A Quick Look at Tradeit League FE Masters’ Success

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Tradeit League FE Masters has had three editions so far, and the numbers are growing with each tournament. From prize pool to audience stats, this series is quickly becoming a success story for Tradeit, Chips.gg, and female CS2.

Tradeit’s goal is to continue to build on the foundation created by the first three editions and hopefully turn Tradeit League FE Masters into a truly prestigious CS2 competition. Here’s a brief summary of the winners and numbers we’ve had so far.

First Edition

Tradeit League FE Masters Season 1 featured 16 teams and had a prize pool of £500 plus an additional £800 in skins. The competition was won by NAVI Javelins, who narrowly defeated BIG EQUIPA in the Grand Final. The scores were 13 – 5 on Inferno, 14 – 16 on Anubis, and 13 – 11 on Mirage.

Second Edition

The second edition of Tradeit League FE Masters featured 16 teams again and was won by Team Pigeons after a challenging Grand Final against NIP Impact.

This edition offered $1500 in prize money plus an additional $1300 in skins.

Third Edition

The third edition took another step in the right direction, having a prize pool of $2800 plus more than $2000 in skins. The competition was won by NAVI Javelins, who defeated Team Pigeons in the Grand Final (3 – 1). But this time, the last match of the tournament used the best-of-five format.

Overall Stats

The first three editions of Tradeit League FE Masters featured a lot of excellent female CS2 teams, such as:

  • NAVI Javelins
  • BIG EQUIPA
  • Team Pigeons
  • Spirit Female
  • Astralis Women
  • ENCE Athena
  • NIP Impact
  • Fearless Cheetahs
  • Guild Esports
  • Etc.

Combined, the tournaments had nearly 250,000 viewers. The peak live viewers number was ~14,000, which isn’t bad at all considering we’re just getting started.

In the coming months, new announcements will be made regarding the next edition of the tournament.

William Westerlund
William Westerlund
William is an author, editor, and an avid gamer with over 10.000 hours in CS:GO. He also enjoys playing Rust, Dota 2, and TF2 but never became a top 1% player in any of those games.

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