For the first time since it began, the Esports World Cup is leaving Riyadh. The 2026 edition moves to Paris this summer with the biggest cheque in the history of the sport waiting at the end of it: a record $75 million prize pool, up from $71.5 million in 2025.

The Esports Foundation has confirmed Paris Expo Porte de Versailles as the home of the event, which runs from 6 July to 23 August. It is a late switch from Riyadh, with organisers pointing to the regional situation in the Middle East, but the new venue is hardly a downgrade. The site has hosted Paris Games Week since 2010 and served as the largest venue at the Paris 2024 Olympic and Paralympic Games, so it knows how to put on a show.

Seven weeks, 24 games, one club champion

The numbers behind the Esports World Cup are the kind that make traditional sport sit up. More than 2,000 players and over 200 clubs from upwards of 100 countries will compete across 25 tournaments in 24 games. The format is the part that sets it apart, a cross-game club championship where organisations rack up points across every title rather than chasing a single trophy.

If you want a sense of the reach, the 2025 edition pulled in more than 750 million viewers and 350 million hours watched. This year stretches across seven weeks and every major genre you can name, from first-person shooters and MOBAs to fighting games, battle royales, racing, and, yes, Chess.

The Esports World Cup was established in 2023 by the Esports Foundation, building on the earlier Gamers8 festival, and is led by chief executive Ralf Reichert. Three years on, it is the largest esports event in the world by prize money and number of titles.

The full Esports World Cup 2026 schedule

Here is how the seven weeks shake out in Paris.

WeekTournamentDates
1Apex Legends (ALGS Year 6 Split 1 Playoffs)7–11 July
1Dota 27–12 July
1FATAL FURY: City of the Wolves8–11 July
1VALORANT9–12 July
2Dota 214–19 July
2Mobile Legends: Bang Bang Women’s Invitational (MWI)14–18 July
2Free Fire15–18 July
2League of Legends15–19 July
3PUBG: BATTLEGROUNDS21–26 July
3Teamfight Tactics21–25 July
3FC Pro World Championship22–26 July
3Mobile Legends: Bang Bang Mid Season Cup22–26 July
4OWCS Midseason Championship (Overwatch 2)29 July–2 August
4Mobile Legends: Bang Bang Mid Season Cup29 July–1 August
4Street Fighter 629 July–1 August
4Call of Duty: Warzone Resurgence Series Championship30 July–2 August
5Honor of Kings World Cup4–8 August
5Call of Duty: Black Ops 75–9 August
5TEKKEN 85–8 August
5PUBG Mobile World Cup (Week 1)6–9 August
6Chess11–15 August
6PUBG Mobile World Cup (Week 2)11–16 August
6Rocket League12–16 August
6Tom Clancy’s Rainbow Six Siege12–15 August
7CROSSFIRE18–22 August
7Trackmania19–22 August
7Fortnite Reload Elite Series Championship19–22 August
7Counter-Strike 219–23 August

The closing weekend is built around the marquee titles, with Final Day seating zones set aside for VALORANT, League of Legends, Rocket League, and Counter-Strike 2.

Players get a vote: the partnership locked in to 2028

The move to Paris also marks the debut of a new accolade, and one with a twist. On 18 June, the Esports Awards and the Esports Foundation extended their partnership through 2028 and announced the EWC Players’ Choice Award, decided entirely by the people who actually play.

Peer-voted recognition is rare in esports, where awards usually come down to fan polls or industry panels. This one hands the decision to the professionals. Competitors attending the Esports World Cup in Paris will vote in person, while other eligible players and clubs cast their votes through a secure digital platform run by the Esports Awards.

To keep it honest, there are rules. Voters must have competed in at least one qualifying S, A or B-Tier tournament during the official competitive season, and nobody can vote for themselves or a teammate. The Esports Awards oversees the whole process, and the winner is announced at its ceremony later this year.

The relationship goes back to June 2024, when the awards ceremony relocated to Riyadh to line up with the first Esports World Cup. The three-year extension, announced in London, carries it through 2028.

“The Esports Foundation has done an incredible job in generating mainstream attention and industry exposure outside of the standard circuit,” said Michael Ashford, chief executive of the Esports Awards. He added that the partnership had let the awards expand their operations and footprint, and said he hoped the collaboration would reach a wider global audience and lift the industry’s visibility year-round.

There is movement on the awards front too. The 2026 Esports Awards ceremony will be held in North America, the start of a rotating host-city model aimed at destinations the show has not visited before. A city and venue are still to be confirmed. Previous ceremonies, including the 2024 show and the 2025 Decade Awards that marked the show’s tenth anniversary, were staged in Riyadh as part of the Esports World Cup programme.

For now, all eyes are on Paris. Seven weeks, 24 games, $75 million, and for the first time, a trophy the players choose themselves.

FAQ

When and where is the Esports World Cup 2026?

The Esports World Cup 2026 runs from 6 July to 23 August at Paris Expo Porte de Versailles, the first time the event has been held outside Riyadh.

How big is the Esports World Cup 2026 prize pool?

It is a record $75 million, up from $71.5 million in 2025, making it the largest esports event in the world by prize money.

How many games are at the Esports World Cup 2026?

More than 2,000 players and over 200 clubs compete across 25 tournaments in 24 games, scored as a cross-game club championship rather than a race for a single trophy.

What is the EWC Players’ Choice Award?

A new award voted for entirely by professional players. Competitors in Paris vote in person and other eligible players vote through a secure platform run by the Esports Awards, with rules preventing self-voting or voting for a teammate.