Here are all the results and winners of the tournaments featured in the Asian Champions League, the leading multi-title esports competition in Asia.
Run by Hero Esports and its Asian Champions League Foundation division, the Asian Champions League had a combined prize pool of 15M RMB (€1.84M). On top of the prize winnings, several tournaments served as a qualification path to the 2025 Esports World Cup.
Talent Gaming made an incredible Cinderella run in the ACL HoK tournament. Starting in the first round of the qualifiers, the team fought its way into the Knockout stage and took down most of the top KPL teams to claim the title. Talent Gaming is the first team to qualify for the Honor of Kings World Cup, featuring a $3 million prize pool during the EWC.
Japanese player Tokido came out victorious from the Street Fighter 6 tournament, winning a $12,000 prize pool. That said, the two players heading to the Esports World Cup are going to be runner-up Higuchi and third-place Moke.
Korea continues to dominate Asian regions, even among retired pros. The Eagle Conference, consisting of Ace’s Calm Mind, Pilot’s Landing Team, and Rain’s Never Surrender, won the Conference Showdown 5-2. Korean ADC player and streamer Leaper earned the Finals MVP award. The three Korean teams split the ¥1 million ($138,705.80) prize pool.
Team Falcons fought its way through the lower bracket and locked in during the Grand Finals, dominating both Alpha Gaming and T1, whom they lost two in the first phase. The Saudi Arabian esports organization took home a $40,000 prize pool.
Dominant run by TYLOO, who defeated Lynn Vision Gaming in the Grand Final and will head to the Esports World Cup 2025 and take home $100,000 in prize pool.
Despite being the number four seed from the Chinese qualifier, BaiSha Gaming made a strong and dominant run in the playoff bracket, dropping zero maps across quarterfinals, semifinals, and finals. The team is the first team to qualify for the CrossFire Esports World Cup tournament, which will take place at the end of August.
The Delta Force tournament featured China, Japan, South Korea, and Thailand competing against one another for glory. In the end, it was the home heroes who ended up winning the DeltaForce tournament, taking down South Korea 2-1 in the decisive series after an incredible eight-hour, non-stop competitive day.
Even if EDward Gaming didn’t make it to the VALORANT Masters Toronto, the team showed they are still one of the strongest teams in VCT CN, taking the win in the China Evolution Series and earning a spot at the EWC VALORANT tournament alongside Titan Esports Club.
In the other VALORANT ACL tournament, it was a dominant run by the Korean team DRX, which took down BiliBili Gaming, XLG Esports, and Paper Rex to claim a $110,000 prize pool.
Xtreme Gaming won both the ESL Challenger Qualifier and the ACL tournament, defeating Team Tidebound in a close five-game series. The team has qualified both for the DreamLeague Season 26 (alongside Yakult Brothers) and earned a spot at the Esports World Cup tournament later this summer.
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