“Ame” is the tournament ID most international viewers know. “雨” is a fan‑spread poetic gloss (“rain”) tied to mood and memes. “萧瑟” is another handle tied to specific team eras — all three can appear in one paragraph of fan lore.Different platforms and years favored different spellings. The rain motif grew because streamers and editors liked short, emotional labels for highlight reels.Bundles like “Ame / 雨 / 萧瑟” appear when people want to signal “I know the whole arc,” not just the latest ID.Common in essay‑style posts, video titles and nostalgic threads about PSG.LGD‑era storylines.Not every English article needs the rain metaphor — it is culturally loaded for Chinese audiences.
Ame / “Yu (rain)” / 萧瑟 — ID bundle · Ame meme explained
Browse all memes>>Explains how his English ID, a poetic “rain” reading and the 萧瑟 handle show up together in fan talk.
Deep dive
More memes · Ame
“Wang Chunyu / silly fish” nickname:A jokey community nickname built around Ame’s real name 王淳煜 — common in forums and stream chat, not an official alias.Drama narrative: Ame vs Sccc:How a long‑running fan rivalry story between two famous Chinese cores gets clipped and reshared.Morphling “wave uphill” (TI9 moment):The iconic TI9 Morphling play that became a permanent meme for risky high‑ground commits.Lifestealer high ground without BKB:Paired with Morph memes as the twin “TI9 heartbreak” shorthand for aggressive high‑ground attempts.
Third-party references
How the meme spread
Cross‑check official roster pages and long‑running community explainers when you see mixed romanization.
- Tieba thread: is the “rain” after Yatoro’s ID about Ame?How explanatory “rain” write-ups spread on Tieba.
- “What does the rain after Yatoro’s ID mean?” explainer videoFan theory videos as a common format.
- Fan edit unpacking “the rain behind rain”The “rain” reading is fan lore, not an official gloss.
- Discussion tying 萧瑟 / Ame / “rain” togetherFans stacking all three names in one narrative.
- Tieba thread on Ame and “rain” spellingsHow posters connect “Ame” with “rain” wordplay.