MOUZ and FURIA secure LAN spots at BLAST Open Fall 2025

Daniel Morris

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After another day of action, MOUZ and FURIA have become the latest teams to secure a spot in London’s LAN Playoffs at BLAST Open Fall 2025. We’ve also said goodbye to another two teams following today’s matches, with Brazilian rosters Imperial and Legacy being sent packing during the online phase.

It’s been a turbulent four days, and there are now only two LAN spots up for grabs. Here’s how things went down during today’s BLAST Open Fall matches.

MOUZ beat G2 in strange clash, FURIA upset Spirit

xertioN at IEM Cologne 2025
Image via Michał Konkol | ESL

As for the winners of the day, things didn’t quite go as you might’ve imagined. First up in the upper bracket was MOUZ vs. G2, which did eventually come to its logical conclusion: a MOUZ 2:0 win. How they got there was strange, though. In both maps, MOUZ roared to a commanding lead, and looked set to demolish G2 without much trouble. Yet, in both maps, G2 looked resurgent in the second halves, pushing MOUZ almost to the limit. Still, those early leads proved too much to overcome, and MOUZ won out 13:10 on both maps. G2 were left to wonder what could’ve been, had they found their stride earlier.

Spirit vs. FURIA was an equally interesting affair. As it so often is for Spirit, it was the total donk show; how often do you see a player drop a 1.74 rating in a series they lost 2:0? You don’t, really. But as the collective, FURIA were their betters, with great output from KSCERATO, molodoy, and YEKINDAR. Spirit would rue the performance from their anchors, who really struggled to make an impact on this series. It was nice to get something of an upset, though, with FURIA once again showing why they’re absolutely one of the best CS2 teams in the world right now.

London awaits for FURIA and MOUZ, joining FaZe and Vitality, who secured their places yesterday.

Imperial and Legacy fall while Liquid and FlyQuest survive

Image via Helena Kristiansson | ESL

It was a total brawl down in the lower bracket of BLAST Open Fall 2025. The day kicked off with Imperial vs. Liquid, a back-and-forth series that no one really deserved to win. The 2:1 scoreline really reflects how messy it was to watch, and only a total collapse from Imperial’s T-side on Nuke was able to prevent Liquid from another early exit in the online phase of this event. Still, if Liquid want to make it to London, they’ll have to do a lot better than this.

I can’t say it was any prettier over in the next elimination match, either. FlyQuest vs. Legacy had a similar result, with the teams trading maps before heading to a decider. The issue here is that none of the maps were particularly competitive – once the winners got rolling, the other team was powerless to resist. In the end, it was the Aussies on FlyQuest who live to fight another day, emerging victorious in 2:1 fashion.

Tomorrow, both Liquid and FlyQuest will Spirit and G2, respectively. It’s fair to suggest that both will have to make considerable improvements on today’s BLAST Open Fall 2025 showings if they’re to have any chance of a win.

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Daniel Morris

Daniel Morris

Counter-Strike Content Lead
Daniel is a CS2 esports specialist, and now channels that expertise to discuss the game online. Despite his knowledge of Counter-Strike, he wasn’t quite good enough to go pro himself.
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