In the game, Khau has a reputation for being way too good at convincing top players to join his clan. Instead of just relying on skill or teamwork, he flashes rewards and incentives that make his clan look irresistible. Pro players see the chance for easy benefits and end up leaving their original teams, even if they were already doing well. It feels less like friendly competition and more like he's buying loyalty, which takes away from the spirit of earning success through effort and teamwork. That's why it seems like he's "stealing" players, not by force, but by making offers that are hard to refuse.
What makes it even crazier is that once these pros join his clan, the balance of the game changes. Other clans struggle because their strongest players are suddenly gone, and Khau's clan becomes stacked with talent. It creates a cycle where winning brings more rewards, and more rewards bring even more players. While it might be smart strategy, it also feels unfair to those who try to build their clans through trust, practice, and loyalty instead of money or prizes. In the end, it turns the game into a competition of who can offer more, not who can play better.