This week's League of Legends power rankings were compiled by Tyler "Fionn" Erzberger, Kelsey Moser, Nilu Kulasingham and Matt Demers. Rankings were achieved by consensus, then thoughts were written by each writer separately.

#15: yoe Flash Wolves

Kelsey: I still haven't seen much yoe Flash Wolves, but when I do watch them in LMS there are an abundance of misplays from their ADC NL. That doesn't mean players like Maple and SwordArt aren't impressive in an international setting or that the Wolves haven't shown surprisingly strong team fighting. They're worthy of a nod from us for sure.

Nilu: A solid performance at IEM coupled with strong domestic performances means that yoe are a team worthy of a spot in the power rankings. They're the most dominant team in the LMS and have only lost a single game. They forfeited vs AHQ, so the teams decided to play in a friendly instead; yoe basically destroyed AHQ in that friendly.

#14: SK Gaming

Matt: While SK sit higher on the standings than Fnatic, something just feels off about the team; Fnatic's recent wins seemed stronger, and if they meet in the EU playoffs it will be interesting to see which team can cover their weaknesses better.

Kelsey: SK Gaming still may be one of the best teams in Europe, but they've had weaknesses exposed in the past weeks. They're making strides to work around them and incorporate more diversity into their play. Playoffs will show us if there's a payoff.

#13: Fnatic

Fionn: I'd love to see their aggressive skirmish style against H2k's calculated, methodical play. That is all.

Kelsey: Fnatic is a definite favorite for European Playoffs, and they've hit their stride while SK is patching up weaknesses. Huni's growing champion pool shows he can shine in the new meta, and Reignover's preference for tank junglers means that their top laner can play full on carries.

There's still an over-reliance on Huni that may be punishable, but Fnatic is looking strong for now.

#12: Cloud9

Fionn: Cloud9 had an awful season by their standards but still ended up in second place. They've been unpredictable this season and aren't the clear favorites like the past three NA LCS seasons, but do you really want to bet against a team who is 95-26 all-time in LCS?

Matt: Fionn's statistics aren't wrong; Cloud9 have some serious skill behind them to be able to pull up their socks from a dismal IEM Katowice and a weird split. I'm almost disappointed in them restoring the TSM-C9 top two finish, but I still have to applaud them for it.

#11: CJ Entus

Fionn: They are the worst best team in Korea but also the best bad team in Korea.

Nilu: Frankly, CJ look awful. The team is plagued by inconsistency issues and while it's clear that the team has potential to be a very good team, the consistency that CJ performs on is a very bad sign. CJ vs Jin Air will be telling.

#10: Team SoloMid

Nilu: TSM are clearly the best Western team on 5.4 but they've been a bit iffy on 5.5. They've been consistently a top-two team in North America since their formation so I don't really have any doubts about the team in the region. They'll probably finish top two once again.

Kelsey: Despite TSM's showing at IEM the meta changes haven't been kind to them. New picks have surprised the team, and it seems doing well against Bjergsen is still the clincher for beating TSM. Letting Dyrus suffer seems to be hurting them more in lane swaps. Overall, TSM is still the best Western team, and their team fighting and lane pressure mid is powerful, but we bet they'll lose to any eastern team with stronger mid laners.

#9: LGD Gaming

Kelsey: LGD is above CJ Entus and TSM because they have better side wave control and strong team fighting. While other teams in China may have figured out how to manipulate their weaknesses, we wager they'd still do well internationally. Their jungler is still an increasingly obvious pain point, and We1less needs to stop waffling on his mid lane picks.

Fionn: I am objecting from writing about LGD until Flame is released and allowed to play a LPL game again.

#8: Snake eSports

Nilu: Snake will probably be team most affected by 5.5 in a positive way. Their ability to consistently fight well when running protect-the-kRYST4L comps has been their hallmark, and 5.5 buffs supportive junglers a lot. BAKA still has very problematic champion pool issues, so Snake may struggle in playoffs.

Kelsey: Snake, like LGD Gaming, is struggling in China as people begin to figure out their weaknesses. They're easy to ban out, and they suffer in the lane swap. Even so, their ability to control when and where they take fights will do them a lot of favors, and as 5.5 rolls out, it will open up more zoning picks from the jungle to give them more options.

#7: Vici Gaming

Kelsey: Vici Gaming and Invictus Gaming have had a renaissance. VG is looking like the smart team that goes for the lane swap and superior rotation. Still, the individual skill of their laners will be an issue for them, and time will tell if they'll rise or fall.

Fionn: Mata might have been fined $8,000 for showing his frustrations during Demacia Cup, yet it's difficult to write off a team that have the two best players from last year's World Championship. Dandy and Mata are extremely good and even with a decent supporting cast they can go far.

#6: OMG

Kelsey: We can't rate teams on "trolling." Despite Uzi publicly informing OMG fans that they're intentionally playing things they're bad at, that doesn't excuse bizarre drafting and the fact that they should be able to play the champions they're playing. If OMG has a resurgence, it will be during Playoffs. For now, we're expecting them to finish less than second in the regular season for the first time ever.

Nilu: OMG don't have the results to back up the perceived strength of their roster. It's entirely possible that the team isn't trying their best but we can't rate a team high based on potential results that may or may not materialize. The team still performs well enough to be considered a top three team in China.

#5: Jin Air Green Wings

Fionn: Jin Air can beat any team in the world but can also lose to any team. They play a disciplined style and love the late-game, but they're going to need GBM to take an ace role in the playoffs if they want to knock off SKT or GE.

Nilu: Fourth place in rankings but they should be third place in Korea, the team look strong and capable of taking games off anyone. But they do have some inconsistencies that they need to work on, particularly Pilot's lack of strength on auto-attack based AD Carres. With champions like Vayne returning in 5.5, perhaps it's time to field Cpt Jack?

#4: Invictus Gaming

Fionn: There is no better bromance in the world currently than KaKAO and Rookie. They play off each other like they know what the other is thinking and have catapulted iG into a top spot in the LPL Spring regular season.

Kelsey: Don't be fooled by Edward Gaming trouncing Invictus Gaming in Demacia Cup finals; that's just something they do to everyone.

The strides Invictus Gaming has made in team building in the past few weeks have solidified their identity as a counter-strategy team that's well researched and can play picks and styles specifically to counter the opposition. If OMG doesn't step up in playoffs, it will be time to declare them the second best team in China.

#3: GE Tigers

Nilu: One best-of-three loss to KT should not be enough to demote the Tigers from #1 in Korea, but patch 5.5 compounds things in SKT's favour. GE looks a bit less dominant than they were in 5.5 and the loss to WE at IEM may have exposed some critical flaws in their pick/bans that may need reassessing.

Fionn: We are now at a point where we need to decide if the Tigers are just bored and lazy from already claiming the top spot in the LCK Spring regular season, or if there are actual problems inside the core of the team following their loss to KT Rolster.

#2: SK Telecom T1

Kelsey: SKT has a jungler problem they're working on. Their trainee T0m shows promise if he can get over his Udyr fixation, and bengi's vision control is still valuable. There's little to say other than that Faker is still the best player in the world, and SKT is so practiced at playing to let him succeed.

Nilu: SKT have seemingly fixed a number of problems with the introduction of 5.5. Bengi is doing much better on tanks and the team has finally opted to stick with Faker for the majority of their matches. SKT on 5.5 are much better than they've ever been in 2015.

#1: Edward Gaming

Fionn: By winning the Demacia Cup, EDG have now won around their 900th Chinese tournament in the past two years. Deft is distancing himself from the rest of the AD pack and is clearly the best in the world.

Kelsey: The strength of this team is in their map pressure. They have a jungler and effectively a top lane and support roamer who seem to excel in counter-ganking. As an opposing jungler, you need to expect to be counter-ganked by not just one, but two players in the sidelines. No one in China can stop EDG. It's up to the rest of the world.