Photo via StarLadder

Immortals’ VP says it took an average of 150 days for MIBR to receive prize money after tournaments

According to Immortals Gaming Club's senior vice president, this only affects the players.

The esports industry has evolved so much over the past few years—and so has CS:GO. Yesterday, CS:GO players were celebrating a framework agreement with ESL and DreamHack in which the Counter-Strike Professional Players’ Association (CSPPA) praised those two tournament organizers for its standards.

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But the industry still has a lot to improve, according to Tomi “lurppis” Kovanen, Immortals Gaming Club’s senior vice president. He said today that it’s taking a long time for one of Immortals’ teams, MIBR, to receive its prize money after tournaments.

“While the industry has gotten a lot better over the past years, prize money payments remain a real issue,” Lurppis said. “In 2019, the average time for prize payout in days from the end of an event for MIBR was ~150 days, with many events still unpaid today, and continuing to increase the average.”

Lurppis didn’t name any tournament organizers in his tweet, which could mean that this is still an issue across all tournament organizers, including the most famous ones.

The prize money’s delay doesn’t affect Immortals, only its players, according to lurppis. “Prize money is largely an irrelevant source of funds for teams as players usually get 90% or so of it,” Lurppis said. “For large teams, cash management won’t be an issue, so instead this only directly hurts players, who get the money they earned much later.”

This isn’t the only controversy about late payments in CS:GO, however. Last year, StarLadder, an organizer for several CS:GO tournaments including the Berlin Major in August 2019, reportedly failed to pay the CS:GO talent that worked in its tournaments on time. The tournament organizer later said that it was because sponsorships take three to six months to pay for the event.

The framework agreement settled between the two biggest tournament organizers, ESL and DreamHack, and the CSPPA could help players get better payment conditions from tournaments organized by those companies, as well as events held by other organizers.


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Author
Leonardo Biazzi
Staff writer and CS:GO lead. Leonardo has been passionate about games since he was a kid and graduated in Journalism in 2018. Before Leonardo joined Dot Esports in 2019, he worked for Brazilian outlet Globo Esporte. Leonardo also worked for HLTV.org between 2020 and 2021 as a senior writer, until he returned to Dot Esports and became part of the staff team.