Mobile Legends: Bang Bang World Championship

Esports tournament From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Mobile Legends: Bang Bang World Championship (abbreviated as M Series) is the annual professional Mobile Legends: Bang Bang world esports championship tournament for the game wherein teams worldwide would be facing off each other to become the world champion for Mobile Legends: Bang Bang. The yearly tournament is presented by Moonton and has been held seven times.

LocationWorldwide
Established2019
Number of
tournaments
7
Quick facts Tournament information, Game ...
Mobile Legends: Bang Bang World Championship
Tournament information
GameMobile Legends: Bang Bang
LocationWorldwide
Established2019
Number of
tournaments
7
AdministratorMoonton
Tournament
formats
Venues
Participants16 teams (M1, M3–M4)
12 teams (M2)
22 teams (M5, M7)
23 teams (M6)
Websiteworlds.mobilelegends.com
Current champion
Philippines Aurora Gaming (1st title)
Most recent tournament
M7 2025
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The recent M7 World Championship reached over 5.68 million peak concurrent viewers—a new record for mobile esports to become most-watched mobile esports tournament in history.[1] The event surpassed its own previous viewership record on three separate occasions.

Aurora Gaming are the current world champions after delivering the first sweep in the Grand Finals in four years. The Filipino runners-up swept Indonesian runners-up Alter Ego Esports at the venue of the M4 World Championship, Tennis Indoor Senayan. This makes Aurora the sixth–consecutive Filipino world champion and the fifth organization to win the world championship, prolonging Philippine dominance over MLBB for an unprecedented five years.

The next edition of the tournament, M8 World Championship, will be hosted in January, 2027, in Turkey—the first time the M Series takes place in both Europe and Western Asia due to Turkey being a transcontinental country. Meanwhile, the M8 Wild Card will debut in Thailand, which will also mark the country's first M Series event.[2]

Background

The very first World Championship was held in Kuala Lumpur in Malaysia. Over 16 teams competed from Asia, South America and Europe namely Brazil, Cambodia, Indonesia, Japan, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Russia, Thailand, the United States and Vietnam.[3] In the end, Indonesian representatives EVOS Legends and Rex Regum Qeon battled in the Grand Finals by a Best of 7. In the Finals, EVOS Legends would go on to win the World Championship in 7 Games and they were named as the inaugural world champions. With the Prize Pool at $250,000, Team EVOS Legends would go on to bring home $80,000, and the MVP winning $3,000.[4][3][5]

The Second World Championship were set to be held in a public venue before the COVID-19 pandemic hit worldwide that had cancelled the public M2 World Championship games. However, the Second Championship were to continue as it was held on January 18 to 24, 2021. The original venue of the Second World Championship were to be in Jakarta in Indonesia but was moved to Singapore. M2 featured over 12 teams from different nations from the entire world like Brazil and Russia, but was completely dominated by Asia-based esports teams like Cambodia, Indonesia, Japan, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, and Singapore.[6] The defending champions of EVOS Legends did not participate in the said Championship, however, their Singaporean branch qualified to compete.[7] Among the twelve teams, the Philippines esports team Bren Esports was crowned the champion by defeating Burmese Ghouls in seven games. [8]

The Third World Championship was held in Singapore for the second time on December 6–19, 2021.[citation needed]

History

The M1 World Championship

The first world championship was held in Kuala Lumpur in Malaysia wherein over 16 teams flew to Malaysia and competed for the title of World Champion in Mobile Legends: Bang Bang. M1 marked the first ever world-wide competition for Mobile Legends: Bang Bang. Through Local Qualifiers and Professional Esports Leagues, the first iteration of MLBB's world series was primarily made up of teams from Brazil, Cambodia, Indonesia, Japan, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Russia, Singapore, Thailand, Turkey and Vietnam. The Mobile Legends: Bang Bang Professional League (MPL) sent two teams from Indonesia, Malaysia/Singapore, Myanmar and the Philippines.[5] The tournament was held from November 10 to 17, 2019. With a prize pool of $250,000, the games began with the Group Stages wherein teams were drawn and divided before the competition into four groups, each containing 4 teams. These teams would face off each other to fight for a spot in both the upper and lower brackets of the playoffs. Two teams would advance and two teams would be eliminated from the group stages. Indonesia's two representatives, EVOS Legends and RRQ (Rex Regum Qeon), Myanmar's Burmese Ghouls, and Malaysia's Todak, managed to qualify for the upper bracket spots, while Japan's 10s Gaming+, The Philippine's Sunsparks, Vietnam's VEC Fantasy Main, and Malaysia' other representative Axis Esports qualified for the remaining playoff spots in the lower bracket.[9][10][11]

The first ever grand finals of the world series saw the representatives of the same country, EVOS Legends and RRQ (Rex Regum Qeon) of Indonesia, in a long, best-of-seven series. EVOS Legends became the first World Champions after winning against RRQ in a tight matchup that went all the way to 7 games.[12] EVOS Legends would bring home $80,000 and an additional $3,000 for the finals MVP of the tournament, Eko “Oura” Julianto.[13]

The M2 World Championship

The second iteration of the world series was originally going to take place in Jakarta, Indonesia[14] but was postponed and moved to Shangri-La Hotel in Singapore due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Then-Current Champions EVOS Legends failed to qualify for M2 after being eliminated from the playoffs of the sixth season of MPL-ID. In EVOS' absence, RRQ Hoshi and Alter Ego, the two grand finalists of the sixth season, represented Indonesia at M2, carrying on the heavy burden of defending Indonesia's throne as the best region in the world.[7] The Second World Championship welcomed a narrowed down total of 12 teams to Singapore to compete and become the new world champions. Teams of the United States, Laos, Vietnam and Turkey did not represent their countries and teams in the second edition of the games. The prize pool for the second iteration was increased from $250,000 to $300,000. With the same format as the first World Championship, the Games were held from 18 to 24 January 2021 after its dates were moved to wait for the easing of COVID-19 pandemic the restrictions in Singapore. Among the 12 teams, the Philippines' own Bren Esports and Myanmar's Burmese Ghouls qualified to battle in the Grand Finals.[15] After a grueling series that lasted for 7 games just like M1, Bren Esports proudly secured the championship after pulling off a massive victory in the tightly matched final game, making them the first ever Filipino team to win the MLBB world title. Later on, Moonton would also release a limited edition Bren Esports skin in honor of Bren's victory, a privilege that Moonton also handed to EVOS Legends after they won the first world Championship in 2019 as a tribute to their victory. Ultimately, Bren chose their signature jungle hero Lancelot for their honorary skin as a tribute to the finals MVP of the tournament, Karl "KarlTzy" Gabriel Nepomuceno.[citation needed]

The M3 World Championship

The third iteration of the world series began on 6 December and ended on the 19th in the year of 2021. M3 marked the second time the world series for Mobile Legends took place in Singapore. It was also held offline.[16] Similar to its first iteration, M3 welcomed 16 teams from different regions around the world to compete and become the best team in the world. New MPL franchise teams like SeeYouSoon from MPL Cambodia, as well as RED Canids and Vivo Keyd from MPL Brazil, participated in the tournament. Moreover, non-MPL teams from the United States, Russia, Middle East, and Latin America (LATAM) also joined the bid for the world title. Unlike M2, Myanmar and Japan were not able to join the third edition of the world championship. Additionally, M3 saw the prize pool increase from $300,000 to $800,000.[17]

After two grueling weeks of world-class action in the land of dawn, Blacklist International was hailed as the new world champions after defeating their fellow countrymen ONIC Philippines with a clean 4–0 sweep, breaking the tradition of the final match of the world championship going all the way to 7 games. Blacklist International's total shutout against Onic PH would mark the first ever sweep in the grand finals of the world stage. The M3 finals also marked the second time the world championship had representatives from the same nation become the grand finalists. Kiel "Oheb" Calvin Q. Soriano, the team's Gold Laner who was notoriously known throughout the tournament as the "Filipino Sniper", was crowned as the finals MVP. When he was asked which hero he wanted for Blacklist's honorary skin, he chose Estes, which is the team's signature pick and the very engine of their infamous "UBE" strategy. With their triumphant victory, Blacklist International became the second Filipino team to win the world title.[18]

Blacklist International is the first team to win the World Championship that has disbanded its MLBB roster in 2025.[19]

The M4 World Championship

The fourth iteration of the Mobile Legends: Bang Bang world series began on 1 January and ended on the 15th of the same month in 2023. The fourth global tournament was held in Jakarta, Indonesia. Like its M1 and M3 counterpart, the tournament was played in an offline setup. It featured 16 teams from different regions around the world. MPL-franchise teams from Indonesia, Philippines, Malaysia, Singapore, Cambodia, Brazil, and MENA (Middle East and North Africa), as well as non-MPL qualifiers from the United States, Latin America, and Mekong (Myanmar, Lao PDR, Thailand, and Vietnam) will participate.

The prize pool was similar to the M3 World Championships, amounting to US$800,000.[20]

In the final match up, two Filipino teams meet once again at the grand stage to claim the M4 World Championship. Defending champions and upper bracket finalists Blacklist International battled lower bracket winners ECHO Philippines in a best-of-seven series. After a world-class performance, ECHO Philippines won the championship against the defending champion Blacklist by sweeping the latter with a 4–0 run. Benedict "Bennyqt" Gonzales won the finals MVP award.[21]

The M5 World Championship

As revealed in the latest MLBB Esports 2023 roadmap, the fifth iteration of the Mobile Legends: Bang Bang world series will be held in the Philippines in December 2023.[22]

The Philippines and Malaysia became the official hosts for the MLBB M5 World championships with the Philippines holding the major events such as the group and knockout stages while Malaysia will hold the first MLBB World Championship Wild Card matches.[23] The Philippines will hold the Group Stage and Knockouts at the EVM Convention Center from December 2 to 12 while the Grand Finals will occur in the Rizal Memorial Coliseum, the venue for several Southeast Asian Games venues in 2019.[24]

Prior to the M5 World Championships, Moonton, the game developers of MLBB announced the votings for the M-Series 5th Anniversary 10 Greatest Players Award, individual recognition and awards for players who made significant impacts for the game and their country during the course of the MLBB World Championships.[25] Certain controversies plagued the nomination process for the awards from Filipino players Johnmar "OhMyV33Nus" Villaluna and Danerie James "Wise" Del Rosario for their affiliation with the online-betting site Rivalry[26] and the snubbing of the MLBB M3 World Championships Finals MVP, Kiel Calvin "OHEB" Soriano. The VEEWISE duo, as Villaluna and Del Rosario are known for, argued that Burmese nominee and MLBB player Naing Lin "ACE" Swe was affiliated to a different online-betting site which violated certain criterions released by Moonton. This caused allegations and heated conversations from both Filipino and Burmese fans. On 10 November, Swe announced his withdrawal from the nomination and Moonton later released an announcement regarding his withdrawal.[27]

The awardee winners were released on 10 December 2023.[28]

The Grand Finals saw the first Philippines vs. Indonesia match in the entirety of the M-Series. The Philippines' AP Bren won the MLBB M5 World Championships, defeating upper bracket foe ONIC Esports in seven games despite AP Bren holding a 3–1 series lead prior to ONIC's Game 7 push. Regardless, AP Bren became the first organization to win two world titles and the first team to win the world championships on home soil.[29]

The M6 World Championship

The MLBB M6 World Championships returned to Malaysia for this iteration of the tournament. Malaysia previously hosted the M1 World Championships in 2019 in Kuala Lumpur. Malaysia's hosting of the MLBB M6 World Championships is significant for the country's continual success in the MLBB scene where they defeated powerhouses Philippines and Indonesia in their campaign for international championships in MSC 2024 and at the IESF World Championships where Malaysian representatives defeated Philippine representatives twice.[30][31]

The M6 World Championship featured the second edition of the wild card system where a pool of teams from different competing regions will have the chance to qualify to the newly adopted Swiss Stage. The Swiss Stage is a set of tournament draws and matches of Best of 1s and 3s to determine teams that will qualify to the knockout stage. The Swiss Stage is used as the system format for the League of Legends World Championship since the 2023 edition.[32]

The M6 World Championship is the first iteration since M1 that the Philippines only had one team to qualify for the knockout stage. This has not happened since 2019 with succeeding editions featuring at least two Filipino teams in the knockout stage or even in the Finals.[33] This edition also featured the first two-team pool from the Turkish region where S2G Esports and Ulfhednar qualified for Swiss.

The Philippines' Fnatic ONIC Philippines clinched a 31 upper bracket series victory over Indonesian champions Team Liquid ID. They advanced to the Grand Finals, marking the fifth-consecutive year that the Philippines has made it to a world championship finals series. Fnatic ONIC Philippines have made it to their best finish yet in the Worlds series as they secure second place during M3.[34] A rematch between Team Liquid ID and Fnatic ONIC Philippines was held in the Grand Finals, where ONIC ultimately won in five games, 4-1. This is the second-consecutive series that a Filipino and Indonesian team matched up in the Grand Finals.

The M7 World Championship

The Mobile Legends: Bang Bang M7 World Championship was held from January 3 to 25, 2026, in Jakarta, Indonesia. The tournament featured 22 teams from 14 core and wildcard regions worldwide, representing Asia, the Americas, Europe, and Africa.

The Grand Finals reached over 5.68 million peak concurrent viewers to become most-watched mobile esports tournament in history,[35] breaking the all-time viewership record for a mobile esports tournament previously set by the 2021 Free Fire World Series in Singapore. Aurora Gaming Philippines defeated Alter Ego Esports 4-0 to claim the Philippines' sixth consecutive world title. Roamer Dylan "Light" Catipon is awarded the Finals MVP.

Viewership

More information Edition, Peak viewers ...
Edition Peak viewers Hours watched Average viewers Air time Prize pool
M1 648,069 9,939,023 162,050 61 hours $250,000
M2 3,083,245 42,706,210 689,737 62 hours $300,000
M3 3,191,404 62,618,894 602,588 104 hours $800,000
M4 4,270,270 79,686,798 802,217 99 hours
M5 Wildcard event 271,822 3,825,344 100,009 38 hours $900,000
Main event 5,067,107[36] 72,160,063 475,259 151 hours
M6 Wildcard event 344,871 3,531,383 144,630 TBD $1,000,000
Main event 4,017,453 85,474,144 708,839 120 hours
M7 5,680,511 135,559,616 1,054,255 128 hours $1,000,000
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Participating regions

The number in each box represents the number of teams by region.

More information Region, M1 ...
RegionM1M2M3 M4 M5 M6 M7Editions
Groups Wildcard Groups Wildcard Groups Wildcard
Argentina1 1 1 - -3
Brazil1121 2 1 - -6
Cambodia1111 1 1 1 -7
China 1 1 1 1 1 4
Chile - - - - - - - - 1 - 1
Commonwealth of Independent States1 1 1 1 1 1 -5
Indonesia2222 2 2 2 -8
Japan11 - 13
Laos1 1 1 - 14
Malaysia2122 1 1 2 2 -8
Middle East and North Africa1 1 1 1 1 1 1 17
Mongolia 1 1 - 1 3
Myanmar11 1 1 1 1 -6
  Nepal 1 - - 1
Peru1 1 - -2
Philippines2222 2 2 2 -8
Russia11 1[37] 1 - 15
Singapore1221 1 1 1 -7
Turkey11 1 1 1 1 1 17
United States111 1 1 - -5
Vietnam1 1 1 - 14
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Participating teams

M1 World Championship (2019)

More information Team, Seed ...
Team Seed
Brazil GeO Esports Brazil Local Qualifiers
Cambodia Impunity KH Cambodia Local Qualifiers
Indonesia EVOS Legends MPL-ID S4 Champion
Indonesia RRQ Hoshi MPL-ID S4 Runner-Up
Japan 10s Gaming+ Japan Local Qualifiers
Laos Candy Comeback Thailand and Laos Local Qualifiers
Malaysia Todak MPL-MY Runner-up
Malaysia Axis Esports MPL-MY 4th place
Myanmar Burmese Ghouls MPL-MM S3 Champion
Philippines Sunsparks MPL-PH S4 Champion
Philippines ONIC Esports PH MPL-PH S4 Runner-up
Russia Deus Vult Russia Local Qualifiers
Singapore EVOS Esports SG MPL-SG S4 Champion
Turkey Evil Esports Turkey Local Qualifiers
United States Team Gosu US Local Qualifiers
Vietnam VEC Fantasy Main 360 Mobi Championship S3 Champion
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M2 World Championship (2020)

More information Team, Seed ...
Team Seed
Brazil DreamMax Esports Brazil Local Qualifiers
Cambodia Impunity KH Cambodia Local Qualifiers
Indonesia RRQ Hoshi MPL-ID S6 Champion
Indonesia Alter Ego Esports MPL-ID S6 Runner-Up
Japan 10s Gaming Frost Japan Local Qualifiers
Malaysia Todak MPL-MY/SG S6 Champion
Myanmar Burmese Ghouls MPL-MM S5 Champion
Philippines Bren Esports MPL-PH S6 Champion
Philippines OMEGA Esports MPL-PH S6 Runner-Up
Russia Unique Deus Vult Russia Local Qualifiers
Singapore EVOS Esports SG MPL-MY/SG S6 Runner-Up
Singapore RSG SG MPL-MY/SG S6 Second Runner-Up
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M3 World Championship (2021)

More information Team, Seed ...
Team Seed
Singapore EVOS Esports SG MPL-SG S2 Champion
Singapore RSG SG MPL-SG S2 Runner-up
Indonesia ONIC Esports MPL-ID S8 Champion
Indonesia RRQ Hoshi MPL-ID S8 Runner-up
Philippines Blacklist International MPL-PH S8 Champion
Philippines ONIC Philippines MPL-PH S8 Runner-up
Malaysia Team SMG MPL-MY S8 Champion
Malaysia Todak MPL-MY S8 Runner-up
Brazil Red Canids MPL-BR S1 Champion
Brazil Vivo Keyd MPL-BR S1 Runner-up
Cambodia See You Soon MPL-KH S1 Champion
United States BloodThirstyKings M3 North American Qualifier Champion
GX Squad M3 Arabia Major 2nd Runner Up (Replaced Akatsuki)
Commonwealth of Independent States Natus Vincere Mobile Legends Mythic League CIS Champion
Turkey Bedel Mobile Legends Turkey Championship 2021 Champion
Peru Malvinas Gaming LATAM Championship 2021 Champion
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M4 World Championship (2022)

More information Team, Seed ...
Team Seed
Malaysia Team HAQ MPL Malaysia S10 Champion
Malaysia Todak MPL Malaysia S10 Runner-up
Cambodia Burn X Flash MPL KH Autumn Split 2022 Champion
Singapore RSG Singapore MPL Singapore S4
Turkey Incendio Supremacy Turkey Champion
Philippines Blacklist International MPL Philippines Season 10 Champion
Philippines ECHO Philippines MPL Philippines Season 10 Runner Up
Indonesia ONIC Esports MPL Indonesia Season 10 Champion
Indonesia RRQ Hoshi MPL Indonesia Season 10 Runner-Up
Brazil RRQ Akira MPL Brazil Season 3 Champion
Myanmar Falcon Esports Myanmar M4 Qualifiers
Argentina S11 Gaming Argentina Super League LATAM Champion
Peru Malvinas Gaming Super League LATAM Runner-up
Vietnam MDH Esports M4 Mekong Qualifiers
Egypt Occupy Thrones MPL MENA Fall Split 2022 Champions (previously Thrones Esport)
United States The Valley MLBB NACT Winner
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M5 World Championship (2023)

More information Team, Finish ...
Group Stage Teams
Team Finish
AP Bren MPL Philippines S12 Champions
Blacklist International MPL Philippines S12 Runner-Up
ONIC Esports MPL Indonesia S12 Champions
Geek Fam ID MPL Indonesia S12 Runner-Up
HomeBois MPL Malaysia S12 Champions
Team Flash MPL Singapore S6 Champions
RRQ Akira LIGA LATAM 2023 Champions
Bigetron Sons LIGA LATAM 2023 Runner-Up
See You Soon MPL Cambodia Autumn Split Champions 2023
Triple Esports MPL MENA Fall Split Champions 2023
Deus Vult MCC Season 2 Champions
Fire Flux Esports MTC Turkiye Championship Season 2
TheOhioBrothers NACT Fall Split Champions 2023
Burmese Ghouls Myanmar M5 Qualifier
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More information Team, Finish ...
Wild Card Teams
Team Finish
Imperio LIGA LATAM 2023 2nd Runner-Up
Team SMG MPL Malaysia S12 Runner-Up (Qualified)
Umbrella Squad MCC Season 2 Runner-Up
4Merical Esports MLBB Champion Battles Fall 2023
Niightmare Esports M Challenge Cup Mekong Season 2
Team Falcons MPL MENA Fall Split Runner-Up 2023
Team Lilgun ESN National Championship Champions 2023 (Qualified)
Keep Best Gaming MLBB M5 China Qualifier
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M6 World Championship (2024)

More information Team, Finish ...
Group Stage Teams
Team Finish
Fnatic ONIC Philippines MPL Philippines S14 Champions
Aurora Gaming MPL Philippines S14 Runner-Up
Team Liquid Indonesia MPL Indonesia S14 Champions
RRQ Hoshi MPL Indonesia S14 Runner-Up
Selangor Red Giants MPL Malaysia S14 Champions
Team Vamos MPL Singapore S14 Champions
NIP Flash MPL Singapore S8 Champions
CFU Gaming MPL Cambodia S7 Champions
Team Spirit MLBB Continental Championships S4 Champions
S2G Esports MTC Turkiye Championship S4 Champions
Twisted Minds MPL MENA S6 Champions
KeepBest Gaming MLBB M6 China Qualifier Champions
Falcon Esports MLBB M6 Myanmar Qualifier Champions
Maycam Evolve MPL LATAM S2 Champions
BloodthirstyKings NACT Fall 2024 Champions
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More information Team, Finish ...
Wild Card Teams
Team Finish
Legion Esports M Challenge Cup Mekong S4 Champions
Niightmare Esports M Challenge Cup Mekong S4 Runner-Up
Insilio MLBB Continental Championships S4 Runner-Up
ULFHEDNAR M Turkiye Championship S4 Runner-Up
RRQ Akira MPL LATAM S2 Runner-Up
Geekay Esports MPL MENA S6 Runner-Up
The MongolZ ESN National Championship Champions 2024
DFYG MLBB M6 China Qualifier Runner-Up
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M7 World Championship (2025-2026)

More information Team, Finish ...
Group Stage Teams
Team Finish
Team Liquid PH MPL Philippines S16 Champions
Aurora Gaming PH MPL Philippines S16 Runner-Up
ONIC Esports MPL Indonesia S16 Champions
Alter Ego Esports MPL Indonesia S16 Runner-Up
Selangor Red Giants MPL Malaysia S16 Champions
CG Esports MPL Malaysia S16 Runner-Up
Evil MPL Singapore S10 Champions
CFU Gaming MPL Cambodia S9 Champions
Team Spirit MLBB Continental Championships S6 Champions
Aurora Gaming MTC Turkiye Championship S6 Champions
Team Falcons MPL MENA S8 Champions
DianFengYaoGuai MLBB China Masters Champions
Yangon Galacticos MLBB Super League S2 Champions
Black Sentence Esports MPL LATAM S4 Champions
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More information Team, Finish ...
Wild Card Teams
Team Finish
RLG SE VMC 2025 Winter Champions
Leon Esports M Challenge Cup Mekong S6 Champions
Virtus.pro MLBB Continental Championships S6 Runner-Up
Boostgate Esports M Turkiye Championship S6 Runner-Up
ZETA Division M7 Japan Qualifiers Champions
Axe MPL MENA S6 Runner-Up
Team Zone ESN National Championship Champions 2025
Guangzhou Gaming MLBB China Masters Runner-Up
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Results

Grand Final winners

 The team/organization has disbanded.
 The entire team/organization has transferred to another game.
More information Year, Edition ...
Year Edition Host(s) Champions Results First runner up Second runner up Third runner up Finals
MVP
No. of
Teams
Region Team Team Region
2019 M1 Kuala Lumpur Indonesia EVOS Legends 4 3 RRQ Hoshi Indonesia
TODAK

Burmese Ghouls

Eko "Oura" Julianto
16
2020 M2 Singapore Philippines Bren Esports 4 3 Burmese Ghouls Myanmar
RRQ Hoshi

Alter Ego Esports

Karl "KarlTzy" Nepomuceno
12
2021 M3 Singapore Philippines Blacklist International 4 0 ONIC Philippines Philippines
BloodThirstyKings ‡

EVOS Singapore †

Kiel "Oheb" Soriano
16
2022 M4 Jakarta Philippines ECHO Philippines 4 0 Blacklist International Philippines
RRQ Hoshi

ONIC Esports

Federic "Bennyqt" Gonzales
16
2023 M5 Manila Philippines AP Bren 4 3 ONIC Esports Indonesia
Blacklist International †

Deus Vult †

David "FlapTzy" Canon
22
2024 M6 Kuala Lumpur Philippines Fnatic ONIC Philippines 4 1 Team Liquid ID Indonesia
Selangor Red Giants

Team Spirit

Grant Duane "Kelra" Pillas
23
2026 M7 Jakarta Philippines Aurora Gaming 4 0 Alter Ego Esports Indonesia
Selangor Red Giants

Team Liquid PH

Dylan Aaron "Light" Catipon
22
2027 M8 Istanbul
To be determined
To be determined To be determined TBD
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Regional and Team Performances

MLBB World Championship team nations best result.
  Champions   Runner-up   Third Place   Fourth Place   5th to 6th   7th to 8th   Group Stage or Swiss Stage   Wildcard
More information Region and League, Titles ...
Region and League Titles Runner-Up 2nd Runner-Up 3rd Runner-Up Top Four Finishes
Philippines (MPL Philippines) 6 (M2M7) 2 (M3, M4) 1 (M5) 1 (M7) 10
Indonesia (MPL Indonesia) 1 (M1) 4 (M1, M5–M7) 2 (M2, M4) 2 (M2, M4) 9
Malaysia (MPL Malaysia) 0 0 3 (M1, M6, M7) 0 3
Myanmar (MPL Myanmar) 0 1 (M2) 0 1 (M1) 2

Commonwealth of Independent States (MCC)

0 0 0 2 (M5, M6) 2
United States (NACT) 0 0 1 (M3) 0 1
Singapore (MPL Singapore) 0 0 0 1 (M3) 1
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The M1, M3 and M4 editions of the world championships witnessed an all Philippine or Indonesian Grand Finals, thus having two editions in either of the four final positions. M2, M5, and now M6 are from the three of the iterations of the world championship that does not see a forseable Philippines vs. Philippines Grand Finals.[38][39][40]

By Team

 Team has disbanded
More information Region and league, Finals appearance(s) ...
Region and league Finals appearance(s) Titles Runner-Up 2nd Runner-Up 3rd Runner-Up
AP Bren 2 2 (M2, M5) 0 0 0
Aurora Gaming 1 1 (M7) 0 0 0
Blacklist International 2 1 (M3) 1 (M4) 1 (M5) 0
ONIC PH 2 1 (M6) 1 (M3) 0 0
EVOS Legends 1 1 (M1) 0 0 0
Team Liquid PH 1 1 (M4) 0 0 1 (M7)
Team Liquid ID 1 0 1 (M6) 0 0
RRQ Hoshi 1 0 1 (M1) 2 (M2, M4) 0
Burmese Ghouls 1 0 1 (M2) 0 1 (M1)
ONIC ID 1 0 1 (M5) 0 1 (M4)
Alter Ego Esports 1 0 1 (M7) 0 1 (M2)
Selangor Red Giants 0 0 0 2 (M6, M7) 0
TODAK 0 0 0 1 (M1) 0
BloodThirstyKings † 0 0 0 1 (M3) 0
Team Spirit 0 0 0 0 1 (M6)
EVOS Singapore 0 0 0 0 1 (M3)
/ Deus Vult † 0 0 0 0 1 (M5)
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The Golden Road

More information Team Placement, Competition ...
Selangor Red Giants OG Esports
Team Placement 1st 1st 1st 3rd Team Placement
Competition Split 1 MSC Split 2 Worlds Competition
Champions SRG SRG SRG FNOP Champions
ONIC Esports
Team Placement 1st 1st 1st 2nd Team Placement
Competition Split 1 MSC Split 2 Worlds Competition
Champions ONIC ONIC ONIC APBR Champions
Blacklist International
Team Placement 1st 2nd 1st 1st Team Placement
Competition Split 1 MSC Split 2 Worlds Competition
Champions BLCK EXE BLCK BLCK Champions
Team Liquid PH
Team Placement 1st 1st 1st 4th Team Placement
Competition Split 1 MSC Split 2 Worlds Competition
Champions TLPH TLPH TLPH RORA Champions
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The "Golden Road" is a term used in Mobile Legends: Bang Bang esports to describe the achievement of a single team winning all major titles within a competitive season. This includes victories in both domestic league splits, the Mobile Legends: Bang Bang Mid Season Cup (MSC), and the Mobile Legends: Bang Bang World Championship (M-Series). The expression is analogous to the concept of the Golden Road in League of Legends, where it denotes a team’s complete sweep of domestic and international tournaments within the same year. The term is commonly employed by esports commentators and analysts to highlight a team's pursuit of a perfect competitive season. It is similar to a grand slam in tennis or in Counter-Strike.

Since the game's release in 2017, only a limited number of teams in Mobile Legends: Bang Bang have had the opportunity to pursue the Golden Road. However, no team has successfully achieved the feat to date, with most being eliminated during either the Mid Season Cup (MSC) or the World Championship (M-Series) stages.

List of teams that have attempted to pursue the Golden Road

Teams whose campaign ended in the World Championship

  • ONIC Esports - 2023
    • ONIC Esports, one of Indonesia’s most dominant Mobile Legends: Bang Bang teams, came within a single tournament of completing the Golden Road in 2023. Entering the year as the reigning MPL Indonesia champions, ONIC successfully defended their title in Season 11, defeating long-time rivals EVOS Legends in the Grand Finals to secure back-to-back championships.[41] Their domestic dominance established them as strong contenders heading into the Mobile Legends: Bang Bang Southeast Asia Cup 2023 (MSC 2023).[42] During MSC 2023, ONIC Esports delivered a commanding performance, posting a 10–2 record throughout the knockout stage. The team swept EVOS Legends in the opening round[43] and decisively defeated ECHO Philippines, the defending M4 World Champions, in the semifinals.[44] This victory marked Indonesia’s return to the MSC Grand Finals for the second consecutive year, where ONIC faced Blacklist International, the M3 World Champions. ONIC prevailed 4–2 in the series, earning Indonesia’s first major international title since 2019, when the organization also claimed the MSC championship in the Philippines.[45][46] Following their MSC triumph, ONIC Esports captured a third consecutive MPL Indonesia title,[47] completing a domestic three-peat and entering the M5 World Championship in Manila[48] as overwhelming favorites.[49] Despite an exceptional run, the team fell just one match short of achieving the Golden Road, losing a hard-fought seven-game Grand Final to AP Bren.[50] ONIC’s 2023 campaign is widely regarded as the closest any team has come to completing the Golden Road in Mobile Legends: Bang Bang history
  • Selangor Red Giants Esports - 2024
    • Selangor Red Giants Esports came within one tournament of completing the Golden Road during the 2024 Mobile Legends: Bang Bang competitive season. The Malaysian organization captured its first-ever domestic championship at MPL Malaysia Season 13 (MPL MY S13),[51] securing direct qualification to the Mobile Legends: Bang Bang Mid Season Cup 2024 (MSC 2024) group stage. At MSC 2024, Selangor Red Giants achieved a series of milestone victories in the Knockout Stage, defeating Fire Flux Esports of Turkey[52] in a best-of-five series and sweeping NIP Flash of Singapore in the semifinals.[53] These victories earned the team the distinction of being the first Malaysian squad to reach the grand finals of an international Mobile Legends tournament. In the championship series, Selangor Red Giants triumphed over Falcons AP Bren, the defending M5 World Champions,[54] in a best-of-seven series to claim Malaysia’s first international title in any Moonton-sanctioned global competition.[55] Following their international success, the team captured a second consecutive domestic title, becoming back-to-back Malaysian champions.[56] Entering the M6 World Championship, Selangor Red Giants were widely regarded as tournament favorites. However, after an early fall to the lower bracket,[57] the team’s campaign concluded in the lower bracket finals, where they were swept by Team Liquid Indonesia. This loss ultimately ended the organization’s pursuit of the Golden Road.[58]
  • Team Liquid PH - 2025–26
    • Team Liquid Philippines (TLPH) entered 2025 as the defending MPL Philippines champions after defeating the reigning M6 World Champions, Fnatic ONIC Philippines, in a tightly contested seven-game Grand Final during Season 15.[59] The victory marked the organization’s first domestic title under the Team Liquid banner and established TLPH as one of the strongest teams in the region. At the Mobile Legends: Bang Bang Mid Season Cup 2025 (MSC 2025), Team Liquid Philippines emerged as one of the tournament favorites.[60] The team sought redemption after their early elimination at MSC 2024, where they were defeated by Falcons AP Bren.[61] Demonstrating significant growth, TLPH advanced through the knockout stage and secured a pivotal victory over ONIC Esports, the Indonesian champions, in the semifinals.[62] In the Grand Finals, Team Liquid Philippines faced Selangor Red Giants OG Esports, the defending MSC champions. After dropping the opening game, TLPH rallied to win four consecutive matches, clinching the series 4–1 and reclaiming the MSC title for the Philippines for the first time in three years.[63] In the domestic campaign, Team Liquid PH becomes the first organization since Blacklist International to go back-to-back in MPL Philippines, making them the third organization overall to achieve such a feat. Team Liquid PH becomes the third team whose Golden Road campaign ended in the M-series when they lost in a 5-game series to Alter Ego in the lower bracket semifinals.[64]

Teams whose campaigns ended in the Mid Season Cup

  • Blacklist International - 2022
    • Blacklist International came close to completing the Golden Road during the 2021 Mobile Legends: Bang Bang competitive season. The Filipino powerhouse established itself as one of the most dominant teams in the region, beginning its historic run by winning the MPL Philippines Season 7 (MPL PH S7) championship with a 4–3 victory over Execration in a tightly contested Grand Finals.[65] The win marked the organization’s first domestic title and solidified its reputation as one of the premier teams in the Philippines especially after the team won the title after going down in a 1-3 deficit. Following their MPL triumph, Blacklist International represented the Philippines at the Mobile Legends: Bang Bang Southeast Asia Cup 2021 (MSC 2021), where they reached the Grand Finals but fell 1–4 to Execration, finishing as runners-up and nullifying their golden road run.[66] Despite the loss, the team maintained its form heading into the next domestic season alongside adding veteran flex player Salic "Hadji" Imam.[67] Blacklist International went on to defend its title at MPL Philippines Season 8 (MPL PH S8), defeating ONIC Philippines 4–1 in the Grand Finals to become back-to-back domestic champions.[68] The team’s success continued on the international stage at the M3 World Championship, where they once again faced ONIC Philippines in the Grand Finals.[69] This time, Blacklist International swept the series 4–0, capturing the M3 World Championship and cementing themselves as one of the most successful Mobile Legends: Bang Bang teams in history.[70]

References

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