Anders Blume takes FURIA’s Overpass as a perfect case study of the current tactical meta. Breaking down their narrow win against Vitality, he highlights how FURIA approach the T side: disciplined early B pressure, strong utility layering, and patient walk-ups — but also rounds lost to predictable executions, lack of mid-round flexibility, and almost no true fakes. Anders explains that many of FURIA’s problems didn’t come from aim or duels, but from telegraphed decisions and one-directional attacks.
On the CT side, he focuses on the value of connector aggression, smart rotations, and tight positional setups that allowed FURIA to suffocate Vitality’s map control. He also points out several “old-school Overpass” ideas that Vitality still use effectively, and why the map rewards teams who take early space and deny information.
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Overall, Anders shows FURIA as a team with powerful B hits, strong discipline, and a clear identity — but also as a lineup that rarely uses fakes and sometimes becomes too direct on T side. The video blends tactical analysis with historical context, illustrating how Overpass still has huge unexplored depth and how teams like FURIA can evolve moving forward.

