Faker demonstrates 2:30 Ambessa jungle clear with precise leash-edge mechanics on sponsored stream

The T1 star pushed jungle camps to their reset limit while Razer watched his every click.

(Image via leesh2148 on Soop Live)
TL;DR
  • Faker completed an Ambessa jungle clear in roughly 2:31 using leash-edge camp dragging and double-camp ability hits.
  • The technique maximizes speed but risks camp resets if executed imperfectly or disrupted by invades.
  • The stream included Razer-sponsored hand-cam footage showing his precise mouse inputs and technique.
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Faker showcased an extremely fast Ambessa jungle clear on his recent stream, finishing the full route in approximately two minutes and 31 seconds. The T1 mid-laner executed a highly optimized path that pushes the boundaries of efficient jungle clearing through precise camp management and ability usage.

The clear relied on dragging jungle camps to the absolute edge of their leash range before finishing them. This technique minimizes travel time between camps but leaves almost no room for error. Multiple moments in the video show monsters nearly resetting their patience meters right before dying.

Faker demonstrated advanced double-camp techniques throughout the clear. He positioned to hit both blue buff and gromp with a single Q ability, then repeated similar setups with raptors and red buff. These optimizations shave seconds off the clear time by maximizing damage output during transitions.

A 2:30 first clear matters in competitive League because it determines early game tempo. Finishing faster means reaching level four sooner, arriving at the 3:30 scuttle crab spawn with priority, and enabling earlier gank windows. Every second saved translates to map pressure advantages.

The method carries significant risk. If an enemy invades during a critical leash moment, a camp could reset and lose five to 10 seconds or more. Small pathing errors or unexpected ability interactions can similarly break the timing. The precision required makes this clear difficult to execute consistently under pressure.

When Razer wants everyone to see your mouse

The stream featured a hand-cam setup showing Faker’s mouse inputs throughout the clear. His stream title on SOOP explicitly read “Faker Stream by Razer,” confirming the hardware visibility as part of a sponsorship activation.

Viewers focused heavily on Faker’s mouse technique. Many observed him clicking near the edge of the left mouse button and speculated he uses mouse wheel inputs for attack-move commands rather than standard clicking. These observations led to conversations about his known preferences for high DPI settings and mouse acceleration.

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