Esports World Cup 2026 Opens Registration for Last Chance Qualifiers

Jun 08, 2026.

LCQ events across eight titles will award the final spots in Paris, fueling some of the EWC’s biggest storylines, and capping a historic Road to EWC that will see more than 350,000 participants try to qualify across a total of 230 events

Riyadh/Paris (June 8, 2026) - The Esports Foundation (EF) today announced the official lineup and details for the Last Chance Qualifier (LCQ) tournaments that will award the final spots in eight different competitions at this year’s Esports World Cup, set to be hosted in Paris, France, from July 6 through August 23.

The program forms the final stage of qualification for EWC 2026, concluding a global Road to EWC that spans more than 230 tournaments and qualification events worldwide and is expected to engage more than 350,000 competitors across publisher ecosystems, regional leagues, and official circuits.

The Last Chance Qualifier series consists of eight open tournaments across Counter-Strike 2, EA FC, Rocket League, TEKKEN 8, Chess, Call of Duty: Black Ops 7, FATAL FURY: City of the Wolves, and Street Fighter 6.

Held in Paris between July 5 and August 10, the events will award the final qualification spots for 37 solo competitors and six Clubs at the Esports World Cup 2026, including four Clubs in Counter-Strike 2 and one Club each in Rocket League and Call of Duty: Black Ops 7. EA FC qualifiers will advance to the Play-Ins stage, while all other LCQ winners will qualify directly for the main event.

LCQ Schedule and Qualification Slots:

FATAL FURY: City of the Wolves (July 5th): 4 players qualify

EA FC (July 9-11): 14 players qualify for Play-Ins

Street Fighter 6 (July 24-26): 6 players qualify

TEKKEN 8 (July 31-August 2): 4 players qualify

Call of Duty: Black Ops 7 (July 31-August 2): 1 Club qualifies

Chess (August 4-6): 4 players qualify

Counter-Strike 2 (August 7-9): 4 Clubs qualify

Rocket League (August 8-August 10): 1 Club qualifies

Some of the most remarkable moments in EWC’s history have come as a result of the LCQ. In 2024, EA FC pro João "JafonsogV" Vasconcellos battled through the LCQ before going on to claim the championship, etching his name into esports history. His performance inspired the creation of the Jafonso Award, which is awarded to teams or players that win an EWC championship after qualifying through the LCQ.

In 2025, Team Falcons’ Overwatch roster pulled off that feat to not only claim the first Jafonso Award and the OWCS Midseason Championship, but win what would turn out to be a crucial tournament victory that cemented Falcons’ second straight Club Championship. In the same year, Chess Grandmasters Nihal Sarin and Levon Aronian both reached the playoffs after qualifying for the first EWC Chess main event through the LCQ.

The Esports World Cup 2026 will be hosted at Paris Expo Port de Versailles, in Paris, France, from July 6 through August 23, bringing together more than 2,000 players and 200 Clubs from over 100 countries across 25 tournaments and 24 games for a record-breaking $75 million+ prize pool.

To learn more about EWC, visit esportsworldcup.com and follow Esports Foundation on LinkedIn.


About The Esports World Cup

The Esports World Cup (EWC) is a premier annual sporting event and global celebration of competitive excellence and esports fandom. The competition features a unique cross-game format that pits the world's top esports Clubs against one another for the largest prize pool in esports history. Hosted in Paris, France, in the summer of 2026, the EWC will bring gaming and esports communities together again to crown the next Esports World Cup Club Champion. esportsworldcup.com


Esports World Cup media contact:

press@esportsfoundation.com