Onegame-Summer-championship

Four days. Sixty-four teams. And now, finally, we know all 32 who are still in this.

Groups C and D wrapped up the Pre-Quarter Finals of the ONE Game Championship Summer Series BGMI bracket on 20th and 21st April. What happened over those two days was exactly what you’d expect when you put some of the most competitive BGMI rosters in India into the same lobbies and tell them only half are getting through. Tight finishes. Surprise performances. A few big names who had to fight harder than they probably expected. And one or two that just didn’t make it.

Here’s everything that went down.

Group C — 20th April: Vasista Esports Hold It Together

Group C didn’t produce a runaway leader the way Group A did — the points were tighter, the margins smaller, and the pressure showed. But when the lobbies were done, Vasista Esports came out on top.

They finished with 66 points — 1 chicken dinner, 21 placement points, 45 kills. Not dominant on paper, but consistent enough across all 6 matches to stay ahead of a very competitive field.

Their player Beast was the Group C MVP and honestly one of the standout individual performances of the entire pre-quarter stage. 23 kills. 51.11% damage contribution. More than half his team’s total damage, across six matches. That’s not just good — that’s carrying.

Madkings Esports finished second with 62 points, and their player TrialsPlayer03 came in second in the MVP standings — 18 kills, 35.29% contribution. No chicken dinners, but 51 total kills as a team tells you they were in every lobby fighting for position.

Team Scout came in third at 59 points, with DCXMasterUWU finishing third in MVPs — 16 kills, 33.33% contribution. Team Scout as a squad racked up 48 kills total, second only to Madkings in the group. They’re a team that knows how to find fights, and that’s going to matter in the quarters.

Zutsu Esports(53 points, 2 chicken dinners) and True Rippers(51 points) rounded out the top 5.

One to watch from here: iQOO Reckoning Esportsmade it through in 7th place with 40 points — no chicken dinners, but they survived. Barely. They’ll need a lot more when the quarter finals start.

For Arrancar Esports, Curse Esports, Team Blink Esports, Team Dragons, Dream Team, Xyther Esports, Rapid Chaos, and Strike Force One — the championship ends here. Strike Force One finished last with just 6 points across 6 matches. That’s a brutal way to go out.

Group D — 21st April: iQOO Revenant Xspark Mean Business

If Group C was close, Group D was a different story. iQOO Revenant Xspark came into their group and made everyone else look like they were playing catch-up.

77 points. 1 chicken dinner, 24 placement points, 53 eliminations. They were first. By a distance. Their player Tracefinished second in the Group D MVP standings with 20 eliminations and a 37.74% contribution — and he wasn’t even their top performer on the kills board across the group. That’s the kind of depth a team needs to go deep in a tournament like this.

The Group D MVP went to Viper from 4TR Official — 21 eliminations, 48.84% contribution. 4TR finished 6th overall in the group with 51 points, which tells you Viper was essentially keeping his team alive on his own in several of those lobbies.

Troy Tamilan Esports were impressive in second — 64 points, 1 chicken dinner, 25 placement points, 39 eliminations. They looked composed. Team Omega came in third at 59 points, with their player Knight finishing third in MVPs — 15 eliminations, 41.67% contribution.

And then there’s iQOO Team Tamilas — Season 2 champions, direct invites, expected by many to top this group. They finished 4th with 57 points. Two chicken dinners, but only 34 eliminations. They made it through, which is what matters, but they know as well as anyone that a 4th place finish in the pre-quarters isn’t where they want to be. The question now is whether they find another gear when it counts.

LSDxGOC snuck in at 5th with 53 points. iQOO 8BIT(41 points) and Rising Esports(41 points, same score, separated by placement points) came in 7th and 8th.

The teams going home from Group D: Team Goku, Cruel Knights, Top Notch, Team Slayx, Strawhats Esports, Nitroso Esports, LG Official, BROs Esports. Eight more rosters who gave everything they had and came up short.

The Full 32 — This Is Who’s Left

Pre-quarters are done across all four groups. Here’s the complete list of the 32 teams who made it through:

From Group A (18th April): Gods Reign · Meta Ninza · Wyld Fangs · Nebula Esports · Genesis Esports · Myth Esports · iQOO Soul · Virgo Esports

From Group B (19th April): Phoenix Esports · Victores Sumus · Higgboson Esports · Do or Die · iQOO Orangutan · Team Resilience · Learn From Past · Hero Xtreme Godlike

From Group C (20th April): Vasista Esports · Madkings Esports · Team Scout · Zutsu Esports · True Rippers · Team Moksh · iQOO Reckoning Esports · Welt Esports

From Group D (21st April): iQOO Revenant Xspark · Troy Tamilan Esports · Team Omega · iQOO Team Tamilas · LSDxGOC · 4TR Official · iQOO 8BIT · Rising Esports

Thirty-two teams. Every single one of them earned their spot. Over a thousand teams started this. These 32 are what’s left.

What Happens Next — Quarter Finals, 22nd & 23rd April

The quarter finals start on 22nd April 2026.

All 32 teams play across 22nd and 23rd April. At the end of those two days, the field gets cut again — and this is where it gets really interesting. The top 8 teams from the quarter finals advance directly to the Grand Finale. The remaining 24 teams go into the semi-finals, where they fight for the last 8 spots in the finale.

That means the quarter finals aren’t just about surviving. Finishing in the top 8 gets you a direct route to the finale and skips the semi-final grind entirely. Every team in that bracket knows it. Expect aggressive play, high kill counts, and lobbies that look nothing like the calculated pre-quarter stage.

The prize pool is ₹8 lakh. The Grand Finale is on 29th April. And the path from here gets narrower with every passing day.

The Players to Watch

Before the quarter finals begin, these are the names that came out of the pre-quarters with something to prove and the stats to back it up:

Beast (Vasista Esports) — 23 kills, 51.11% contribution in Group C. The highest individual contribution percentage of any MVP across all four groups. If he keeps this up, Vasista Esports can go far.

DeltaPG (Gods Reign) — 20 kills, 42.55% in Group A. Gods Reign topped their group by 18 points. He’s the reason.

Viper (4TR Official) — 21 eliminations, 48.84% in Group D. Kept a mid-table team alive on individual performance alone.

Trace (iQOO Revenant Xspark) — 20 eliminations on the group-topping team. They have depth, and he’s the headline.

Mafia & Venom (Victores Sumus) — Two players, identical stats, 14 kills and 35.90% each. A dual-carry setup that’s genuinely difficult to plan against.

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Watch It All Live

Quarter finals start 22nd April. Every match is live.

ONE Game on YouTubesubscribe now, matches go live from 12:00 PM daily. @one.gameofficial

ONE Game Discordreal-time updates, results as they happen, and the community that’s been following every lobby since Day 1.

The pre-quarters are done. The real fight is just getting started.

author avatar
Mohd Nasiruddin Ahmed Senior Manager- Gaming and Sports
Muhammad Nasiruddin Ahmed, better known in the gaming world as Monsterain, is a seasoned esports and gaming professional with over a decade of experience shaping competitive gaming ecosystems. From grassroots tournaments to large-scale international events, he has been at the forefront of building and scaling gaming communities. Having spent 6+ years at Nordwin Gaming as the Head of League Operations, Nasiruddin played a pivotal role in designing and executing high-impact leagues and tournaments, setting benchmarks in the esports space. He further expanded his expertise as a Senior Manager in Sports & Games in New Media Holding, bringing strategic vision to the evolving intersection of gaming and digital entertainment.
Written by Nasir

Mohd Nasiruddin Ahmed

Muhammad Nasiruddin Ahmed, better known in the gaming world as Monsterain, is a seasoned esports and gaming professional with over a decade of experience shaping competitive gaming ecosystems. From grassroots tournaments to large-scale international events, he has been at the forefront of building and scaling gaming communities. Having spent 6+ years at Nordwin Gaming as the Head of League Operations, Nasiruddin played a pivotal role in designing and executing high-impact leagues and tournaments, setting benchmarks in the esports space. He further expanded his expertise as a Senior Manager in Sports & Games in New Media Holding, bringing strategic vision to the evolving intersection of gaming and digital entertainment.

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