fbpx
Wikipedia

Moon (gamer)

Jang Jae-ho (known as spirit_moon or moon) is a South Korean professional gamer of the popular Blizzard real-time strategy games Warcraft III and StarCraft II. He is seen by many as the best Night Elf player in the world. Jang Jae-ho is a five time world champion and has won three televised national Korean WarCraft III Championships as well as four seasons of MBCGame's World War. He is particularly known for his excellent micromanagement and innovative strategies. He is often seen using strategies that later set the benchmark for many Night Elf players and was nicknamed the "5th Race" by Gametv.com. He has played and won more televised WarCraft III games than any other Warcraft III players. Jang Jae-ho is featured in the documentary film Beyond the Game.[1] Moon transitioned to StarCraft II and was without a team for a while, before retiring from professional gaming in order to fulfill South Korean military service requirements.[2] After completing his military service, Moon returned to Warcraft 3 and is currently active.[3]

moon
Jang at ESL StarCraft 2 Masters 2023 Winter
Personal information
NameJang Jae-ho
Nickname(s)Fantasista
NationalitySouth Korean
Career information
GamesWarcraft III
StarCraft II
Playing career2003–2012
Team history
2005–2006Mousesports
2006–2008MeetYourMakers
2009–2011WeMade FOX
2012Fnatic
Career highlights and awards
  • IEF champion
  • WCG champion
  • 9× MBC Game League champion
  • 4× NGL-One champion
  • 2× PGL champion
  • NeXT champion
  • 2× IEST champion
  • 3× WC3L champion
  • WEG champion
Korean name
Hangul
장재호
Revised RomanizationJang Jae-ho
McCune–ReischauerChang chaeho

Professional gaming career edit

Korean Champion edit

After Warcraft III: The Frozen Throne was released July 2003 a professional competitive gaming scene supporting the game developed in South Korea. Jang Jae-ho quickly rose to become one of the most prominent players in this scene, winning his first big tournament by beating Chun "Sweet" Jung Hee in the finals of televised league MBC Sonokong Prime League II in 2003. He defended his championship title in the finals of next edition of the league (which took place later that year), and lost to Park Se "Swain" Ryong who was at one point down 2 maps (the match is considered one of the greatest comebacks in WarCraft III history).

World Champion edit

Known for his innovative strategies, fans nicknamed Jang Jae-ho "Fantasista". After the release of The Frozen Throne he developed into the dominating player of the Korean WarCraft III scene (which he is considered still today). Few major Korean competitions concluded in 2004 (aside from several qualifiers for international tournaments only the MBC Daum Prime League IV). Jang Jae-ho qualified for the 2004 World Cyber Games global finals, meaning he would make his first international appearance.

He was considered the insider favorite for the tournament which took place in San Francisco, California. He was stopped by his countryman Tae Min "Zacard" Hwang in the round of 16 however, considered a major upset since Jang Jae-ho had an unbeaten televised record versus Hwang Tae-min's race of choice, Orc.

Upon his return to Korea he progressed to the last stages of the MBCGame Prime League V and the 2004–2005 Ongamenet War3 TFT Invitational. He eventually progressed to the finals of both which were set to take place in early 2005, he was also invited to a new televised league with an international field of participants named World e-Sports Games meaning he was competing in three televised leagues simultaneously.

He went undefeated in the first season of the World e-Sports Games, beating names as Fredrik Johansson and Li "Sky" Xiaofeng. The eventual finals cast him against the player that knocked him out of the World Cyber Games, Tae Min Zacard, who he proceeded to beat 3–0.

The league was followed intensely by WarCraft III fans around the globe and fully established Jang Jae-ho as a gaming icon. Around the same time he won MBCGame Prime League V and became the runner-up of the 2004–2005 Ongamenet War3 TFT Invitational, losing to Korean prodigy Jang "FreeDoM" Yong Suk in the finals after being up two maps. This further enhanced his reputation as the world's best WarCraft III player and made him one of the best paid gamers of the time; winning US$50,000 in a span of months.

Throughout the rest of 2005 he would win the second season of the World e-Sports Games beating Kim Dong "Gostop" Moon in the grand finals, the MBCGame Warcraft League and several tournaments in China. His winnings in the year were approximately US$83,000 which was by then the largest sum won by any player throughout a year in WarCraft III.

He also signed with the Korean company Pantech & Curitel during this time, representing them in leagues.

During these events a "rivalry" was created between him and Dutch professional gamer Manuel "Grubby" Schenkhuizen by fans. Jang Jae-ho was dominating competitions in South Korea including the globally diverse World e-Sports Games while Manuel Schenkhuizen had what was considered a dominating run in international competition, holding at one point the two most prestigious international titles; that of the World Cyber Games (which he won in 2004) and the Electronic Sports World Cup (which he won in 2005).

As they dominated different circuits they did not meet in any off-line matches throughout the 2005 year . Despite several online matches the rivalry was not resolved during this time as Jang Jae-ho was perceived as having a "racial advantage" with his Night Elf vs. Manuel Schenkhuizen's Orc.

2006 Slump edit

By late 2005 Jang Jae-ho's results weakened, he was eliminated from the second group stage of the World e-Sports Games in the longest tie-breaker (for second place) of the series history which included him, Korean professional gamer Jae Wook "Lucifer" Noh and Swedish professional gamer Kim "SaSe" Hammar.

He signed with Danish professional competitive gaming team MeetYourMakers in February 2006.

He was considered the favorite for the masters of the World e-Sports Games, which took place April 21 – May 3, 2006 in Hangzhou, China. This eight player invitational saw all top two finishers of previous seasons return, and invited a number of players considered the world's strongest at the time.

He went undefeated through the group stages of the tournament, beating French professional gamer Yoan "ToD" Merlo, Kim Dong Moon and Chinese professional gamer Sun Ri "XiaOt" Wai. This cast him against Manuel "Grubby" Schenkhuizen in the semi-finals, which would be their first match in a major international tournament.

Jang Jae-ho lost the match 1–3, which was considered an upset but not totally out of the realm of possibilities as a patch by Blizzard Entertainment as well as strategic adaption to Jang Jae-ho's playing style had made the Night Elf vs. Orc match-up more balanced. He subsequently lost the match for fourth place vs. Xiaofeng Li 2–3, a match widely anticipated by fans as Xiaofeng Li's World Cyber Games victory made him Jang Jae-ho's main WarCraft III rival in Asia.

After that he went through an extended dry spell in tournaments in what is termed a "slump". The professional Korean WarCraft III scene was in decline and Jang Jae-ho had to drop out of the only televised league the country had in the year, MBCGame International League, because it conflicted with the World e-Sports Games.

He did not qualify for any individual international tournament but did have success in team competitions. He was a key factor in Meet Your Makers victory of WarCraft III's most prominent professional team leagues, WarCraft 3 Champions League and the NGL One Professional league. His dry spell ended in October 2006 when he won Global Gaming League's Digital life in New York City, New York, picking up US$5,000. He went on to do well in a series of televised show matches in South Korea, beating Manuel Schenkhuizen 2–0 in a US$10,000 match in the Korean "SuperFight" series.

Manuel Schenkhuizen commented afterward:

"I think the old Moon, the Moon from 2005 is back."

In December he was invited to International Electronic Sports Tournament in Beijing, China, beating Xiaofeng Li in the grand finals he won US$20,000 in the tournament and finished 2006 with a major win.

2007 Domination edit

It was reported February 2007 that Jang Jae-ho had extended his contract with Meet Your Makers for a year with a US$10,000 monthly salary.[4]

Building on his strong run towards the end of 2006, 2007 looked to be Jang Jae-ho's strongest year yet. He has so far this year defended his MBC Game World War title four times, which is a televised series of show matches in South Korea paying out US$10,000 to a seasonal champion.

He won the biggest amount of prize money ever turned out in a WarCraft III competition in Moscow, Russia by winning Game-X. He has also won in China, one of which was considered to be attended by almost all top tier professional Warcraft III players; the World Series of Video Games stop in Wuhan, China. Moon won over US$130,000 in prize money in 2007.

2008 Legendary Status edit

 
Jang at WCG 2008 Grand Final

Jang Jae-ho started his year with a second-place finish in the Chinese tournament, PGL behind the upcoming Chinese human player TH000. He then went on to win the Blizzard Worldwide Invitational beating at this time the world's best Orc player Lyn in a best 2 out of 3 sets series. The next week he won his second title of the year the ESWC Masters of Paris beating his arch Rival Li "Sky" XiaoFeng in the finals. Although, highly favored to win the ESWC title and solidifying his position as the world's best player, he was knocked out in the group stages alongside his teammate Grubby. However, he managed to qualify for the World Cyber Games taking second place in his country for the second time in a row. At the global finals, he made it to the grand finals only to lose at the hands of his teammate Grubby, the series was widely regarded as the clash of the titans as both Moon and Grubby are the highest earners in terms of prize money. He recently showed that his loss to Grubby did not affect his confidence and managed to win the IEF 2008 tournament in Wuhan beating his arch-rival Li "Sky" XiaoFeng again. On the way, he also defeated French professional player Yoan "ToD" Merlo 3–0 in the group stages.

With the tides turning in racial balance even Moon himself admitted that "Orc was imba",[5] but he has fought on becoming one of the only Night Elf players still able to withstand the apparently inevitable Orcish monopoly. However his legendary status not only extends to his playing style but also for the content of his character, known and respected for being humble despite his level of stardom, and even revealed he still lives with his grandmother despite international success.[6]

However, ESNation licensed the franchise rights for all MeetYourMakers teams to Frontspawn ApS,[7] resulting in the MYM WarCraft team being released immediately.[8] The franchisee relaunched the MYM WarCraft team but without Moon on the roster.[9] It was later revealed that Moon had signed a three-year contract with the Korean team WeMade FOX for $500,000 which made him the highest paid esports player at the time, a title which was previously held by Korean professional gamer NaDa (who was also a member of WeMadeFox).[10]

Switch to StarCraft II edit

Moon started playing Starcraft II competitive following its release, but it was only after his switch recruitment to Fnatic on January 17, 2012, that he became a full-time player.[11] His first notable achievement was making it into the GOMTV Global Starcraft II League Open Season 2.[12] He has since had little success in the GSL, but has done better in non-Korean tournaments, placing second at the Intel Extreme Masters 5,[13] and being one of the Koreans to play in the North American Star League.[14] Moon also played in the 2011 Summer DreamHack LAN where he placed second, losing the Grand Finals to LiquidHuk for 2–3. He placed 2nd at the IPL4 Pacific Qualifiers, losing to MarineKingPrime. As a result of his achievements in WarCraft 3 and Starcraft 2, he was inducten into the ESL esports Hall of Fame on 7 July 2019.[15]

Awards edit

Won edit

  • 2008 Esports Award Best Warcraft 3 Player
  • 2008 ESports Award Korea Player of the Year
  • 2007 KeSPA Greatest WarCraft III Player Award
  • 2007 GGL Warcraft 3 Player of the Year
  • 2006 KeSPA Greatest WarCraft III Player Award
  • 2005 KeSPA Greatest WarCraft III Player Award

Nominated edit

  • 2007 ESports Award Best Warcraft 3 Player
  • 2006 GGL Warcraft 3 Player of the Year
  • 2006 Gosugamers GosuGamer of the Year
  • 2006 ESports Award Best Warcraft 3 Player
  • 2005 ESports Award eSports Player of the Year
  • 2005 ESports Award Best Warcraft 3 Player

References edit

  1. ^ "WarCraft III" – http://weblogs.hollanddoc.nl/beyondthegame/heroes/ October 26, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ nedro (March 8, 2014). "Legendary WCIII player Moon retires". Mineski. Retrieved December 21, 2014.
  3. ^ "Moon's Comeback: Talk Show and Showmatch at Midnight (KST) Dec 11". Reddit. December 9, 2015. Retrieved December 10, 2015.
  4. ^ 1on1-Markus "Army" Stefanko – part 1 – Brightcove[permanent dead link]
  5. ^ Athens: Moon says Orc is Imba – SK Gaming
  6. ^ 1on1 interview with Jang Jae "Moon" Ho – SK Gaming
  7. ^ ESNation turns MYM into a franchise February 21, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ Goodbye and Thank you MYM February 20, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  9. ^ Ciara completes MYMs roster February 21, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  10. ^ Moon in WeMade Fox
  11. ^ Shields, Duncan (December 17, 2012). "fnatic officially adds Moon". SK Gaming.
  12. ^ Qualifier List for Day 2 of GSL Open 2 Preliminaries
  13. ^ Intel Extreme Masters 5 Results
  14. ^ Moon's NASL Profile June 5, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  15. ^ "Home - ESL". May 20, 2022.

External links edit

    moon, gamer, neutrality, this, article, disputed, relevant, discussion, found, talk, page, please, remove, this, message, until, conditions, january, 2016, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, jang, known, spirit, moon, moon, south, korean, profession. The neutrality of this article is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please do not remove this message until conditions to do so are met January 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message Jang Jae ho known as spirit moon or moon is a South Korean professional gamer of the popular Blizzard real time strategy games Warcraft III and StarCraft II He is seen by many as the best Night Elf player in the world Jang Jae ho is a five time world champion and has won three televised national Korean WarCraft III Championships as well as four seasons of MBCGame s World War He is particularly known for his excellent micromanagement and innovative strategies He is often seen using strategies that later set the benchmark for many Night Elf players and was nicknamed the 5th Race by Gametv com He has played and won more televised WarCraft III games than any other Warcraft III players Jang Jae ho is featured in the documentary film Beyond the Game 1 Moon transitioned to StarCraft II and was without a team for a while before retiring from professional gaming in order to fulfill South Korean military service requirements 2 After completing his military service Moon returned to Warcraft 3 and is currently active 3 moonJang at ESL StarCraft 2 Masters 2023 WinterPersonal informationNameJang Jae hoNickname s FantasistaNationalitySouth KoreanCareer informationGamesWarcraft IIIStarCraft IIPlaying career2003 2012Team history2005 2006Mousesports2006 2008MeetYourMakers2009 2011WeMade FOX2012FnaticCareer highlights and awards2 IEF champion WCG champion 9 MBC Game League champion 4 NGL One champion 2 PGL champion NeXT champion 2 IEST champion 3 WC3L champion 4 WEG championKorean nameHangul장재호Revised RomanizationJang Jae hoMcCune ReischauerChang chaeho Contents 1 Professional gaming career 1 1 Korean Champion 1 2 World Champion 1 3 2006 Slump 1 4 2007 Domination 1 5 2008 Legendary Status 1 6 Switch to StarCraft II 2 Awards 2 1 Won 2 2 Nominated 3 References 4 External linksProfessional gaming career editKorean Champion edit After Warcraft III The Frozen Throne was released July 2003 a professional competitive gaming scene supporting the game developed in South Korea Jang Jae ho quickly rose to become one of the most prominent players in this scene winning his first big tournament by beating Chun Sweet Jung Hee in the finals of televised league MBC Sonokong Prime League II in 2003 He defended his championship title in the finals of next edition of the league which took place later that year and lost to Park Se Swain Ryong who was at one point down 2 maps the match is considered one of the greatest comebacks in WarCraft III history World Champion edit Known for his innovative strategies fans nicknamed Jang Jae ho Fantasista After the release of The Frozen Throne he developed into the dominating player of the Korean WarCraft III scene which he is considered still today Few major Korean competitions concluded in 2004 aside from several qualifiers for international tournaments only the MBC Daum Prime League IV Jang Jae ho qualified for the 2004 World Cyber Games global finals meaning he would make his first international appearance He was considered the insider favorite for the tournament which took place in San Francisco California He was stopped by his countryman Tae Min Zacard Hwang in the round of 16 however considered a major upset since Jang Jae ho had an unbeaten televised record versus Hwang Tae min s race of choice Orc Upon his return to Korea he progressed to the last stages of the MBCGame Prime League V and the 2004 2005 Ongamenet War3 TFT Invitational He eventually progressed to the finals of both which were set to take place in early 2005 he was also invited to a new televised league with an international field of participants named World e Sports Games meaning he was competing in three televised leagues simultaneously He went undefeated in the first season of the World e Sports Games beating names as Fredrik Johansson and Li Sky Xiaofeng The eventual finals cast him against the player that knocked him out of the World Cyber Games Tae Min Zacard who he proceeded to beat 3 0 The league was followed intensely by WarCraft III fans around the globe and fully established Jang Jae ho as a gaming icon Around the same time he won MBCGame Prime League V and became the runner up of the 2004 2005 Ongamenet War3 TFT Invitational losing to Korean prodigy Jang FreeDoM Yong Suk in the finals after being up two maps This further enhanced his reputation as the world s best WarCraft III player and made him one of the best paid gamers of the time winning US 50 000 in a span of months Throughout the rest of 2005 he would win the second season of the World e Sports Games beating Kim Dong Gostop Moon in the grand finals the MBCGame Warcraft League and several tournaments in China His winnings in the year were approximately US 83 000 which was by then the largest sum won by any player throughout a year in WarCraft III He also signed with the Korean company Pantech amp Curitel during this time representing them in leagues During these events a rivalry was created between him and Dutch professional gamer Manuel Grubby Schenkhuizen by fans Jang Jae ho was dominating competitions in South Korea including the globally diverse World e Sports Games while Manuel Schenkhuizen had what was considered a dominating run in international competition holding at one point the two most prestigious international titles that of the World Cyber Games which he won in 2004 and the Electronic Sports World Cup which he won in 2005 As they dominated different circuits they did not meet in any off line matches throughout the 2005 year Despite several online matches the rivalry was not resolved during this time as Jang Jae ho was perceived as having a racial advantage with his Night Elf vs Manuel Schenkhuizen s Orc 2006 Slump edit By late 2005 Jang Jae ho s results weakened he was eliminated from the second group stage of the World e Sports Games in the longest tie breaker for second place of the series history which included him Korean professional gamer Jae Wook Lucifer Noh and Swedish professional gamer Kim SaSe Hammar He signed with Danish professional competitive gaming team MeetYourMakers in February 2006 He was considered the favorite for the masters of the World e Sports Games which took place April 21 May 3 2006 in Hangzhou China This eight player invitational saw all top two finishers of previous seasons return and invited a number of players considered the world s strongest at the time He went undefeated through the group stages of the tournament beating French professional gamer Yoan ToD Merlo Kim Dong Moon and Chinese professional gamer Sun Ri XiaOt Wai This cast him against Manuel Grubby Schenkhuizen in the semi finals which would be their first match in a major international tournament Jang Jae ho lost the match 1 3 which was considered an upset but not totally out of the realm of possibilities as a patch by Blizzard Entertainment as well as strategic adaption to Jang Jae ho s playing style had made the Night Elf vs Orc match up more balanced He subsequently lost the match for fourth place vs Xiaofeng Li 2 3 a match widely anticipated by fans as Xiaofeng Li s World Cyber Games victory made him Jang Jae ho s main WarCraft III rival in Asia After that he went through an extended dry spell in tournaments in what is termed a slump The professional Korean WarCraft III scene was in decline and Jang Jae ho had to drop out of the only televised league the country had in the year MBCGame International League because it conflicted with the World e Sports Games He did not qualify for any individual international tournament but did have success in team competitions He was a key factor in Meet Your Makers victory of WarCraft III s most prominent professional team leagues WarCraft 3 Champions League and the NGL One Professional league His dry spell ended in October 2006 when he won Global Gaming League s Digital life in New York City New York picking up US 5 000 He went on to do well in a series of televised show matches in South Korea beating Manuel Schenkhuizen 2 0 in a US 10 000 match in the Korean SuperFight series Manuel Schenkhuizen commented afterward I think the old Moon the Moon from 2005 is back In December he was invited to International Electronic Sports Tournament in Beijing China beating Xiaofeng Li in the grand finals he won US 20 000 in the tournament and finished 2006 with a major win 2007 Domination edit It was reported February 2007 that Jang Jae ho had extended his contract with Meet Your Makers for a year with a US 10 000 monthly salary 4 Building on his strong run towards the end of 2006 2007 looked to be Jang Jae ho s strongest year yet He has so far this year defended his MBC Game World War title four times which is a televised series of show matches in South Korea paying out US 10 000 to a seasonal champion He won the biggest amount of prize money ever turned out in a WarCraft III competition in Moscow Russia by winning Game X He has also won in China one of which was considered to be attended by almost all top tier professional Warcraft III players the World Series of Video Games stop in Wuhan China Moon won over US 130 000 in prize money in 2007 2008 Legendary Status edit nbsp Jang at WCG 2008 Grand FinalJang Jae ho started his year with a second place finish in the Chinese tournament PGL behind the upcoming Chinese human player TH000 He then went on to win the Blizzard Worldwide Invitational beating at this time the world s best Orc player Lyn in a best 2 out of 3 sets series The next week he won his second title of the year the ESWC Masters of Paris beating his arch Rival Li Sky XiaoFeng in the finals Although highly favored to win the ESWC title and solidifying his position as the world s best player he was knocked out in the group stages alongside his teammate Grubby However he managed to qualify for the World Cyber Games taking second place in his country for the second time in a row At the global finals he made it to the grand finals only to lose at the hands of his teammate Grubby the series was widely regarded as the clash of the titans as both Moon and Grubby are the highest earners in terms of prize money He recently showed that his loss to Grubby did not affect his confidence and managed to win the IEF 2008 tournament in Wuhan beating his arch rival Li Sky XiaoFeng again On the way he also defeated French professional player Yoan ToD Merlo 3 0 in the group stages With the tides turning in racial balance even Moon himself admitted that Orc was imba 5 but he has fought on becoming one of the only Night Elf players still able to withstand the apparently inevitable Orcish monopoly However his legendary status not only extends to his playing style but also for the content of his character known and respected for being humble despite his level of stardom and even revealed he still lives with his grandmother despite international success 6 However ESNation licensed the franchise rights for all MeetYourMakers teams to Frontspawn ApS 7 resulting in the MYM WarCraft team being released immediately 8 The franchisee relaunched the MYM WarCraft team but without Moon on the roster 9 It was later revealed that Moon had signed a three year contract with the Korean team WeMade FOX for 500 000 which made him the highest paid esports player at the time a title which was previously held by Korean professional gamer NaDa who was also a member of WeMadeFox 10 Switch to StarCraft II edit Moon started playing Starcraft II competitive following its release but it was only after his switch recruitment to Fnatic on January 17 2012 that he became a full time player 11 His first notable achievement was making it into the GOMTV Global Starcraft II League Open Season 2 12 He has since had little success in the GSL but has done better in non Korean tournaments placing second at the Intel Extreme Masters 5 13 and being one of the Koreans to play in the North American Star League 14 Moon also played in the 2011 Summer DreamHack LAN where he placed second losing the Grand Finals to LiquidHuk for 2 3 He placed 2nd at the IPL4 Pacific Qualifiers losing to MarineKingPrime As a result of his achievements in WarCraft 3 and Starcraft 2 he was inducten into the ESL esports Hall of Fame on 7 July 2019 15 Awards editWon edit 2008 Esports Award Best Warcraft 3 Player 2008 ESports Award Korea Player of the Year 2007 KeSPA Greatest WarCraft III Player Award 2007 GGL Warcraft 3 Player of the Year 2006 KeSPA Greatest WarCraft III Player Award 2005 KeSPA Greatest WarCraft III Player AwardNominated edit 2007 ESports Award Best Warcraft 3 Player 2006 GGL Warcraft 3 Player of the Year 2006 Gosugamers GosuGamer of the Year 2006 ESports Award Best Warcraft 3 Player 2005 ESports Award eSports Player of the Year 2005 ESports Award Best Warcraft 3 PlayerReferences edit WarCraft III http weblogs hollanddoc nl beyondthegame heroes Archived October 26 2008 at the Wayback Machine nedro March 8 2014 Legendary WCIII player Moon retires Mineski Retrieved December 21 2014 Moon s Comeback Talk Show and Showmatch at Midnight KST Dec 11 Reddit December 9 2015 Retrieved December 10 2015 1on1 Markus Army Stefanko part 1 Brightcove permanent dead link Athens Moon says Orc is Imba SK Gaming 1on1 interview with Jang Jae Moon Ho SK Gaming ESNation turns MYM into a franchise Archived February 21 2009 at the Wayback Machine Goodbye and Thank you MYM Archived February 20 2009 at the Wayback Machine Ciara completes MYMs roster Archived February 21 2009 at the Wayback Machine Moon in WeMade Fox Shields Duncan December 17 2012 fnatic officially adds Moon SK Gaming Qualifier List for Day 2 of GSL Open 2 Preliminaries Intel Extreme Masters 5 Results Moon s NASL Profile Archived June 5 2011 at the Wayback Machine Home ESL May 20 2022 External links editMYM Website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Moon gamer amp oldid 1198115450, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

    article

    , read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.