastating. Their mid-laner Callme went 0-6 on Azir in Game 1, and things didn’t get much better from there. This wasn’t just about individual mistakes — it looked like fundamental team coordination issues.
The meta implications here are fascinating too. We’re seeing teams prioritize early game control and vision dominance on Patch 26.7, and FlyQuest executed this gameplan perfectly. Their objective control was flawless — they secured Cloud Dragon, Herald, Mountain Dragon, Baron, and Hextech Dragon in Game 1 while Disguised got nothing. That’s not luck. That’s preparation and execution.
What really stands out is how FlyQuest closed these games. No drawn-out 40-minute slogs. No throwing leads at Baron. Just clean, efficient wins that showed they understand how to convert advantages into victories. That’s championship DNA.
For us LCS fans, this series highlighted the gap that’s starting to emerge between the top teams and everyone else. FlyQuest looks like they’re operating on a different level right now. Their coordination is crisp, their individual play is sharp, and their macro understanding seems ahead of most teams in the league.
Disguised, meanwhile, needs to figure things out fast. You can’t give up 42 kills in two games and expect to compete in this league. Their roster has talent, but talent without coordination gets you exactly what we saw here — complete domination by a more cohesive team.
The jungle difference was probably the biggest factor. Gryffinn vs KryRa looked like a veteran teaching a rookie how the position works. That gap in experience and game understanding showed up in every skirmish, every objective fight, and every team decision.
Looking ahead, FlyQuest has to feel great about their championship chances if they can maintain this level of play. They’re showing the kind of consistency and dominance that wins splits. Every other team in the LCS just got put on notice.
For Disguised, the season is far from over, but they need answers quickly. The gap between them and the top teams is real, and it’s growing. They have the individual skill to compete, but they need to find their team identity fast.
This series was a statement. FlyQuest isn’t just another good team — they might be the team to beat in LCS 2026. And for the rest of the league, that should be a wake-up call.

