Mid-Season Invitational
The Mid-Season Invitational (MSI) is an annual League of Legends tournament hosted by publisher Riot Games since 2015. It is the second most important international League of Legends tournament aside from the World Championship.[1][2]
Sport | League of Legends |
---|---|
Founded | 2015 |
Inaugural season | 2015 |
Owner(s) | Riot Games |
No. of teams | 13 |
Venue(s) | Rotating locations |
Most recent champion(s) | G2 Esports (1st title) |
Most titles | T1 (2 titles) |
Qualification | Winners of regional leagues in Spring split . |
TV partner(s) | Twitch, YouTube |
Sponsor(s) | Riot Games |
Level on pyramid | Major |
Related competitions | World Championship |
In 2015 and 2016, the event featured the Spring Split champions of the five major competitive League of Legends regional leagues (LEC, LCS, LCK, LMS, LPL), as well as a wildcard team from a less region determined by the International Wildcard Invitational, held a few weeks beforehand.[3] In its inaugural tournament, Chinese team Edward Gaming emerged victorious by defeating South Korean team SK Telecom T1 3–2 in the final.[4]
Since 2017, Spring Split champions of all regions will qualify for the event. The International Wildcard Invitational was replaced by the Play-in Stage. The best Wildcard region in MSI will directly receive a spot in the World Championship's Group Stage for that year for their Summer Split champion. The top four regions in MSI will get the pool-1 spot in the World Championship's Group Stage.
T1 from LCK of South Korea is the most successful team with two MSI titles (2016 and 2017).
Overview
Results
Year | Final location | Final | Semifinalists | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Champion | Score | Runner-up | |||||
2015 | Tallahassee | Edward Gaming | 3 | 2 | SK Telecom T1 | ahq e-Sports Club | Fnatic |
2016 | Shanghai | SK Telecom T1 | 3 | 0 | Counter Logic Gaming | Flash Wolves | Royal Never Give Up |
2017 | Rio de Janeiro | SK Telecom T1 | 3 | 1 | G2 Esports | Team WE | Flash Wolves |
2018 | Paris | Royal Never Give Up | 3 | 1 | Kingzone DragonX | Flash Wolves | Fnatic |
2019 | Taipei | G2 Esports | 3 | 0 | Team Liquid | SK Telecom T1 | Invictus Gaming |
2020 | Cancelled due to COVID-19 pandemic[5] and replaced by Mid-Season Streamathon |
Teams reaching top four
Team | Titles | Runner-up | Semifinalists |
---|---|---|---|
T1[6] | 2 (2016, 2017) | 1 (2015) | 1 (2019) |
G2 Esports | 1 (2019) | 1 (2017) | |
Royal Never Give Up | 1 (2018) | 1 (2016) | |
Edward Gaming | 1 (2015) | ||
Team Liquid | 1 (2019) | ||
Counter Logic Gaming | 1 (2016) | ||
DRX[7] | 1 (2018) | ||
Flash Wolves | 3 (2016, 2017, 2018) | ||
Fnatic | 2 (2015, 2018) | ||
ahq e-Sports Club | 1 (2015) | ||
Team WE | 1 (2017) | ||
Invictus Gaming | 1 (2019) |
References
- Erzberger, Tyler (May 2, 2016). "The Mid-Season Invitational Power Rankings". ESPN. ESPN Inc. Retrieved May 11, 2016.
- Lingle, Samuel (May 4, 2016). "League Midseason Invitational day one recap". The Daily Dot. Archived from the original on October 10, 2016. Retrieved May 11, 2016.
- Johnson, Michael (May 3, 2016). "League Of Legends Mid-Season Invitational – What You Need To Know!". Rock, Paper, Shotgun. Retrieved May 11, 2016.
- Scott, Jake (May 1, 2015). "MSI recap: Edward Gaming defeat SKT 3-2, become MSI 2015 champions". theScore eSports. Score Media Ventures. Retrieved May 11, 2016.
- Stavropoulos, Andreas (23 April 2020). "Riot officially cancels 2020 Mid-Season Invitational". Dot Esports. Retrieved 23 April 2020.
- Rebranded from SK Telecom T1 in last 2019.
- Rebranded from Kingzone DragonX to DragonX in 2019, then rebranded to DRX in 2020.