League of Legends Championship Pacific explained

League of Legends Championship Pacific
Last Season:2025 LCP season
Sport:esports
Game:League of Legends
Inaugural:Split 1 2025
Teams:8 (regular season)
TBD (playoffs)
Confed Cup:World Championship
Mid-Season Invitational
First Stand

The League of Legends Championship Pacific (LCP) is an upcoming professional esports league for League of Legends teams competing in the Asia-Pacific region. Riot Games, the game's developer, and tournament organizer Carry International created the league on 29 September 2024. This followed an announcement in June by Riot in which they planned to form a single tournament to replace the Pacific Championship Series (PCS) and Vietnam Championship Series (VCS) as a tier-one league. Both leagues, along side the League of Legends Japan League (LJL), which was integrated into the PCS for the 2024 season, became tier-two leagues.

The LCP will utilize a hybrid franchise and promotion and relegation model, similar to the Valorant Champions Tour (VCT) in Riot's tactical shooter Valorant. Four teams will be "partners" in the league and can't be relegated, while another four are "guest teams" that can be relegated to the PCS, VCS, LJL or other sub-regional leagues based on their location.

The LCP is made up of three organizations from Vietnam, two organizations each from Japan and Taiwan and one organization from Oceania. All teams will play from a studio in Taipei.

History

Prior to the LCP

The first professional esports league for League of Legends players in Taiwan, Hong Kong, Macau, and Southeast Asia was the Garena Premier League (GPL), which ran from 2012 to mid-2018 and ran by Garena, who distributed the game in those regions. Teams from Taiwan, Hong Kong, and Macau were given their own league, the League of Legends Master Series (LMS), in late 2014.[1] Three years later, the Vietnam Championship Series (VCS) was upgraded to a Tier 1 tournament and Vietnam became its own competitive region, separate from the rest of Southeast Asia.[2] [3] The GPL was rebranded as the League of Legends SEA Tour (LST) in mid-2018.[4]

On 25 September 2019, Garena announced its intention to merge the LMS and LST into a single league. This was fully announced by Riot Games as the Pacific Championship Series (PCS) on 19 December for a 2020 start.[5] [6] [7] [8] The league, whilst originally franchised to feature 10 teams, would shrink to 8 teams for Spring 2024 (following a relegation series demoting Impunity Esports and Dewish Team whilst the promoted teams, Nate9527 and PSG Talon Academy, did not secure sponsors in time) and 7 for Summer 2024 (when Beyond Gaming closed operations). The PCS would "merge" with Oceania's league, the League of Legends Circuit Oceania (LCO), in time for the 2023 season, giving the two best LCO teams spots in the PCS playoffs instead of the league qualifying for international tournaments on their own.[9]

Japan's professional esports league for League of Legends, the League of Legends Japan League (LJL), was formed in 2014. Throughout the course of the league's history, DetonatioN FocusMe (DFM) dominated the competition, scoring 16 LJL titles and representing the region several times in international competition. On 26 November 2023, Riot announced that the league would become part of the PCS, much like Oceania, for the 2024 season.[10] During the season, DFM's dominance would be replaced by that of Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks Gaming (owned by the Nippon Professional Baseball (NPB) team of the same name), who won both LJL splits and finished as PCS runners-up in Spring and Summer, qualifying for the 2024 World Championship in the process.

Formation

On 11 June 2024, Riot Games released a blog post titled "LoL Esports: Building Towards a Brighter Future", in which they would overhaul the competitive scene for 2025. Among these changes were the announcement of an 8-team pan-Asia-Pacific tournament that would take the place of the PCS and VCS as a tier-1 league. This league was announced to feature a hybrid promotion and relegation system, with some teams being franchise partners of the league while others were "guests" that would be relegated.[11] On 19 July Riot publicly announced that the league would consist of four partners and four guest teams. The league would officially launch as the League of Legends Championship Pacific on 29 September,[12] with the format for the inaugural season announced on 1 November and the teams revealed on 3 November.

Despite being part of the larger Asia-Pacific region, it was announced on 20 September 2024 that the LCO had folded. It is currently unknown what would replace the competition as a domestic league that promotes teams to the LCP.[13]

Format

Split 1

Split 2

Season Finals

To be announced

Qualifications

Promotion Tournament

Teams

Eight teams will make up the league. This will consist of four partner teams that can't be relegated and four guest slots that can be relegated to the domestic leagues below the LCP (currently consisting of the PCS, VCS and LJL) based on their location. These initial four guest teams will consist of two merit slots consisting of the best non-partnered teams in the 2024 PCS and VCS Summer splits and two additional teams.

3 teams from Vietnam, 2 teams each from Japan and Taiwan, and 1 team from Oceania make up the LCP as of the 2025 season.

Partner teams

TeamJoined
CTBC Flying Oyster3 November 2024
GAM Esports18 August 2024
PSG Talon1 September 2024
SoftBank Hawks3 November 2024

Guest teams

TeamJoined
Chiefs Esports Club3 November 2024
DetonatioN FocusMe3 November 2024
Team Whales3 November 2024
Vikings Esports3 November 2024

Results

YearSplitChampionsRunners-upThird-place
2025Split 1
Split 2
Season Finals

Notes and References

  1. News: Kulasingham . Nilu . Garena to separate Taiwan, Hong Kong and Macau from South East Asia for the 2015 GPL Season . 18 January 2020 . Yahoo News . 1 October 2014.
  2. News: Wolf . Jacob . Vietnam promoted to independent region in League of Legends . 18 January 2020 . ESPN . 21 February 2018 . en.
  3. News: Goslin . Austen . Vietnam is now its own independent competitive league . 18 January 2020 . The Rift Herald . 21 February 2018 . en.
  4. Web site: A New Beginning for Esports in Southeast Asia. LoL Garena. 20 April 2018.
  5. Web site: 全新聯賽將於 2020 年啟動,聯合LMS及LST全面提高戰區戰力 . 《英雄聯盟 LoL》官方網站 – 全球第一多人連線遊戲,挑戰你的電子競技夢想! . LoL Esports; Garena TW . 25 September 2019 . 5 January 2020 . zh-TW.
  6. News: Hao . Dexter Tan Guan . Pacific Championship Series created as combination of League's LMS and LST . 29 December 2019 . Dot Esports . 19 December 2019.
  7. News: Nicholson . Jonno . Riot Games announces Pacific Championship Series . 29 December 2019 . Esports Insider . 19 December 2019.
  8. News: Matthiesen . Tom . League of Legends: Riot merges the LMS and the LST to form one large Pacific Championship Series in 2020 . 29 December 2019 . Inven Global . 20 December 2019 . en.
  9. News: Mclaughlin . Declan . Riot Games announces PCS will expand into Oceania . 30 December 2022 . Dexerto . 18 November 2022 . en.
  10. News: Ho . Liam . LoL esports announces Japan's LJL will join Oceania in PCS playoffs for Worlds entry . Dexerto . 27 November 2023 . en.
  11. News: Wilson . Jason . Riot Games rolls out consolidation plan, new spring event for League of Legends esports . 11 June 2024 . . 11 June 2024 . en.
  12. Web site: Introducing League of Legends Championship Pacific! . LoL Esports . 29 September 2024 . 30 October 2024.
  13. News: Taifalos . Nicholas . Riot 'exploring solutions' for new LoL circuit in Oceania just 4 years after last revamp . 1 October 2024 . . 20 September 2024.