The 5 Biggest Tournament Prize Pools Ever Seen In Competitive e-sports



These are the largest prizes ever dished out to winners in competitive e-sport tournaments. You can see more from us at Fortune Frenzy: https://www.fortunefrenzy.co.uk/ E-sports are getting more popular every year, and as their audience increases, so to do the grand prizes for taking home a championship win. Whether it’s player support, developer cash injections, or corporate sponsorship, the e-sports scene is securing bigger prizes every year. So let’s take a look at the games which managed to secure the biggest prize pools ever seen in the world of e-sports. Call of Duty: Black Ops 3 - Call of Duty XP Championship 2016 - $2,000,000 With a big push of support from both publisher Activision and developer Infinity Ward, the second Call of Duty XP Championship, held in 2016 managed to make this year’s COD XP the biggest COD prize pool ever, doubling the prize pool held at the previous year’s tournament. 32 teams competed in a multiplayer tournament of COD: Black Ops 3 for a piece of the $2,000,000 prize fund. Team EnVyUS finally beat out Splyce Gaming in a 3-1 final, to take home $800,000 of the total prize pool. Next year’s XP Championship is set to improve on 2016’s total, with the teams competing on the recently released Infinite Warfare. Halo 5: Guardians - Halo World Championship 2016 - $2,500,000 The Halo world Championships are a relative newcomer to the Halo scene, only opening back in 2014 after the Master Chief Collection HD re-release of the original games. Although other Halo championship tournaments have been around since the release of Halo 2 back in 2004, the Halo World Championships is the first tournament which was supported by its own publishing giant, Microsoft. The end of the 2016 Halo World Championships saw that prize pool rise to $2.5 million, of which the winners Counter Logic Gaming took home $1,000,000. The 2017 event is set to break that total once again. Smite - Smite World Championship 2015 - $2,612,259 Due to dwindling popularity, it was Smite’s previous year tournament which managed to secure its largest prize pool and not its 2016 event, which managed to pull in a still impressive $1,000,000. The tournament took place across 2 days, from January 9th to the 11th and was eventually won by COGnitive Prime, who took home a grand prize of $1.3 million.The runners up Titan, took home just over $500,000 of the prize pool. With a sadly dwindling player base and no corporate sponsorship in sight for the Smite World Championships, it’s likely that 2015 will be the highest prize pool the game will ever see. League of Legends - LoL 2016 World Championship - $5,070,000 League of Legends is the biggest MOBA in the world, with 7.5 million daily concurrent players. Its huge popularity is the reason behind its outstanding success when it comes to its tournament prize pools and why it reaches number 2 on our list. League of Legends went live in 2009 and has only continued to increase in popularity since then. Year on year, the player base gets bigger, with LOL’s expanding popularity attracting corporate sponsorship and producing even bigger prize pools. The largest prizes yet were handed out at the LoL 2016 World Championships. The SK Telecom T1 team took home the grand prize of just over $2,000,000, beating out the Samsung Galaxy team in the final, who took home an equally impressive $750,000, with the remainder of the prize pool dealt out to the runners up. Dota 2 - The International 2016 - $20,770,640 Dota 2 is the very reason we had to condense this list down to individual games and not contests. Dota 2’s competitive scene has become so prolific and popular, that it takes up the first 10 spots of the highest prize pool competitions by itself. It reached its pinnacle this year at Valve sponsored, The International 2016, which saw the e-sport produce a prize pool worth just under $21,000,000. This was a steady increase over the previous 2 years of the tournament, with the 2015 International drawing in just over $18 million, and the 2014 International bringing in just under $11,000,000. In the end Wings Gaming managed to take the cup and also a $9,000,000 grand prize. That’s all we’ve got for you this week. If you enjoyed this video, then you can give us a like to show it, or click for a dislike if you felt the complete opposite. We have a new video every fortnight, so subscribe to us to receive our videos as soon as they’re uploaded. We’ll see you then. Head on over to https://www.fortunefrenzy.co.uk/ for even more daily updates from us.

Comments

  1. wrong list csgo is in no.3 spot where as smite is in no.4 spot in 2015.
  2. Well none of them ain't no Casey Neistat, I'll tell you that much.
  3. LEAGUE OF LEGENDS  = PAY TO WIN, EASY GAME
  4. Really infinity ward
  5. i always wonder since league of legends is the most popular game in the world, 32 million play the game every month so it should has the biggest crowd and the biggest tournament , very nice from valve to share part from their earnings in the prizes for tournamets


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Duration: 5m 15s

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