November 13th, 2018 is when Ashe was introduced into Overwatch. Since her inception, she has seen relatively little play, being outclassed by other hitscan staples like McCree and Widowmaker. However, during Week 11 of the Overwatch League’s 2020 season, she has seen a surge in playtime. Why has Ashe surfaced now and is it on her own merit or because of the Hero Pool system? We have two strong examples for Ashe in Overwatch League to pull from. One from the Los Angeles Valiant and one from the Chengdu Hunters. The Valiant Case In the Los Angeles Valiant versus the Los Angeles Gladiators, we see Ashe used to either facilitate picks and creating them on her own. The consistent damage provided with Ashe’s Dynamite, backed with Mercy’s damage boost, is enough to hamstring the Gladiators’ total health pool. With a self-sufficient pick like Torbjorn, Reaper, and Tracer, the Ashe should have the space she needs to sit in the back and shoot uncontested while the frontline creates the space.



With this composition in mind, ideally what the Valiant are looking for is to spam out the enemy’s shields and kite away using Torbjorn’s turret to add to spam and allowing Kai "KSP" Collins the space he needs to work all the while keeping supports safe. This plays directly into the Valiants wheelhouse as KSP is a known hitscan ace as well as a well known Ashe Overwatch player.



Johannes "Shax" Nielsen and Song "Dreamer" Sanglok seem to be playing as a duo here. When Dreamer makes the move to Wrecking Ball, Shax plays mobile, dive heroes, like Tracer However, when Dreamer makes the move to Orisa, Shax tended to play more stationary DPS like Reaper or Torbjorn or KSP would move himself to one of the aforementioned stationary DPS. On Hollowood the Valiant would also feature Shax on Pharah while Dreamer piloted Orisa.

It should be no surprise that the Valiant struggled on re-contesting and on attack on Dorado seeing how they have no space to kite into. They spawn with their backs against a wall with nowhere for their Ashe and their Mercy to rotate to. Add onto that, the contrast how the Valiant performed on their attack on Hollywood. The Gladiators’ defence is forced to play on the point, opening up space for the Valiant to spam onto the point. Again, this is represented in how difficult it was for the Valiant to push into Point A on Hanamura. And again on the Valiant’s defensive win on Hanamura. Read more - Sideshow:''I actually didn’t even like Overwatch when I first started'' This is not to claim that the Valiant played perfectly, but the first two maps played certainly did no favour to their compositional win conditions. We don’t count the Los Angeles Gladiators here, because they admittedly mirrored the composition after playing directly against it in their match against the Valiant. Many of these themes are consistent with the Chengdu Hunters’ case as well. The Hunters Case While Ashe was featured in Chengdu’s 3-0 win over the Guangzhou Charge, she was used much more sparingly and more as a counter to the Charge’s Pharah-centric composition. Generally speaking, they still used her in the same ways. Famed Chinese DPS player Xin "Leave" Huang played Ashe on Hollywood Defense and Rialto Defense and where Ashe was not favoured, Leave and the Hunters prioritized Dive compositions featuring their signature Wrecking Ball, Tracer, and Sombra.