LOL. You have zero idea what my life has been like bro. I don't want to reveal too much, but what I will say is I literally went to the worst high school in my city (which has since been shut down), that didn't offer the proper prerequisite courses to apply for anything but basic humanities programs in university, because my family could not afford the bus fare to send me to a better out of district school. I also grew up frequenting food banks, living off food donations from the hospital where my mother spent most of my teenage years battling psychosis--and when food banks and donations weren't available, I was eating one meal a day and stealing food just to make it. Oh, did I mention that we had to excommunicate ourselves from my father who had threatened to kill my mother and was stalking her? Furthermore, I spent the majority of my upbringing with no adults around, suffering from debilitating depression and anxiety. I sold drugs a little bit but quickly realized how stupid that was and that it wasn't the life for me, especially given my intelligence and academic capabilities. Also, my older brother, who I looked up to, became addicted to drugs and started suffering from psychosis himself while I was in university, frequently threatening violence against me (and even death) in his delusional state--and he was a rather violent dude when he wasn't crazy.
Yet, despite all that, I stayed myself in school and manoeuvred my way through the system well enough to get myself into school on a scholarship, eventually obtaining a science degree that I am not currently using, because I CHOOSE to work with at-risk youth, which doesn't pay much. LOL@me being a failure and/or lacking ambition. I would say that it takes a very creative, intelligent, and ambitious person to overcome the obstacles that have been thrown in my way.
Btw, what is this kid's "league?" We know he has a high IQ--but what has he achieved? There are plenty of people with high IQs that haven't achieved anything "great" because of not being in the right circumstances to foster certain achievements. And if it makes a difference, I was reading at age 3, too, and would read the 40 volume encyclopedia we had at home for fun--and I also read all of the books in my school library that weren't geared towards girls. I got into all kinds of gifted schools, qualified for scholarships at all kinds of prep schools, was suggested to skip two grades when I was 6 years old, and was on track to graduate high school at 16 years old--and then everything I listed in the first paragraph of what has become a long-ass post happened to me. This is why I say that having a high IQ is great, but environment definitely matters as well, which I think is exemplified quite clearly by the little synopsis of my life story that I've provided for you here.
With all that being said, there's a chair over there in the corner--I suggest you go take a seat it in it, homie.