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Campeonato Brasileiro de League of Legends
Game League of Legends
First season2012
Owner(s) Riot Games Brazil
No. of teams2012–2020: 8
2021 onwards: 10
Countries Brazil
Most recent
champion(s)
LOUD (2nd title) (2023 Split 1)
Most titlesINTZ (5th title)
Qualification Franchise partnership
TV partner(s) Twitch
YouTube
SporTV
Promotion to Mid Season Invitational
World Championship
Official website br.lolesports.com

The Campeonato Brasileiro de League of Legends (CBLOL, lit. Brazilian Championship of League of Legends) is the top level of professional League of Legends competition in Brazil. There are ten teams in the league. Each annual season of play is divided into two splits, spring and summer, both consisting of ten rounds of round-robin tournament play, which then conclude with play-off tournaments between the top three teams. The winners of each split qualifies for the Mid-Season Invitational and World Championship. [1]

The matches have been held since 2015 at Riot studios in São Paulo and broadcast via livestream, with an audience. And for the finals the matches are held in arenas like Allianz Parque, and are attended by narrators, commentators, analysts and presenters. [2] In addition to full broadcasting on official YouTube channels, Twitch, and since 2017 CBLOL has also been playing live games on SporTV, with the same coverage as Riot. [3]

Overview

The tournament has been organized since 2012, shortly after the debut of the Brazilian server, with professionalism still incipient, when it was held in just three days. In 2014, the first league championship was held: the Brazilian League - Champions Series, and in the same year the precedent of two annual competitions was inaugurated, with the holding of the Brazilian Regional Final. Since then, the two-splits format has been adopted, with each one played in the first phase in the "all against all" format, and later knockout until the grand finale. [4] [5] Also in 2015 the league format with stable members was adopted, but subject to lowering and promotion of the worst placed to benefit the best of the Challenging Circuit. [6] [7] Until 2014, a qualifying phase for the championship dispute was adopted. [8]

On 21 January 2020, Riot Brazil confirms CBLOL is moved to franchising. [9]

Format

  • 10 teams participate
  • 9 weeks, League play
  • Double Round Robin
  • Matches are best of one
  • Advancement:
    • Top six teams advance to Playoffs
    • 7th - 10th don't advance to Playoffs
  • Ties are broken by the following methods:
    1. Head-to-head record during regular season
    2. Shortest combined game time (for the team's wins)
    3. If still tied, a tiebreaker game will be played

Teams

Source: [10]

Team First appearance
Fluxo 2023 Split 1
FURIA 2020 Split 1
INTZ 2014 Split 2
KaBuM! Esports 2014 Split 1
Liberty 2022 Split 1
Los Grandes 2022 Slipt 2
LOUD 2021 Split 1
paiN Gaming 2012
RED Canids Kalunga 2016 Split 1
Vivo Keyd Stars 2013

Past seasons

Year Split Winner Runner-up Third place Fourth place
2012 vTi Ignis vTi Nox paiN Gaming Insight
2013 paiN Gaming CNB RMA Nex Impetus
2014 1 Keyd Stars paiN Gaming CNB KaBuM! Esports
2 KaBuM! Esports CNB Keyd Stars paiN Gaming
2015 1 INTZ Keyd Stars paiN Gaming KaBuM! Black
2 paiN Gaming INTZ Keyd Stars g3nerationX
2016 1 INTZ Keyd Stars Operation Kino KaBuM! Esports
2 INTZ CNB paiN Gaming Keyd Stars
2017 1 RED Canids Keyd Stars paiN Gaming INTZ
2 Team oNe paiN Gaming RED Canids INTZ
2018 1 KaBuM! Esports Vivo Keyd RED Canids CNB
2 KaBuM! Esports Flamengo Esports CNB Vivo Keyd
2019 1 INTZ Flamengo Esports Redemption POA CNB
2 Flamengo Esports INTZ KaBuM! Esports Uppercut
2020 1 KaBuM! Esports Flamengo Esports Vivo Keyd FURIA Uppercut
2 INTZ paiN Gaming KaBuM! Esports Prodigy
2021 1 paiN Gaming Vorax Flamengo Esports RED Canids Kalunga
2 RED Canids Kalunga Rensga paiN Gaming Vorax
2022 1 RED Canids Kalunga paiN Gaming KaBuM! Esports FURIA
2 LOUD paiN Gaming FURIA RED Canids Kalunga
2023 1 LOUD paiN Gaming Los Grandes FURIA
2 LOUD paiN Gaming RED Canids Kalunga INTZ

Number of top four finishes

  *   Denotes a team that no longer participates in the league.

Team 1st 2nd 3rd 4th Total Top
Four Finishes
INTZ 5 2 0 2 9
KaBuM! Esports 4 0 3 2 9
paiN Gaming 3 6 5 1 14
RED Canids Kalunga 3 0 2 1 6
LOUD 3 0 0 0 3
Vivo Keyd Stars 1 4 2 2 9
Flamengo Esports* 1 3 1 0 4
vTi Ignis* 1 0 0 0 1
Team oNe* 1 0 0 0 1
CNB* 0 3 2 2 7
Vorax* 0 1 0 1 2
Rensga* 0 1 0 0 1
vTi Nox* 0 1 0 0 1
Los Grandes 0 0 1 0 1

References

  1. ^ Rodrigues, Bruno (2017-02-07). "Riot anuncia Mundial 2017 na China e vaga direta para o Brasil - Mais e-Sports". Mais e-Sports.
  2. ^ "League of Legends: Riot inaugura estúdio para transmitir o Brasileiro de LoL". TechTudo.
  3. ^ Oliveira, Gabriel. "CBLoL 2017 começará no dia 21 com transmissão do SporTV". CNB e-Sports Club | Gaming is our sport. Archived from the original on 2017-07-03. Retrieved 2019-12-23.
  4. ^ "LoLeSports BR". br.lolesports.com. Retrieved 2017-07-10.
  5. ^ Melo, Gabriel. "Relembre as finais dos campeonatos nacionais de LoL". CNB e-Sports Club | Gaming is our sport. Archived from the original on 2017-07-31. Retrieved 2019-12-23.
  6. ^ Set, Ricardo. "CBLoL 2015 é anunciado com formato semelhante à LCS". CNB e-Sports Club | Gaming is our sport. Archived from the original on 2017-07-03. Retrieved 2019-12-23.
  7. ^ "CBLoL e Desafiante na Temporada 2015 | League of Legends". br.leagueoflegends.com. Retrieved 2017-07-10.
  8. ^ "LoLeSports BR". lolesports.com.br. Archived from the original on 2017-07-07. Retrieved 2017-07-10.
  9. ^ "Riot Brasil confirms CBLoL will move to franchising". ESPN. Jan 22, 2020.
  10. ^ "LoL Esports". lolesports.com. Retrieved 2022-12-19.

External links