The CSGO Global Tournament 2025 is gearing up to be a pivotal fixture in the esports calendar, combining both online stages and high-stakes LAN events across multiple global regions. Teams will move through a rigorous schedule spanning September to December, covering Europe, China, Hong Kong, and Romania—each location featuring significant prize pools that aggregate into the multi-million dollar range. In short, the Global Tournament is set to be a comprehensive test of resilience, technical skill, and on-the-fly decision-making, with long-term implications for competitive Counter-Strike standings and future team lineups.
Summary
September 2025
No 1. Galaxy Battle 2025 Phase 4


Galaxy Battle 2025 Phase 4 kicks off online in Europe from September 21 to October 12. The event brings 24 teams into direct competition, with a total prize pool of $50,000. The distribution is precise: $25,000 for the champion; $11,000 allocated to second place; $4,000 split across third and fourth; and $15,000 shared between fifth and eighth positions. This structure targets incentivizing performance at every bracket and encourages tactical resource allocation and match preparation throughout all competitive stages.
No 2. Winline Insight Season 8


Scheduled for September 22 through October 9, Winline Insight Season 8 operates online and also within the European scope. 16 high-caliber teams are in contention, with another $50,000 on the line. The payout division—$25,000 for first, $15,000 for second, $7,500 for third, $2,500 for fourth—ensures the point spread is significant enough to impact team rankings and tournament stratagems. The format supports high-stakes play both for leaderboard points and monetary gain.
No 3. Majestic LanDaLan 3

Hosted physically in Moscow (September 25–28), Majestic LanDaLan 3 fields 8 teams with the same $50,000 pot as other September events. Notable is the winner-heavy distribution: $30,000 to the first-place finisher, $10,000 for second, $3,500 for third/fourth, with $1,000 each for placements five through eight. The structure rewards semifinals advancement and amplifies implications of strategic risk management at every elimination stage.
October 2025
No 1. ESL Proleague Season 22

Stockholm is the setting (October 3–12) for ESL Proleague 22. Sixteen pro teams will contest a massive $1,000,000 prize pool. The breakdown: $100,000 to the victor, $50,000 to second, $28,000 third, $22,000 fourth. Fifth through eighth land $18,000; ninth to eleventh reap $13,500; twelfth to fourteenth, $10,500; and fifteenth to sixteenth, $8,500. The sum at stake means every placement is critical, directly impacting global seeding and long-term organizational sustainability.
No 2. CS Asia Championships 2025


From October 14 to 19 in Shanghai, the CS Asia Championships 2025 bring 16 top-tier teams together to compete over a $1,000,000 purse. The highest-earning team leaves with $150,000; second, $70,000; then $60,000 for third and $40,000 for fourth. Fifth and sixth share $20,000, seventh/eighth split $10,500, the remainder is distributed incrementally down to $1,000 for 13th through 16th. This event crucially represents regional depth and international competitiveness.
No 3. PGL Master Bucharest 2025


Bucharest, Romania, hosts a high-profile event from October 26–November 1, featuring 16 internationally ranked competitors and a total prize package of $1,250,000. The champion gains $200,000; runner-up receives $93,750; $75,000 for third; $43,750 for fourth. Fifth through eighth each receive $31,250, followed by decremental payouts to the bottom bracket. This tournament functions as both a championship opportunity and a rankings-defining contest.
CSGO Global Tournament 2025: November 2025
No 1. IEM Chengdu 2025


Chengdu’s event, running November 3–9, places yet another $1 million in play for 16 international competitors. The top finisher is awarded $125,000, with $50,000 awarded to second, $30,000 for third, etc., progressing to $4,000 for the field’s lowest finishers. The sum and distribution ensure each match outcome alters both leaderboard trajectories and organizational ROI.
No 2. Blast Rivals 2025 Season 2

From November 12–16 in Hong Kong, BLAST Rivals returns for its second season. While the pool is smaller ($350,000), the short-format with 8 teams introduces highly condensed pressure cycles, forcing rapid adaptation and intensive tactical vertical integration. Outcome volatility is high, necessitating robust analytic prep.
No 3. StarLadder Budapest Major 2025 Stage 2


StarLadder Budapest Major’s second phase (November 29–December 2) leverages a $80,000 pool for 16 teams. Although lower than other majors, this stage serves as a crucial late-season accelerator for global rankings, and provides a platform for evaluating both veteran and emergent competitive entities in high-leverage best-of scenarios.
December 2025
No 1. StarLadder Budapest Major 2025

—Picture source from internet—
Concluding the annual calendar, Budapest hosts the season’s final event, December 4–14. Sixteen teams contend for a $1,170,000 payout, finalizing rankings and consolidating the seasonal competitive metagame. Every match result directly shapes both year-end championship narratives and the ongoing evolution of professional Counter-Strike.
Conclusion
Across all brackets, the 2025 CSGO tournament circuit addresses both financial and strategic drivers of elite esports. From highly structured payout models—which inform risk analysis and bracket management—to LAN and online settings, each event supports the continued advancement of organizational infrastructure, talent development, and competitive play standards. The calendar scaffolds global competition, establishing both immediate stakes and long-term competitive legacies within the Counter-Strike ecosystem.
