Mobile Legends: Bang Bang Mid Season Cup

Mobile Legends: Bang Bang Mid Season Cup
Tournament information
SportMobile Legends: Bang Bang
LocationWorldwide (2023–present)
Regional SEA (2017–2022)
Month playedSeptember (2017)
July (2018, 2024–present)
June (2019–2023, 2024: Wildcard stage)
Established2017 (2017)
Number of
tournaments
7
AdministratorMoonton
Tournament
format(s)
Host(s)
List
  • Jakarta (2017, 2018)
  • Manila (2019)
  • Cancelled (2020)
  • Online Tournament (2021)
  • Kuala Lumpur (2022)
  • Phnom Penh (2023)
  • Riyadh (20242025)
Participants
  • 8 teams (2017)
  • 10 teams (2018)
  • 12 teams (2019–2023)
  • 23 teams (2024–present)
Websitemcl.mobilelegends.com
Current champion
Selangor Red Giants (1st title)
Most recent tournament
MSC 2024

Mobile Legends: Bang Bang Mid Season Cup, (previously known as Mobile Legends: Bang Bang Southeast Asia Cup) referred to as MSC, is an annual international tournament for professional esport teams for the MOBA game Mobile Legends: Bang Bang hosted by Moonton during the halfway point of each year split since 2017.

On 1 January 2024, Moonton announced the rebranding of the formerly SEA-based tournament from "Southeast Asia Cup" to the "Mid Season Cup" as the first international tournament before the second leg of MLBB professional leagues.[1] The Mid Season Cup will take place in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. This year saw the introduction of the wildcard format, which will bring in eight international teams to fight for a slot in the group stage happening in July.

Malaysia's Selangor Red Giants won the most recent edition of the tournament in 2024, defeating Falcons AP Bren, 4–3.

History

As the Southeast Asian Cup (2017-2023)

2017

The inaugural Mobile Legends: Bang Bang Southeast Asia Cup was held at the Mall Taman Anggrek in Jakarta, Indonesia from September 1st to 3rd, 2017. MSC 2017 was the inaugural and smallest MSC iteration with only eight teams competing. Hosted by game developers Moonton, the first iteration of MSC was designed for the growing Mobile Legends: Bang Bang communities teams in Southeast Asia primarily Indonesia, the Philippines, Malaysia, Singapore, Cambodia, and Thailand.

The tournament was played on a double-elimination playoff bracket format with all matches excluding the Grand Finals being Best-of-threes (Bo3). Thailand's IDONOTSLEEP were crowned the inaugural MSC champions after sweeping the Philippine team Salty Salad in the Grand Finals 3-0. As of 2025, this is the only MSC title outside of the "Maphilindo" sphere of regions in MLBB.[2]

2018

The second iteration of MSC was held from 27–29 July 2018 at the Jakarta International Expo again in Jakarta, Indonesia.[3] The second iteration of MSC expanded the team participation from eight to ten with three of the first major professional leagues of MLBB—MPL Indonesia, MPL Philippines, and MPL MYSG—sending two of their teams each, primarily the champions and the runner-up teams of the very first professional seasons. Included in the qualified teams are three other qualifying regions from Thailand, Vietnam, and Cambodia, notably IDONOTSLEEP, the defending MSC champions qualified to defend its title.

The group stage format was introduced for the second iteration with all teams being split into two groups to play a single round-robin, Best-of-3 (Bo3) to qualify to the knockout stage. The top two teams from both groups will qualify to the said stage. The Philippines' champions Aether Main won the Philippines' first of three MSC titles after sweeping the Season 1 runner-up of MPL Philippines Digital Devils Pro, 3–0.[4]

2019

The third iteration of MSC was held for the first time in the Philippines from 19–23 June 2019 at the Araneta Coliseum in Quezon City, Philippines.[5] The third iteration saw the adoption of the group stage format from the second iteration and the double-elimination playoff bracket from the first iteration of the tournament. Moreover, the team participation was expanded from ten teams to twelve. In the very same year, Moonton would unveil its year-ending tournament, the Mobile Legends: Bang Bang World Championship, the first world championship series for the games.[6] In this third iteration of MSC, MPL Myanmar's champions and runner-up now made up the main eight teams coming from the MPL regions while three teams from Thailand, Cambodia and Laos qualified for this event. Defending champions Bren Esports (formerly Aether Main's roster) qualified as the runner-up team from MPL Philippines Season 3.

All twelve teams were split into four groups of three teams with the top 1 from each group advancing to the upper-bracket while the bottom 2 advanced to the inaugural play-in tournament. Four teams qualified for the lower-bracket in the play-in tournament while the four top teams competed in the upper bracket. MPL Indonesia's champions ONIC Esports swept fellow indonesian team and runner-up Louvre Esports in the Grand Finals, 3–0. This is ONIC Esports' first of two MSC titles in its organization's history, the most by any team.[7] Notably, this was the Philippines' worst performance in MSC to date, with ArkAngel getting swept in the lower-bracket finals by Louvre.[8]

2020

The supposed fourth iteration of MSC was cancelled due to the travel restrictions imposed by countries in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic.[9]

2021

The fifth iteration of MSC was held online due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. All teams participating were in their respective boot camps or a single structure during the competition, in particular, Blacklist International and Execration, the Philippine representatives competed in the same room together during MSC 2021 split by just a simple barrier.

MSC 2021 saw the second Philippines vs. Philippines Grand Finals in MSC history with Blacklist International facing up against Execration. Blacklist, the Season 7 champions swept Indonesia's EVOS Legends in the upper bracket finals 3-0 while Execration, the season 7 runner-up won in four games against EVOS in the lower bracket finals. Unlike the season 7 grand finals, MSC 2021 saw Execration win the MSC 2021 title 4-1.[10] Grant "Kelra" Pillas was named Finals MVP.[11]

2022

The sixth iteration of MSC was the first since 2019 to be held on an offline event at the Malaysia International Trade and Exhibition Centre in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.[12] Despite the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, restrictions for MSC 2022 remained tightly regulated especially with the presence of a crowd for the first time in two years. MSC 2019 was held from 11–19 June 2022. The sixth iteration of MSC saw the adoption of MSC 2019's group stage and knockout stage format excluding the play-in tournament. MSC 2019's group stage qualifies the top 2 teams in each of the four groups to the knockouts with the bottom team being eliminated outright.

MPL Indonesia Season 9 champions RRQ Hoshi won over MPL Philippines Season 9 champions RSG Philippines in the upper-bracket finals to deliver Indonesia's first grand finals appearance in three years.[13] RSG Philippines would win 3-2 against Season 9 runner-up Smart Omega and defending Finals MVP Pillas.[14] RSG Philippines would sweep RRQ Hoshi 4-0 to win the Philippines third and, as of 2025, last MSC title.[15] Emman "EMMAN" Sangco was named Finals MVP.[16]

2023

The seventh and final iteration of MSC as the Southeast Asian Cup was held from 10–18 June 2023 in AEON Mall Mean Chey in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, the first tournament held outside of the Maphilindo sphere.[17] MSC 2023 showcased the first international participation of teams from the Middle East and North African region (MENA), North America (NA), and Turkey with Team Occupy, Outplay and Fire Flux Impunity representing their regions, respectively.[18] Similar to MSC 2022, the group stage format was adopted however, MSC 2023 would return the single-elimination playoff bracket for the first time since MSC 2018.[19]

MPL Indonesia Season 11 champions and MSC 2019 champions ONIC Esports returns to the MSC Grand Finals for the first time since 2019 after sweeping MPL Philippines Season 11 champions ECHO Philippines in the Semifinals.[20] MPL Philippines Season 11 runner-up and MSC 2021 runner-up Blacklist International returns to the MSC Grand Finals for the first time since 2021 after they won 3-1 against home-town team BURN x Flash in the Semifinals.[21] ONIC Esports would bring the MSC title back to Indonesia—and an international title by technicality—for the first time in four years after winning against Blacklist International 4-2.[22] Nicky "Kiboy" Fernando was named Finals MVP.[23]

As the Mid-Season Cup (2024-present)

2024

The first iteration of the rebranded "Mid-Season Cup" was held from 28 June to the 14 July 2024 in Boulevard City, Saudi Arabia. The Mid-Season Cup was held for the first time outside of Southeast Asia and for the first time in MENA after MSC was put as one of the main tournaments for Mobile Legends: Bang Bang in the inaugurated global esports tournament, the Esports World Cup.[24][25] MSC 2024 inaugurated the participation of six new regions: Latin America (LATAM), China, Mekong (primarily Vietnam), Eastern Europe and Central Asia (EECA), South Asia (primarily Nepal), and Mongolia. MSC 2024 adopted the Wild Card stage for the first time in tournament history after it was previously used during the MLBB M5 World Championships.[26] Alluding to the group stage format of MSC 2023, the top two teams from four groups would advance to the knockout stage with MSC 2024 adopting the single-elimination knockout bracket.

MPL Malaysia Season 13 champions Selangor Red Giants swept MPL Singapore Season 7 champions NIP Flash while MPL Philippines Season 13 runner-up Falcons AP Bren won 3-1 against Season 13 champions Liquid ECHO.[27][28] MSC 2024 was primarily significant because this is the first iteration of a Philippines vs. Malaysia Grand Finals. Notably, MSC 2024, to date, was the worst performance by Indonesia with none of its representative qualifying for the knockout stage., notably defending champions Fnatic ONIC Indonesia[29][30] Selangor Red Giants won the MSC 2024 title, 4-3 against Falcons AP Bren, the first Malaysian team to win the MSC tournament and the first international title for Malaysia. Muhammad Haqqullah "Sekys" Ahmad Shahrul Zaman was named Finals MVP.[31][32]

2025

The second iteration of the Mid-Season Cup will return to the 2025 Esports World Cup from 10 July to the 2 August 2025. This is the second time since MSC 2017 and 2018 that back-to-back iterations of the tournament will be held in the same country and region.[33] Defending champions Selangor Red Giants OG Esports will be returning to MSC 2025 to defend their title.[34]

Format

Two teams from Mobile Legends: Bang Bang Professional Leagues (MPL) in different Southeast Asian countries are invited to MSC. For countries without MPL, local qualifiers are hosted. The tournaments start with a group stage where teams fight for the spot in the upper bracket through the best of 3 round robin. Teams winning the best of 3 in the group stage get the spot in the upper bracket. The other two teams compete on play-ins where the winning team gets to the lower bracket and the losing team is eliminated. After the group stage is the tournament proper. Losing teams from the upper bracket are demoted to the lower bracket while losing teams from the lower bracket are eliminated. One finalist will come from each bracket and compete in the Grand Finals.[35] From 2017 to 2019, the Grand Finals are played in best of 5, but since the 2021 version, it is played in best of 7.

Venue

Viewership

Mobile Legends: Bang Bang Mid-Season Cup is streamed live on Facebook Gaming, TikTok and YouTube.

Year Peak Viewers Average Viewers Hours Watched Reference
Southeast Asia Cup
2017 53,837 20,102 353,451 [36]
2018 100,000+ N/A N/A [37]
2019 276,579 68,220 2,887,965 [38]
2020
Cancelled due to COVID-19 pandemic
2021 2,284,012 514,618 29,461,866 [39]
2022 2,800,606 477,042 35,181,778 [40]
2023 3,650,305 659,399 40,552,979 [41]
Mid Season Cup
2024 2,382,990 406,641 29,142,536 [42]

Participants

MSC 2024

Group Stage Ref.
Group A Group B
Team Seed Team Seed
RRQ Akira MPL LATAM S1 Winner Fnatic ONIC MPL ID S13 Winner [43]
NIP Flash MPL SG S7 Winner See You Soon MPL KH S6 Winner
Fire Flux Esports MTC S3 Winner Team Falcons MPL MENA S5 Winner
EVOS Glory MPL ID S13 Runner-up Selangor Red Giants MPL MY S13 Winner
Group C Group D
Team Seed Team Seed
Team Spirit[participants 1] MCC S3 Winner Cloud9[participants 2] NACT Spring 2024 Winner
Liquid ECHO MPL PH S13 Winner Falcons AP Bren MPL PH S13 Runner-up
Twisted Minds MPL MENA S5 Runner-up Xianyou Gaming China Qualifier Winner
HomeBois Wildcard Stage Winner Falcon Esports Myanmar Qualifier Winner
Wildcard Stage [44]
Group A Group B
Team Seed Team Seed
Zino Zenith MCCM S3 Winner    Trained to Kill MCB S3 Winner
Entity7 MPL LATAM S1 Runner-up Brute Force[participants 1] MCC S3 Runner-up
S2G Esports MTC S3 Runner-up HomeBois MPL MY S13 Runner-up
KeepBest Gaming China Qualifier Runner-up IHC Esports Mongolia Qualifier Winner
Notes
  1. ^ a b For documentary purpose only, according to their majority of players, teams from CIS region: Brute Force based in Saudi Arabia and Team Spirit based in Serbia both will represent Russia.
  2. ^ For documentary purpose only, according to their base of operations, team from North America region: Cloud9 will represent United States.

Results

Top four results

Edition Year Hosts Grand final Third place Fourth place No. of teams
Champions Score Runners-up
Southeast Asia Cup
1 2017 Indonesia
IDONOTSLEEP
3–0
Salty Salad

Solid Gaming Alpha

Impunity
8
2 2018 Indonesia
Aether Main
3–0
Digital Devils Pro Gaming

RRQ.O2

Aerowolf Roxy
10
3 2019 Philippines
ONIC Esports
3–0
Louvre Esports

ArkAngel

OverClockers
12
2020 Cancelled because of COVID-19 pandemic
4 2021 None
[note 1]

Execration
4–1
[note 2]

Blacklist International

EVOS Legends

RSG Malaysia
12
5 2022 Malaysia
RSG Philippines
4–0
RRQ Hoshi

Omega Esports

Falcon Esports
12
6 2023 Cambodia
ONIC Esports
4–2
Blacklist International

ECHO Philippines

BURN x FLASH
12
Mid Season Cup
7 2024 Saudi Arabia
Selangor Red Giants
4–3
Falcons AP Bren
Liquid ECHO and NIP Flash
[note 3]
23
8 2025 Saudi Arabia TBD TBD 23
Notes
  1. ^ Online tournament.
  2. ^ Since 2021, the grand final would be held in best-of-seven (BO7) series format.
  3. ^ For MSC 2024, the third-place match was not held. Semi-finalists are listed in alphabetical order.

Performances by teams

Legend

  • 1st – Champions
  • 2nd – Runners-up
  • 3rd – Third place
  • 4th – Fourth place
  • SF – Semi-finals
  • PO – Playoffs
  • PI – Play-in
  • GS – Group stage
  • WC – Wildcard stage
  • Q – Qualified
  •  •  – Did not qualify
  •  ×  – Did not enter / Withdrew
  •    – Nation hosts
Teams reaching the Top Four by tournament
Team (22)
2017

2018

2019

2021

2022

2023

2024

2025
Times
entered
Times
qualified
Top Four
total
ONIC Esports1 × × 1st GS 1st GS TBD 5 4 2
AP Bren2 × 1st PO 2nd 6 3 2
Omega Esports3 × × 1st[a] 3rd 5 2 2
IDONOTSLEEP 1st GS PO PI GS × 6 5 1
RSG Philippines × × × × 1st 3 1 1
Selangor Red Giants × × × × × 1st 2 1 1
Blacklist International4 × × 2nd 2nd 5 2 2
RRQ Hoshi5 × 3rd 2nd 6 2 2
Salty Salad 2nd × × × × × × 1 1 1
Cignal Ultra6 × 2nd × × × 3 1 1
Louvre Esports × 2nd × × × × 2 1 1
Team Liquid PH7 × × × 3rd SF 4 2 2
EVOS Glory8 × GS 3rd PO GS 6 4 1
Solid Gaming Alpha 3rd × × × × × × 1 1 1
ArkAngel × × 3rd × × × 2 1 1
NIP Flash9 × × × × SF 3 1 1
EVOS SG10 4th × PO PO PO × × 4 1 1
Falcon Esports11 × × × × 4th GS[b] PO 3 3 1
Aerowolf Pro Team12 × 4th × × × 3 1 1
OverClockers × × 4th × × × × 1 1 1
RSG Malaysia × × × 4th 4 1 1
Team Flash KH13 × × × × 4th 3 1 1
Team (22)
2017

2018

2019

2021

2022

2023

2024

2025
Times
entered
Times
qualified
Top Four
total
Notes
1. ^ Includes result playing as ONIC Esports during 2019–2023.
2. ^ Includes result playing as Aether Main during 2018 and Bren Esports during 2019–2023.
3. ^ Includes result playing as Execration during 2019–2021.
4. ^ Includes result playing as EVOS Esports PH during 2019.
5. ^ Includes result playing as RRQ.O2 during 2018 and PSG.RRQ during 2019.
6. ^ Includes result playing as Digital Devils Pro Gaming during 2018.
7. ^ Includes result playing as ECHO Philippines during 2023.
8. ^ Includes result playing as EVOS Esports during 2018–2019 and EVOS Legends during 2021–2023.
9. ^ Includes result playing as Team Flash during 2022–2023.
10. ^ Includes result playing as Impunity during 2017.
11. ^ Includes result playing as Fenix Esports during 2023.
12. ^ Includes result playing as Aerowolf Roxy during 2018–2019.
13. ^ Includes result playing as BURN x FLASH during 2022–2023.
[a]. ^ For MSC 2021, Omega Esports did not qualify. Omega Esports acquired the roster of Execration on 12 July 2021.[45]
[b]. ^ For MSC 2023, Falcon Esports did not qualify. Falcon Esports acquired the roster of Fenix Esports on 10 July 2023.[46]

Performances by nations

Legend

  • 1st – Champions
  • 2nd – Runners-up
  • 3rd – Third place
  • 4th – Fourth place
  • SF – Semi-finals
  • PO – Playoffs
  • PI – Play-in
  • GS – Group stage
  • WC – Wildcard stage
  • Q – Qualified
  •  •  – Did not qualify
  •  ×  – Did not enter / eligible
  •    – Hosts

Number of participating teams by nation

Nation (21)
2017
(8)

2018
(10)

2019
(12)

2021
(12)

2022
(12)

2023
(12)

2024
(23)

2025
(23)
Total
Indonesia 2 3 2 2 2 2 2 2 17
Philippines 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 16
Malaysia 2 1 1 2 2 1 2 2 13
Singapore 1 1 1 2 2 1 1 1 10
Myanmar × 1 2 × 1 1 1 1 7
Cambodia × × 1 1 2 1 1 1 7
Thailand 1 1 1 1 1 5
Vietnam × 1 1 1 1 1 5
Laos × × 1 1 1 1 4
Turkey × × × × × 1 2 1 4
China × × × × × × 2 2 4
Russia × × × × × × 2 2 4
United States × × × × × 1 1 1 3
Saudi Arabia × × × × × 2 1 3
Egypt × × × × × 1 1 2
Brazil × × × × × × 1 1 2
Mongolia × × × × × × 1 1 2
  Nepal × × × × × × 1 × 1
Peru × × × × × × 1 1
Argentina × × × × × × 1 1
Japan × × × × × × × 1 1
Nation (21) (8)

2017
(10)

2018
(12)

2019
(12)

2021
(12)

2022
(12)

2023
(23)

2024
(23)

2025
Total

Team nations best result by tournament

Nation (19)
2017

2018

2019

2021

2022

2023

2024

2025
Times
entered
Times
qualified
Top Four
total
Philippines 2nd 1st 3rd 1st 1st 2nd 2nd TBD 7 7 7
Indonesia PO[a] 3rd 1st 3rd 2nd 1st GS 7 7 5
Malaysia PO[a] GS PO 4th PO PO 1st 7 7 2
Thailand 1st GS PO PI GS 7 5 1
Singapore 4th GS PO PO PO PO SF 7 7 2
Myanmar × GS PI × 4th GS PO 5 5 1
Vietnam × GS 4th PI WC 6 4 1
Cambodia × × PI PO GS 4th PO 5 5 1
Turkey × × × × × PO PO 2 2 0
Laos × × PI PI GS 5 3 0
United States × × × × × GS GS 2 2 0
Egypt × × × × × GS 2 1 0
Saudi Arabia × × × × × GS 2 1 0
Brazil × × × × × × GS 1 1 0
China × × × × × × GS 1 1 0
Russia × × × × × × GS 1 1 0
Mongolia × × × × × × WC 1 1 0
  Nepal × × × × × × WC 1 1 0
Peru × × × × × × WC 1 1 0
Nation (19)
2017

2018

2019

2021

2022

2023

2024

2025
Times
entered
Times
qualified
Top Four
total
Notes
[a]. ^ For MSC 2017, there was no group stage.

Team nations that have never qualified

Teams from these nations have gone through qualifications that lead to MSC, but failed to qualify.

Nation (12)
2023

2024

2025
Attempts
Brunei 3
UAE 3
Kuwait × 2
Bolivia × 2
Kazakhstan × 2
Iraq × × 1
Jordan × × 1
Bangladesh × × 1
Bhutan × × 1
Mexico × × 1
Ukraine × × 1
Timor-Leste × × 1
Nation (12)
2023

2024

2025
Attempts

See also

References

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