Last week, tournament organizer BLAST announced changes to its Dota 2 series, the BLAST Slam, revealing that they’re cutting the prize pool down from $1 million to $750,000. And to be completely honest, this wasn’t a shocker to me. The Dota scene gets a million-dollar tournament almost every single month, from the aforementioned BLAST Slam, to PGL Wallachia, to DreamLeague.
Though we’re getting a lot of free entertainment, I – and I’m sure many others – have started believing that the Dota 2 esports scene has gone into pretty stale territory. We’re seeing the same teams playing in yet another million-dollar tournament – wow, never heard that story before.
The issue is that, though BLAST, PGL, and ESL each try to differentiate their events in their own ways, every single Tier 1 Dota tournament just feels very repetitive. There’s nothing really “special” about any of them anymore.
However, I still believe the Dota scene can be saved – and it might start with tournaments looking very different from the ones we’re used to.
Dota 2’s Tier 1 tournament pattern
If you’ve tuned into Tier 1 events this season, you might feel like the same story keeps repeating itself.
The first issue is that we’re seeing the same eight teams in the playoffs of every single tournament. The top eight in the world are crystal clear, and they just gatekeep the playoffs from any other team at these events.
Oh wow, the group stage just ended – I wonder who qualified for the playoffs. Tundra, Yandex, PARIVISION, Falcons, Spirit, Aurora, BetBoom, and Liquid. What a surprise.
We see the same guys over and over again, just cycling around who gets to win the tournament this time. Sometimes one of them will bomb out early – but you can count on them making it back to the playoffs at the next tournament, which is only a few weeks away.
Tournament organizers are trying their best to switch up formats – different group-stage structures, different seedings – but most still end with the same results. You have 16 teams going into the group stage, and only eight of them will see the light of the playoffs.
And once you’re there, the viewing experience doesn’t change much either. Same casters, same talent, same Bo3s all the way to a Bo5 Grand Final. Maybe the tournament has a different overlay and is held in a different city, but strip all that away, and you’re watching the same tournament again.
A $1 million prize pool used to mean something, but now it’s basically a monthly occurrence.
It’s not just me, I swear
Listen, I know I might sound like I’m just being a burnt-out cynic, but I don’t think I’m alone here. Some people on Reddit are talking about the same issue. One user put it plainly: “Same eight teams every tournament. No money for Tier 2 teams. Same DreamLeague, PGL, and BLAST tournaments ten times a year. Same matchups – it’s boring, to be honest.”
Even two-time TI winner Yaroslav “Miposhka” Naidenov is in agreement, saying: “I honestly don’t know how you don’t get tired of Dota. There are so many tournaments every single day. You constantly watch the same picks and the same teams. It’s just boring.”
Mind you, he said this three months ago when he was still taking a break from professional play. My guy was bored out of his mind – so bored, in fact, that he rejoined Team Spirit as the team’s secondary coach last month.
Even Team Yandex’s Ilya “CHIRA_JUNIOR” Chirtsov voiced his opinion, saying all tournaments feel the same and that some variety is needed. I mean, this is a guy who’s won three of these events this season and consistently makes deep runs. He’s literally getting paid good money to play in these tournaments, and he still has complaints.
So yeah, I believe it’s not just burnout talking. There’s a real staleness problem, and it’s being felt widely enough that even the organizers cutting prize pools might be quietly admitting it, too.
Give us Fearless Draft
We all know Dota players hate League of Legends for stealing some of our game designs, so maybe we can steal something back. If you’ve watched even a bit of League of Legends esports, you’ve probably heard the term “Fearless Draft.”
Here’s how Fearless Draft works: once a team picks a hero in a series, that hero is gone for the rest of the series – for both teams. So, if a team picks Largo in game one, neither side can touch him again until the series is over.
I really believe that Dota needs this right now. Pretty badly. If we’re going to watch the same teams, same players, and same format all the time, we can at least try changing the heroes we’re going to watch.
This prevents us from watching the same meta heroes getting picked over and over again. I think we can all agree that this could definitely make a series less bland and more entertaining to watch.
Us Dota players also love tooting our own horns about how this game demands adaptability, and who better to prove it than the pros? I’d argue being able to adjust on the fly is a team skill, too. You need to find solutions quickly, and that’s exactly the kind of pressure that separates good teams from great ones.
Of course, this wouldn’t be an overnight fix. The pros would need time to actually adjust, but I feel like this period is worth it if it means we stop watching the same ten heroes in every single series.
We have 126 heroes in the game – let’s make use of all of them, right?
Give the Tier 2 scene some love
The Tier 2 Dota scene barely gets any real support right now. Sure, some of these guys occasionally slide into Tier 1 tournaments through qualifiers, but even then, they run straight into the same eight teams gatekeeping the playoffs. Most of the time, they just become group stage fodder.
So here’s my idea. If BLAST is already cutting prize pools, why not use some of the saved money to fund a proper Tier 2/Tier 1.5 tournament instead? I’d bet almost any of these teams would kill for a shot at an actual LAN, even if the prize pool is sitting at something like $200,000. It’d be something like the Dota 2 Minors Valve used to host for a little bit.
We’d also get to see some fresh faces. At the TI15 qualifiers last month, Gorgc put together a Team Bald stack, and Topson, Arteezy, and Ceb did something similar with Retirement Home. These campaigns pulled in some pretty great numbers and content, even though none of them qualified for TI. These Tier 2 tournaments could be something they participate in. They don’t need to be chasing a TI slot to be worth watching.
And even if streamer stacks like this don’t stick around every event, at minimum, we’d be giving the actual Tier 2 hustlers more visibility. I’m sure we all want to see Nigma Galaxy and OG play in the Grand Finals of an event, and let’s be real – seeing them in a Tier 1 final is pretty unrealistic. So, imagine a tournament where they’re the favorites, and there won’t be a PARIVISION or Team Yandex bodying everyone.
Watching the best isn’t always the most entertaining
Sure, we wouldn’t be watching the best Dota in the world with these new tourneys, but I’d argue that’s actually a good thing. Qualifiers, where most of these Tier 2 teams play, have produced some of the craziest games you’ll see all year. People are throwing left and right with wild momentum swings.
It’s not always clean Dota, but it can sometimes be more entertaining than watching Neta “33” Shapira itemize, play perfectly, and stomp teams in 30 minutes.
Counter-Strike 2 has already figured this out. Sometimes, LAN events exclude the absolute best teams in the world. For example, there’s one going on right now – the XSE Pro League 2026 is a million-dollar tournament, and the highest-ranking team is 9z, currently in the top eight of the HLTV Rankings.
You don’t see the likes of Team Vitality, Team Falcons, Team Spirit, or FURIA here, so nobody is going to farm these teams for a free win. Yes, it isn’t perfect Counter-Strike, but it’s a sight for sore eyes and a structure that gives smaller teams a real stage.
These types of tournaments can give Tier 2 teams much-needed stage experience that could raise their floor and close the gap with Tier 1 teams. It’s also a good opportunity for scouting purposes – maybe a promising kid makes waves and gets picked up by a Tier 1 team later on.
Dota doesn’t really have anything like this right now. Most Tier 2 teams are just stuck in qualifiers or get denied deep runs at Tier 1 events. It’s either Tier 1 or basically nothing, and I’m sure we can do something about it.