Player info | |
---|---|
Player | TeePee |
Real Name | Tyler Polchow |
Country | USA |
Team | |
Game | Call of Duty: Warzone |
Age | 29 |
Birthday | July 3, 1992 |
800
1000 Hz
5.00
1.00
Relative
0.90
0.90
Gradual
1.33
Disabled
0.00
0.00
Disabled
F
Space Bar
C
Left Ctrl
V
Left Shift
R
Z
B
Mouse Button 4
E
Q
X
4
Tactical Flipped
Default
Disabled
0.04
12
12
1.00
0.75
Dynamic
Disabled
Standard
Disabled
Double-Tap ADS
Enabled
Hold
Hold
Contextual Tap
Enabled
Apply All
Tap
Disabled
Automatic Tactical Sprint
Enabled
Enabled
Fullscreen
360
1920x1080
100
Automatic
Disabled
Unlimited
Enabled + Boost
2.2 (sRGB)
Very Low
High
Low
Disabled
Disabled
Disabled
Low
Tap
Toggle
Toggle
Disabled
Toggle
Automatic Tactical Sprint
Enabled
Disabled
Enabled
80.00
Enabled
Toggle Weapon Mount Keybind
Enabled
100.00
Hold
Sprint/Tactical Sprint/Steady Aim Keybind
Hold
105.00
Affected
54.83
100.00
100.00
Disabled
Disabled
Square
Enabled
Boost High
100.00
1.54
45.99
100.00
Enabled
MW
TeePee’s real name is Tyler Polchow. TeePee is a retired Call of Duty player and is a 2014 World Champion. He is currently the coach for OpTic Gaming and is known for his roles on teams such as Leverage, compLexity, Evil Geniuses and Team EnVyUs.
TeePee first started making waves during the Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2 season when he joined Leverage and formed what would become the most loyal duo in Call of Duty history with Patrick “Aches” Price. After two solid showings at both the MLG Online and LAN National Championships he had a bit of a disappointing finishing with the Old Spice 10k.
After taking a bit of a break in Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3 due to lack of support from the developers, he was looking to come back strong with the release of Call of Duty: Black Ops. Still sporting the Leverage team name but now under the Quantic brand, they came out blazing winning the first two MLG tournaments. However, after that it seemed the team leveled off a bit picking up only one more win in TeePee’s home state of California at MLG Anaheim. What came next, however, most probably wouldn’t have figured. Going into Call of Duty: Black Ops II, the team transitioned over to the compLexity brand. Teepee along with the rest of his team had a few decent showings but not what they were expecting. Going into the MLG Spring Championship the roster got an update keeping TeePee with his long time teammate Aches and Crimsix, who joined at the beginning of the season, and adding Clayster. This is where they reached their true success winning 6 of the last 7 tournaments to close out Call of Duty: Black Ops II.
He married his wife in 2015. He also has an older brother, a younger brother, four nephews and a niece.
His username is his initials.
TeePee’s older brother introduced him to PC video games when he was very young, with his first being Pokemon. When he was older, he played FPS and RPG games on the PC, including Wolfenstein and Final Fantasy. He also played soccer and other sports while he was in high school. He started playing Call of Duty (CoD) 4 in high school when he got his first Xbox 360 in his Freshman year of high school. He loved it and spent many hours of his high school life playing pubs. That became his main focus. He later switched to the PS3 when the Xbox circuit didn’t work out.
One day, when he was around 15 or 16 years old, he was in the CoD lobby when a player called ‘Regulate’ asked him whether he ever play MLG battles. He didn’t know what those were at the time, so he looked into them and began watching Halo tournaments. This sparked his competitive nature, as he wanted to compete for prizemoney. He therefore joined the team of the person who had asked him about MLG battles, but they performed poorly in the tournaments.
TeePee missed out on the first CoD 4 Pro Circuit Ladder (PCL) PlayStation tournament, but worked really hard to prepare for the second on, where his team made it to the top twelve. But he managed to make his mark and gain recognition during the series. He met Aches online in 2010 during that time and they began to discuss TeePee joining Ache’s team, LeveraGe. They achieved second place in his first major tournament, at which point his parents began to accept that there may be a future for him in competitive eSports. Despite officially retiring in June 2016, he has still been participating in the professional league in various capacities ever since, although he mainly focuses on casting, coaching and streaming these days.
He joined Team Envy in April 2021.
According to his chat bot, TeePee has over 27,820 subscribers, which would minimally earn him ~$97,370 USD per month, excluding additional revenue from tournament winnings, donations, sponsorships, coaching, Twitch cheer bit contributions, casting income and tips.
TeePee streams almost daily for between 3 – 11 hours.
Whenever you have an opportunity to compete against top players… Find a dedicated team, start on your game battles ladders and get reps in on the actual game types that the pros play on. Then you need to participate in the pay-to-enter tournaments, because then you’re putting yourself in a situation where you’re practicing against people who are better than you.