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NA vs. EU Rift Rivals 2018 results

The winners and losers of this year's tournament for regional bragging rights.
This article is over 6 years old and may contain outdated information

Rift Rivals is League of Legends’ relatively new region-vs-region tournament, pitting the game’s esports leagues against one another around the world. In our neck of the woods, the EU and NA LCS face off against one another in Los Angeles at Riot’s LCS Battle Arena.

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Just like the event’s debut last year, there isn’t really much on the line this time around. It’s a single round robin group stage followed by a relay race knockout stage, and the winning region earns a nice, shiny trophy and bragging rights, but not much else. Still, it’s fun to watch, and much more lighthearted than the really important events of MSI and Worlds—and the teams from each region care enough to try hard. After all, it does decide whether NA is greater than EU or the other way around.

Here are the results from the tournament so far, updated with the most recent games on the top.

Knockout Stage relay best-of-five – EU LCS win 3-1

Game one: Echo Fox defeat G2

Game two: Fnatic defeat 100 Thieves

Game three: Splyce defeat Team Liquid

Game four: Fnatic defeat Echo Fox to win the tournament

Group Stage – End: EU five wins/NA three wins

100 Thieves vs. Splyce – 100T win

The scrap between 100T and Splyce was closer than Splyce’s other matches this tournament, but it still wasn’t that close. All in all, Splyce were the only team that looked like they didn’t belong at Rift Rivals.

G2 Esports vs. Team Liquid – G2 win

Liquid have looked like the best NA team at Rift Rivals so far, but they just couldn’t withstand G2. That’s a bad sign for NA, but a great sign for G2 fans who want their team to take back the EU LCS trophy later this split.

Fnatic vs. 100 Thieves – Fnatic win

100 Thieves are struggling to find themselves with their new roster. The new jungler has been performing very well, but Fnatic exploited them elsewhere to win the day.

G2 Esports vs. Echo Fox – G2 win

There isn’t much to this one. Echo Fox hasn’t been able to confidently pull off the funneling strat so far this split, and G2 are the kings of it. So when G2 got their hands on a Kai’Sa funnel, Echo Fox didn’t know how to handle it, and G2 took the game.

Team Liquid vs. Fnatic – TL win

The game between Liquid and Fnatic started off as a rapid-fire back-and-forth, but ultimately, Liquid looked much cleaner than Fnatic. Whether it was controlling the map or fighting in-lane, Liquid always seemed like they were a step ahead.

Echo Fox vs. Splyce – EF win

Echo Fox wins by all-around outclassing Splyce. So far, Splyce looks like the weakest team at the tournament, but Echo Fox’s reckless aggression was still put on display.

G2 Esports vs. 100 Thieves – G2 win

G2 amassed an extremely large lead early, but 100T held on for a comically long time, in classic 100T fashion. G2 eventually earned the win, but they struggled from the mid game into the late game.

Team Liquid vs. Splyce – TL win

Liquid is definitely the best team from NA at the tournament, and Splyce is definitely the worst from EU. That being said, this game wasn’t very close. Liquid smashed them.

Fnatic vs. Echo Fox – FNC win

Echo Fox came into the tournament tied for first place with Liquid in the NA LCS. That being said, it was a surprise when Fnatic, a third-place EU team, exploited their weaknesses so dramatically.


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Image of Aaron Mickunas
Aaron Mickunas
Esports and gaming journalist for Dot Esports, featured at Lolesports.com, Polygon, IGN, and Ginx.tv.