Photo via BLAST Premier

BLAST Premier comes to North America with 2023 Spring Final

North American fans got what they wanted.

BLAST is bringing its third offline CS:GO tournament to North America with BLAST Premier: Spring Final 2023 in Washington D.C, it was announced today.

Recommended Videos

The tournament will be held in Entertainment & Sports Arena in the capital of the U.S. It will take place from June 7 to June 11. A prize pool of $425,000 will be up for grabs at the event, with the winner also qualifying for this year’s edition of BLAST Premier: World Final.

So far, three teams have qualified for the Spring Final: Team Vitality, G2 Esports, and FaZe Clan. They did so by topping their respective groups in the currently ongoing BLAST Premier: Spring Groups 2023 event. Another three teams will advance to the tournament via Spring Groups 2023, scheduled to finish this Sunday, on Jan. 29.

Two other teams will secure their spot at the event via Spring Showdowns in the Europe and Americas regions.

The show in Washington will be the third BLAST offline event in the region. The organizers previously held BLAST Pro Series Miami 2019 and BLAST Pro Series Los Angeles 2019 in the United States, before turning into BLAST Premier and adding a new yearly format to the competition.

Last year, three teams won three different BLAST events. The Spring Final was claimed by Natus Vincere, with Fall Final and World Final won by Heroic and G2, respectively.


Dot Esports is supported by our audience. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn a small affiliate commission. Learn more
related content
Read Article ESL Pro League Season 19: Schedule, results, streams, and more
The ESL Pro League Season 19 on an abstract black and green background.
Read Article ‘We can’t pass it up’: BRACE, BNK don’t regret missing DH Melbourne for CS2 in Europe
BRACE on stage at Skyesports Grand Slam in Pune, India.
Read Article ‘We kinda gave up’: Why insani, MIBR, and Brazil no longer need NA CS2 to flourish
Insani, a CS2 player for MIBR, sits at his PC at ESL Challenger Melbourne.
Related Content
Read Article ESL Pro League Season 19: Schedule, results, streams, and more
The ESL Pro League Season 19 on an abstract black and green background.
Read Article ‘We can’t pass it up’: BRACE, BNK don’t regret missing DH Melbourne for CS2 in Europe
BRACE on stage at Skyesports Grand Slam in Pune, India.
Read Article ‘We kinda gave up’: Why insani, MIBR, and Brazil no longer need NA CS2 to flourish
Insani, a CS2 player for MIBR, sits at his PC at ESL Challenger Melbourne.
Author
Mateusz Miter
Polish Staff Writer. Mateusz previously worked for numerous outlets and gaming-adjacent companies, including ESL. League of Legends or CS:GO? He loves them both. In fact, he wonders which game he loves more every day. He wanted to go pro years ago, but somewhere along the way decided journalism was the more sensible option—and he was right.