First Stand Grand Finals viewership defies expectations

Lea Maas
calendar-icon
First Stand Riot
Image Credit: Riot Games

League of Legends’ 2025 First Stand Tournament, the game’s first cross-regional competition of the year, has concluded with 1.1m peak viewers.

According to esports data platform Esports Charts, the event recorded 509,029 average viewers and 18m watch hours throughout its 35-hour air time.

First Stand is a newly-introduced international tournament that invites the winning team of the first Split in every League of Legends (LoL) region. Its inaugural edition featured Team Liquid (LTA Cross-Conference), Karmine Corp (LEC Winter), Hanwha Life Esports (LCK Cup), Top Esports (LPL Split 1) and CTBC Flying Oyster (LCP Split 1).

From March 10th-16th, the five opponents battled through a Round-Robin Group Stage and a Knockout Stage for a share of the $1m prize pool (~£771,000).

Although First Stand’s opening match between Karming Corp and Team Liquid showed promising viewership with over 700,000 peak viewers, the tournament continued with inconsistent audience numbers.

The event’s host location at Seoul’s LoL Park made it inconvenient for European fans to watch certain matches due to the significant timezone difference. Moreover, taking place so early in the season, First Stand may appear insignificant to some viewers.

First Stand’s Surprising Conclusion

Despite such concerns, the Grand Finals between French organisation Karmine Corp (KC) and First Stand winner Hanwha Life Esports surpassed 1m peak viewers, making it the second most-watched LoL competition in 2025 so far. Only South Korea’s LCK Cup was more popular, with 1.91m peak viewers.

First Stand was also co-streamed by several notable esports personalities, including Marc ‘Caedrel’ Lamont, Christian ‘IWDominate’ Rivera and KC co-owner Kamel ‘Kameto’ Kebir.

South Korea has been a dominating region within the ongoing LoL season beyond Hanwha’s performance at First Stand. Korean esports organisations Hanwha, T1 and Gen.G Esports currently lead the game’s global power rankings.

With First Stand concluded, all regions return for their second Splits ahead of the LoL calendar’s second international tournament, the Mid-Season Invitational (MSI). Kicking off on June 27th, MSI awards its winner with a direct qualification to the 2025 World Championship.

Lea Maas

News Writer
  • x-icon
  • linkedin-icon
Lea is an esports journalist with too many interests and too little time. Covering esports stories for more than 3 years, she likes to spend her days (and nights) watching and analysing competitive VALORANT. Lea is also deeply invested in DEI issues and promoting mental health awareness within her industry.
Read Full Bio
Stay updated with the latest in Esports Follow Esports Insider for breaking news, features and guides
Add ESI as your preferred source on Google Add ESI as your preferred source on Google
ESI Ranking System
We’ve created a ranking system to help you quickly know how good each gambling platform is. As gamblers ourselves, we know which factors matter most to you, so we follow a best-in-class methodology to test each one with no stone unturned. Once done, we then rank each platform based on the following tiers:
  • A-Tier High-quality sites that deliver a top experience every time. They boast strong performance, nice features, and reliable support, but are just shy of perfection.
  • B-Tier Solid platforms that are worth a spin. They’re safe, fun, and functional, but may be lacking advanced features or have minor drawbacks.
  • S-Tier Reserved for elite operators only. These go well beyond the norm with lucrative bonuses, rewarding promotions, lightning-fast payouts, and a flawless experience overall.
To read more details about how we review casino and betting sites, check out How We Rate Gambling Operators.