Wang “Jinggg” Jing Jie just did it again. The Paper Rex duelist pulled off a 1v4 ace during a VALORANT Masters match, turning what should have been a lost round into the kind of highlight reel moment that gets shared a few hundred thousand times before most people finish their morning coffee.
For anyone keeping score at home, a 1v4 ace means Jinggg was the last player standing on his team, facing four opponents, and proceeded to eliminate every single one of them. Alone. That’s not a lucky spray transfer. That’s a player operating on a different frequency than everyone else on the server.
The play and the player behind it
The 22-year-old Singaporean has been building this reputation since he joined Paper Rex back in September 2021. Born on July 29, 2003, he started competing in VALORANT in 2020, which means he was roughly 17 years old when he decided professional gaming was the move. Given that his career earnings from VCT events now exceed $398,000, it seems like a reasonable bet.
This isn’t even the first time Jinggg has made the impossible look routine on an international stage. He delivered a similarly jaw-dropping 1v4 clutch against NRG at VCT Masters Tokyo in 2023, a play that cemented his status as one of the most mechanically gifted duelists in the world. The fact that he keeps producing these moments, years apart, against different opponents, at different tournaments, suggests this isn’t variance. It’s a pattern.
Paper Rex’s 2026 campaign
The team’s 2026 season has been strong. PRX secured second place at VALORANT Masters Santiago earlier in the circuit, and they’ve been competing at Masters London, which is where this latest clutch performance took place.
Jinggg is the tip of that spear. As a duelist, his job description is essentially “be the first one through the door and get kills.” The fact that he’s equally capable of being the last one alive and still getting kills is what separates him from most players at his position.
What this means for competitive VALORANT
Jinggg’s career trajectory has been remarkably consistent. He hasn’t had the kind of dramatic peaks and valleys that define some esports careers. Instead, he’s been steadily excellent since joining PRX, accumulating nearly $400,000 in prize money while still only 22 years old.
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