BLAST
From Liquipedia Dota 2 Wiki
BLAST is a Denmark-based esports production company founded in 2016.[2] The company was under the name RFRSH until summer 2019.[3] They are best-known for being one of the key tournament organizers in the Counter-Strike scene, hosting their own professional circuit, Blast Premier. Since 2020, their final Counter-Strike tournaments in each circuit, the Blast Premier World Finals, have featured $1m USD prize pools.
In May 2024, they announced its expansion into Dota 2, announcing tournaments until 2025.[4]
BLAST to enter Dota 2We are delighted to be entering Dota 2 and have plans for BLAST to bring a new level of production and excitement that Dota fans haven’t seen before.
It’s a game we love as fans and players, we’ve been following closely as an interested tournament organiser for the last few years. As we’ve grown as a business and expand into further titles, Dota has always been on our wish list. With the recent changes to the Dota ecosystem we feel it’s the perfect opportunity for BLAST to come in, provide the community with the next level of tournaments and become the new home of Dota 2.
BLAST prides itself on unparalleled production quality and game changing fan-first moments while bringing together the very best teams and biggest superstars to fight it out for glory on the server. We look forward to bringing this approach to the world of Dota 2 and providing fans with the best esports entertainment on offer.
Andrew Haworth, VP of Ecosystems, Valve & Riot
In October 2024, they revealed their tournaments dates until November 2026.[5][6]
BLAST reveals its ambition for Dota 2Since we announced that we’re entering Dota 2 we’ve been working on some incredible production surprises that we look forward to bringing to the fans across the world. The BLAST Slam format will bring high intensity and jeopardy to every match keeping the fans entertained at every step of the way.
We’ll be bringing the best teams to every BLAST Slam. In our studio events, we’ll get close to them going behind the scenes to tell the stories of the best players in the world. In our arena events, we’ll bring the best production to give the players the platform they deserve to shine.
Andrew Haworth, VP of Valve Ecosystems
In January 2025, they made adjustment to prize pool distribution for BLAST Slam II and future events; the prize pool is split into two categories; Prize Money and Team Earnings.[7]
In June 2025, they announced changes for BLAST Slam IV and future events; increasing amount of participants, adding qualifiers for Europe, China, and Southeast Asia while Americas will receive an invite based on recent performances, a team from the host region will also receive an invite.[8][9]
Events
[edit]S
Tournament
Date
Prize Pool
Location
P#
Winner
Runner-up
Additional Content
[edit]Interviews
[edit]2024
- [e] 2024-05-08 |
Blast Dota Exec:"Not afraid of making changes to the norm" by BLAST.tv
Preview
[edit]Miscellaneous
[edit]References
[edit]- ↑ BLAST LinkedIn
- ↑ "RFRSH ApS - Company Profile and News". Bloomberg.com.
- ↑ "Change of name from 'RFRSH ApS' to 'BLAST ApS'". OpenCorporates.
- ↑ "BLAST enters Dota - first event in November". Blast.tv. 2024-05-08.
- ↑ BLAST Slam (2024-10-02). "Mark your calendars as the 2025/2026 BLAST Slam dates are here".
- ↑ "BLAST reveals its ambition for Dota 2". Blast.tv. 2024-10-02.
- ↑ "BLAST Slam Prize Pool update". Blast.tv. 2025-01-20.
- ↑ BLAST Slam (2025-06-12). "BLAST Slam Changes: More teams, More Qualifiers, More Dota".
- ↑ "BLAST Slam Changes: More teams, more qualifiers, more Dota". Blast.tv. 2025-06-04.