Miks deep dive: VALORANT's newest controller is a jack of all trades but master of none, feat. FrosT
A special thanks to Riot Games for providing the opportunity to be a part of the pre-release test for Miks.
Earlier this week, Riot Games unveiled their newest agent, and the competitive VALORANT community has been buzzing ever since. Hailing from Croatia, Miks joins the roster as a Controller — an agent class traditionally tasked with cutting off sightlines, managing space, and setting up teammates for executes. But if you've been following VALORANT's agent design trajectory over the last couple of years, you'll know that "Controller" these days means a lot more than just throwing smokes.
Miks is the latest example of that expanding philosophy, and his kit raises some important questions about where Riot's agent design is heading.
Breaking Down Miks' Abilities
We covered the initial ability rundown in a previous article, but after spending time with Miks during the pre-release event, we have a much clearer picture of what he actually brings to the table.
- Harmonize (Q) – 200 credits: This is a combat stim ability that can buff either Miks alone or Miks and one teammate simultaneously. It's most comparable to Brimstone's Stim Beacon, but with a shorter duration, around 8 seconds compared to Brim's 12. And it is limited to a single teammate per round. It's a meaningful tactical tool, but the time restriction does keep it from feeling overpowered.
- Waveform (E) – 100 credits each: Miks gets two smokes with a deployment range similar to Brimstone and Clove. Like Clove and Omen, one smoke recharges mid-round, and the recharge timer is also 40 seconds. Each smoke lasts about 16–17 seconds, putting him comfortably in line with other meta controllers.
- M-Pulse (C) – 250 credits per charge: This is the ability everyone is talking about. M-Pulse is a two-in-one tool that lets players toggle between a concuss mode and a heal mode.
- In concuss mode, it pulses three times in the style of KAY/O's FRAG/ment, stunning anyone within its area of effect, with the final pulse accompanied by a distinct audio cue. Players should note that it only takes two bullets from a rifle to destroy the M-Pulse, making it quite vulnerable.
- In heal mode, it functions similarly to Skye's Regrowth, continuously healing teammates within range until either the timer expires or they hit 100 HP (shields excluded). Players can purchase two charges per round.
- Bassquake (X) – 8 ult points: Miks' ultimate is deployed in a conical shape and slows and deafens anyone caught within its range; think Fade's Nightfall but with an added slow effect. The effect lasts roughly 8 seconds before players fully regain movement speed and audio. At 8 ult points, it matches Fade's cost, which seems reasonable given the dual-effect nature of the ability.
A Mishmash, by Design
If you noticed a lot of comparisons to other agents while reading through that breakdown, you're not alone, and it wasn't accidental. Miks' kit is, at its core, a collage of mechanics already present in the game: Brimstone's stim, Clove's recharging smoke, Skye's heal, KAY/O's stun, and Fade's ultimate. Each ability is a slightly tweaked version of something we've already seen.
This isn't the first time Riot has designed an agent this way. Omen broke convention early on with a Controller having access to a nearsighted flash. Clove was introduced with the Pick-Me-Up and Meddle, blurring the line between fragger and support. And the recent Harbor rework handed him a slow-flash combo while broadening his ultimate's reach. The pattern is clear: Riot is deliberately expanding what each role can do.
The problem is that Miks pushes this further than anyone before him. A single agent can now stim a teammate, heal teammates, stun enemies, smoke off areas of the map, and slow and deafen opponents with his ultimate, all within the confines of one round. Compare that to Omen, who is still widely picked in the meta; he works with two smokes, two teleports, and a flash. The gap in raw utility is stark.
It also contradicts a direct statement Riot made in Patch 12.05, when they nerfed Yoru, citing that he was "too strong and starting to bleed into other roles at the cost of comp diversity." Releasing Miks with this toolkit while that sentiment is still fresh feels, at best, inconsistent.
What the Pros Are Saying
Not everyone shares the same level of concern, though. Global Esports head coach Hector "FrosT" Rosario offered a candid perspective when we reached out for comment. His first take? Miks feels held back.
"It feels like he was dialed back before release in fear of releasing an agent that's too strong — he's very underwhelming."
When asked about the wider issue of agents with increasingly broad ability pools, Frost was skeptical of Riot's execution.
"The power creep was inevitable. I am not very confident of Riot's ability to balance agents… the community can police itself, but instead we are at the mercy of the art."
Talking about the meta, he added that Miks doesn't yet offer enough to justify a slot given how much Sentinels and Initiators are struggling:
"He's a terrible agent right now. Creative people will use him and may find a place for him in the meta — but given the fact that Sentinels and Initiators (except Skye) suck and other Controllers have to subsidize that void, he doesn't offer enough to be valuable."
Verdict: Too Much of Everything, Not Enough of Anything
Miks represents a fascinating and concerning direction for VALORANT's agent design. On paper, he can do almost everything. In practice, he may not do enough of any one thing to matter. Whether casual players embrace his versatility or pros continue to overlook him in favor of established picks, his existence sets a precedent that's hard to ignore.
The real question isn't whether Miks can find his way into the meta; it's whether Riot can resist the temptation to keep stacking multi-role utility into every new agent that follows him.
For all things VCT-related, make sure to stay tuned to THESPIKE.GG as we continue to update you with the freshest game and esports news.
Featured Image Source: Riot Games
Latest News
Comments
vct 2023
For all information about the VCT 2023, check out our VCT Hub. There you will find our FAQ to answer all of your questions and details about the teams, different Leagues, and more.









