Team Liquid

Team Liquid
Short nameLiquid, TL
DivisionsAge of Empires
Apex Legends
Artifact
Clash Royale
Civilization VI
Fortnite
Counter-Strike 2
Dota 2
Free Fire
Hearthstone
Heroes of the Storm
League of Legends
Mobile Legends: Bang Bang
Rocket League
PUBG
StarCraft II
Street Fighter
Super Smash Bros.
Tekken 7
Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six Siege
Valorant
World of Warcraft
Founded2000; 24 years ago (2000)
LocationUtrecht, Netherlands
United States (LoL team, CS Team)
Brazil (Rainbow Six team, Free Fire team and Game Changers Valorant team)
Europe Alienware facility (Dota2)
Indonesia (MLBB ID)
The Philippines (MLBB PH)
ManagerVictor Goossens (co-CEO)
Steve Arhancet (co-CEO)
PartnersAlienware
Honda
IMC Trading
HyperX
Jersey Mike's Subs
Marvel Entertainment
Monster Energy
Secretlab
SAP SE
Twitch
Parent groupaXiomatic
Websitewww.teamliquid.com

Team Liquid is a multi-regional professional esports organization based in the Netherlands that was founded in 2000. They signed their first professional players with the release of StarCraft II: Wings of Liberty.

In 2012, Team Liquid acquired a North American Dota 2 team, marking their first venture into multi-genre management.[1] In January 2015, Team Liquid officially merged with Team Curse under the Liquid banner, bringing on Steve Arhancet, his supporting staff, and former Curse League of Legends, Street Fighter, and Super Smash Bros. teams. Their European Dota 2 squad won The International 2017, which had one of the largest prize pools for any esports tournament in history.[2] Team Liquid's League of Legends team has won five LCS titles,[3] and their Counter-Strike Global Offensive team was awarded the Intel Grand Slam prize in 2019 after winning four tournaments in just 63 days.[4] Team Liquid also has Rainbow Six Siege, Free Fire and female Valorant teams in Brazil as well as Mobile Legends: Bang Bang rosters in Indonesia and the Philippines.

  1. ^ Horton, Samuel (December 8, 2012). "Team Liquid ventures into Dota 2". SK Gaming. Archived from the original on February 14, 2013. Retrieved December 8, 2012.
  2. ^ Payne, Marissa. "These five gamers just won $11 million playing 'Dota 2'". The Washington Post. Retrieved August 13, 2017.
  3. ^ Hernandez, Gab (April 1, 2024). "Team Liquid wins LCS Spring Playoffs, secures spot in MSI 2024". gameland.gg. Retrieved April 19, 2024.
  4. ^ "Team Liquid - Intel Grand Slam". ESL Gaming. Retrieved February 6, 2020.