
Esports World Cup Announces Record Breaking $70 Million Prize Pool
Prize money in the world of esports has long been a divisive topic. While the multi-million dollar prize pools of the Dota 2 International always made headlines, a few years down the line, there is almost no doubt that these heights made the scene unsustainable for a lot of teams outside of the very top players who took the lion's share of those prize pools. However, on the other side of the coin, when players in some of the biggest games in the world are competing for just a few thousand dollars, it can feel like their years of work to reach the top are not being respected.
It's difficult to stay on the right side of the line for many esports tournament organisers, and that only becomes a bigger issue when you have more than 20 different tournaments happening within two months and an overall championship encompassing all of them. That is where the Esports World Cup finds itself, returning for a second year with the mandate to sustainably grow esports, but offer enough of a reward that the top teams will do everything they can to earn a spot in the tournament.
'We went in last year with $60 million, it was unheard of, it was so much bigger than anything else, and at the same time, we wanted to leave room for growth,' said Ralf Reichert, CEO of the Esports World Cup Foundation. 'So we went from 60 to 70 [million dollars prize pool]
The $70 million prize pool for the 2025 event has more than $38 million dedicated to individual game prize pools, over $5 million for qualifying events and $450,000 for MVP awards across the Esports World Cup. The rest, around $27 million, is reserved for the Club Championship, the cross game championship where organisations can win serious money if they perform well across multiple games. The Club Championship winners will walk away with $7 million, which will be one of the biggest individual payouts in esports history.
'If you look at the Esports World Cup, [the Club Championship is] what holds it together,' said Reichert. 'So on the one hand it's fantastic that we have all of these games and can bring them together at one point in time, which is unique, then the club championship is what makes it a story and wraps it together. So we don't consider it as a side element but at the very heart and centre of the Esports World Cup. So naturally this should have the highest prize money.'
But really, the most important figures when it comes to the prize pool are what the players themselves can be walking away with. While the Esports World Cup obviously features all of the biggest games, this year with the addition of Valorant, which often have multi-million dollar prize pools, it also features a lot of the slightly smaller esports, where big prize pools are rarer. That means some players in these games can win truly life changing money, and that has already been proven off the back of the 2024 event.
'We literally changed lives,' said Reichert. 'In Street Fighter with Xiao Hai who won $350,000, he's 35, which was maybe not his last [tournament], but he's certainly in the autumn of his career. We could see how much this meant to him as a title, but as well in terms of his financial future. In the MLBB women's event, we had a $180,000 prize for first, which is by far the largest ever for a women's tournament, and those winners who went home, can live for a few years from this. And last but not least, in PUBG Mobile the Brazilian org Alpha7 went home with $470,000 which, living in Brazil, it's almost a fortune for such a club.'
There is no doubt that the money on offer to both players and clubs is impressive, and will likely change a lot of lives once it has all been handed out later this year. But it's almost surprising at how the prize pool has grown this year. On paper, the $10 million increase is significant, but when you consider that includes entirely new prize pools for new tournaments being added, and a significant amount going to qualification events, it's perhaps not quite the major increase many expected after a successful first year and the goal of growing year by year. However, this is by design, with the Esports World Cup Foundation very conscious of not doing too much too quickly.
'There's nothing worse than spending a billion one year and zero the next year,' said Reichert. 'So we would rather spend the billion over the next 10–15 years and grow it step by step, because that's what ultimately will help the sport most and the sport is above everything.'
For now, the focus is on the $70 million that will be handed out this summer across the 25 tournaments in 24 games that are set to take place in Riyadh. With so much cash on the line, multiple lives will change as a result of this mammoth prize pool, and there is no doubt that competition will lead to some incredible stories you will not want to miss.
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