List of League of Legends leagues and tournaments
League of Legends is a widely played electronic sports game at both amateur and professional levels. This is a list of League of Legends tournaments.
International tournaments
Name | Tier | Region | Location | Years active | Size | Latest winner | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
World Championship | Major | Worldwide | various | 2011– | 12 (Play-in stage) 16 (Group stage) | DAMWON Gaming | |
Mid-Season Invitational | Major | Worldwide | various | 2015– | 10 (Play-in stage) 6 (Group stage) | G2 Esports | |
All-Star | Off-season | Worldwide | various | 2013– | 14 | 1v1: EU Bwipo |
Tier 1
As of 2020, there are 12 professional leagues for League of Legends around the world. For the World Championship, the LEC and LPL are allocated four spots each, the LCS and LCK are allocated three spots each, the PCS and VCS are allocated two spots each, and the remaining spots are given to the summer champions of emerging regions.
Tier 2 and lower
Name | Tier | Region | Location | Years active | Size |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
North America Academy League | 2nd (academy) | North America | Los Angeles | 2018– | 10 |
European Masters | 2nd (professional) | Europe | Various | 2018– | 16 |
LVP Superliga | 3rd (professional) | Spain | Various | 2011– | 10 |
League of Legends Challengers Korea | 2nd (semi-professional) | South Korea | Seoul | 2015– | 8 |
LoL Development League | 2nd (academy) | China | Various | 2018– | 26 |
Vietnam Championship Series B | 2nd (semi-professional) | Vietnam | Various | 2013– | unknown |
Circuito Desafiante | 2nd (semi-professional) | Brazil | Rio de Janeiro | 2015– | 6 |
LCL Open Cup | Off-season | CIS | Online | 2017– | 16 |
Hero of Cities | 3rd (amateur cup)[TGA] | China | Taicang | 2011– | 31[Q] |
Demacia Cup/Championship | Off-season | China | Chongqing | 2013– | 29 |
KeSPA Cup | Off-season | South Korea | Seoul | 2015– | 19 |
Former Tier 1 and 2 leagues
Name | Tier | Region | Location | Years active | Size | WC |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
League of Legends Masters Series[LNL] | 1st (professional) | TW/HK/MO | Taipei | 2015–2019 | 8 | 2G + 1P |
Elite Challenger Series | 2nd (semi-professional) | TW/HK/MO | Taipei | 2016–2019 | 8 | |
League of Legends SEA Tour[GPL] | 1st (professional) | Southeast Asia[SEA] | Various | 2018–2019 | 8 | 1P |
LoL Secondary Pro League | 2nd (professional) | China | Shanghai | 2014–2017 | 16 | |
SLTV Challenger League | 2nd (semi-professional) | CIS | Kiev | 2016–2018 | 32 | |
LJL Challenger Series | 2nd (semi-professional) | Japan | 2014–2018 | 6 | ||
Liga Latinoamérica Norte (LLN) (Eng) | 1st (professional) | Latin America North[LAN] | Mexico City | 2014–2018 | 8 | 1 P |
Copa Latinoamérica Sur (CLS) (Eng) | 1st (professional) | Latin America South[LAS] | Santiago | 2014–2018 | 8 | 1 P |
Garena Premier League (GPL) | 1st (professional) | TW/HK/MO/SEA[SEA&TW] | various | 2012–2018 | various | 1 P |
Vietnam Championship Series A (VCSA) | 2nd (professional) | Vietnam | 2013–2017 | 8 | GPL Qualification | |
Thailand Pro League (TPL) | 2nd (semi-professional) | Thailand | 2014–2018 | 8 | GPL Qualification | |
Singapore Legends Series (SLS)[TLC-SG] | 2nd (semi-professional) | Singapore | 2013–2018 | 8 | GPL Qualification | |
LoL Championship Malaysia (LCM)[TLC-MY] | 2nd (semi-professional) | Malaysia | 2013–2018 | 8 | GPL Qualification | |
Pro Gaming Series (PGS) | 2nd (semi-professional) | Philippines | 2014–2018 | 8 | GPL Qualification | |
LoL Garuda Series (LGS) | 2nd (semi-professional) | Indonesia | 2014–2018 | 8 | GPL Qualification | |
(AS) Garena All-Star | 2nd (SEA Qualifier) | Southeast Asia | various | 2016–2017 | 6 | Represent for GPL at All-Star |
NA League of Legends Challenger Series | 2nd (semi-professional) | North America | Los Angeles | 2014–2017 | 6 | |
EU League of Legends Challenger Series | 2nd (semi-professional) | Europe | Berlin | 2014–2017 | 6 | |
NiceGameTV League of Legends Battle | 2nd (mixed[NLB]) | South Korea | Seoul | 2012–2014 | 16+12[NLB] | |
Garena Talk Talk League | 2nd (amateur) | TW/HK/MO | Online | 2013 | 8[Q] | |
(Mid-Season) International Wildcard Invitational | Qualifier | various[IWC] | various | 2015–2016 | 8 | MSI Qualification |
(WC) International Wildcard tournament/qualifier | Qualifier | various[IWC] | various | 2013–2016 | 8 | 2 |
(AS) International Wildcard All-Star | Qualifier | various[IWC] | various | 2015–2016 | 8 | Represent for IWC at All-Star |
Collegiate leagues
Current Name | Former Name | Region | Years active | Size | Latest winner |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
International College Cup | Worldwide | 2016– | 12 | Jimei University | |
ULoL Campus Series College Championship | Division 1 | North America | 2015– | 222 | Maryville |
CSL Junior Varsity 1 | Division 2 | North America | 2015– | 221 | British Columbia B Team |
CSL Junior Varsity 2 | Division 3 | North America | 2015– | 136 | Penn State Division 3 |
Campus Series conferences
Name | Region | Years active | Size | Latest winner |
---|---|---|---|---|
ULoL Campus Series North | North America - North | 2017– | 53 | Maryville |
ULoL Campus Series South | North America - South | 2017– | 52 | Texas A&M |
ULoL Campus Series East | North America - East | 2017– | 66 | Toronto |
ULoL Campus Series West | North America - West | 2017– | 51 | Simon Fraser |
Big Ten | US | 2017– | 14 | Maryland |
Peach Belt | US | 2018– | 12 | N/A |
Other tournaments
"Years active" refers to the number of years the tournament hosted a League of Legends section, not necessarily the age of the competition itself.[1]
Name | Region | Location | Years active | Size | Latest Champion |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
The ABL Series | Worldwide | North America | 2017– | 10 | Dynasty eSports |
World Cyber Games | Worldwide | Rotating final location | 2011–2013 | CJ Entus Blaze | |
Major League Gaming | Worldwide | North America | 2011–2012 | FXOpen eSports | |
IeSF Esports World Championship | Worldwide | Various | 2013– | 26 | South Korea |
Asian Games | Asia | Asia | 2018– | 8 | China |
Mid-Season Cup | China; South Korea | Shanghai; Seoul | 2020 | 8 | Top Esports |
Mid-Season Showdown | PCS; Vietnam | Taipei; Hanoi | 2020 | 4 | Talon Esports |
Notes
- ^ Known as the North American League of Legends Championship Series (NA LCS) before 2019.
- ^ Refers to the United States and Canada. Countries in Central America and the Caribbean compete in the Latin America region.
- ^ Known as the European League of Legends Championship Series (EU LCS) before franchising in 2019.
- ^ Does not include members of the Commonwealth of Independent States, nor the Baltic States.
- ^ Refers to the People's Republic of China and does not include Hong Kong and Macau. Although players from Hong Kong and Macau are explicitly accepted as domestic players in the LPL, they de facto share "PCS" residency with players from Taiwan and Southeast Asia (except Vietnam).
- ^
- ^ Merger of the League of Legends Master Series (LMS) and the League of Legends SEA Tour (LST) into a single league.
- ^ Formerly known as the League of Legends Nova League and served as the second tier league below Garena Premier League in 2014.
- ^ Merger of the Liga Latinoamérica Norte (LLN) and the Copa Latinoamérica Sur (CLS).
- ^ Refers to Hispanic America.
- ^ Not withstanding the actual Commonwealth of Independent States, all post-Soviet players, including those from the Baltic States, are explicitly regarded as domestic players. The region has also been referred to as the "CIS and Baltic States".
- ^ Refers to most countries of the Arab League.
- ^ Refers to Mexico, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, Venezuela, Puerto Rico and all countries in Central America and the Caribbean.
- ^ Refers to Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Paraguay and Uruguay.
- ^ Replaced the Garena Premier League (GPL) prior to the start of the 2018 summer season.
- ^ The PCS' definition of Southeast Asia extends only to the following countries which host LoL servers: Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore and Thailand.
- ^ Became a separate region independent from the rest of Southeast Asia in 2018.
- ^ Consists of semi-professional and amateur teams; losing professional teams from OnGameNet (predecessor of League of Legends Champions Korea) also participate.
- ^ Included Taiwan, Hong Kong, Macau before 2015 and Vietnam before 2018
- ^ Formerly called "The Legends Circuit Malaysia" and served as a second tier league below the Garena Premier League.
- ^ Formerly called "The Legends Circuit Singapore" and served as a second tier league below the Garena Premier League.
- ^ Served as the first tier league before the 2013 spring season, then second tier before the 2014 spring season.
- ^ The size of this tournament does not include the regional or online stages, only the finals.
- ^ "Emerging regions", refers to any region without an automatic spot in the World Championship main event, that is, excluding China, South Korea, North America, Europe and Taiwan/Hong Kong/Macau. Champions of leagues marked with "IWT" participated in the IWC.
References
- "League of Legends Guides". Archived from the original on 21 October 2016. Retrieved 21 October 2016.
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