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“Smoothie built the work ethic. Andy is using it”: What it takes to build a career after esports

“Smoothie built the work ethic. Andy is using it”: What it takes to build a career after esports
ThePawn.com April 15, 2026 5 minutes read
“Smoothie built the work ethic. Andy is using it”: What it takes to build a career after esports
keyboard and laptop showing changing careers after esports
Image Credit: Thomas Lefebvre and Axville

When the stage lights go out, what remains?

For retired esports professionals, that question is becoming harder to avoid. The old fantasy — that a few strong seasons, a recognizable handle, and a spot in the ecosystem would naturally lead to a comfortable second act — looks less reliable than it once did. Salaries have cooled.

Team budgets have tightened. Jobs adjacent to competition, from coaching to broadcast to content, still exist, but they are fewer, more competitive, and often just as unstable as the careers players are leaving behind.

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Careers After Esports: The Skills That Carry Over, and the Ones You Leave Behind

That makes the quieter stories more interesting: the former pro and analyst in medical sales, the ex-card gamer in futures trading, the longtime LCS veteran now selling luxury homes in Beverly Hills. These are not stories about staying in gaming by another name. They’re about leaving it, and about the strange challenge of translating a life built inside esports into a world that often does not understand it.

Alberto “Crumbz” Rengifo knows that translation problem well. After a decade in League of Legends as both a player and a broadcast analyst, he stepped into an industry with little overlap in language.

“I’m in corporate sales selling First Aid supplies and medical equipment,” he said. The move came quickly. “Moving back to Canada from the US, it was an amazing opportunity on short notice from doing solar sales.”

On paper, it can look like a sharp break. In practice, the underlying skills can be familiar.

“Trusting the process and grind is absolutely essential in sales,” Crumbz said. “Also, your ability to collaborate with your team in various departments is paramount to success.”

The wording could describe an esports team reviewing scrims after a loss, except now the stakes are quotas, clients, and cross-functional coordination instead of draft prep and stage games.

crumbz analyst lol
Image Credit: Riot Games

His point gets at one of the central tensions of post-esports life. The benefits of a competitive gaming career are real: discipline, performance under pressure, pattern recognition, etc. But outside esports, those strengths are not self-explanatory.

“You must absolutely learn how to frame esports experience into a relevant positive experience,” Rengifo said. “Not many people in the ‘real world’ know or even care about esports. It’s your job to teach them why it matters.”

That may be the hardest part of all. Retirement from esports is not just a career shift. It is an act of interpretation.

Andy “Smoothie” Ta spent 11 years competing at the top of North American League of Legends, appearing at two World Championships and reaching domestic finals with elite organizations (and TSM). In 2024, he retired and got his real estate license.

The first months after that transition were disorienting.

“For the first few months after I retired, I was genuinely lost,” he said. “I had spent over a decade building an identity around being Smoothie. My schedule, my self-worth, my social circle, all of it was wrapped up in that name.”

That is a familiar problem in traditional sports, too, but esports can intensify it.

Pro players often enter young, live inside tightly managed routines, and spend formative years being known primarily by a tag. When that structure disappears, so does a ready-made identity. Smoothie said he deliberately avoided the most obvious next steps.

“I turned down the obvious paths, coaching, streaming, content, because none of them felt like a bet on myself,” he said. “They felt like staying in the same room with the lights off.”

Smoothie LCS
Image Credit: Riot Games

Instead, he chose a field that frightened him.

“I moved into luxury real estate in Beverly Hills because it scared me,” he said. “I knew almost nothing, I had to start over completely, and the learning curve was brutal.”

The results came quickly: major sales volume, a rookie award, and proof that competitive habits can survive outside the server.

“Smoothie built the work ethic,” he said. “Andy is using it.”

Smoothie is especially sharp on what outsiders get wrong about pro gaming. The stereotype is that esports produces only narrow, game-specific skills, as if years of elite competition amount to little more than fast hands. His experience suggests otherwise.

“The most important skills that I took with me during my transition to real estate was pattern recognition, teamwork, and communication,” he said. “One of my coaches told me early in my career to aim to improve just 1% every day. I have never stopped applying that.”

There is also an irony in how the old career can become newly valuable once it is over. Smoothie said clients are often fascinated by the life he came from: the practice schedules, the pressure, the experience of playing on the world stage. In esports, that résumé can feel ordinary among peers.

Outside it, it can become a differentiator — a conversation starter, a mark of uncommon discipline, a story people remember.

The post “Smoothie built the work ethic. Andy is using it”: What it takes to build a career after esports appeared first on Esports Insider.

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