Европын G2 Esports баг 2026 оны Mid-Season Invitational тэмцээнд Өмнөд Солонгосын T1 багийг 3-1 харьцаатай буулган авснаар олон улсын тавцан дахь өрсөлдөөний түүхээ шинэчлэв.
Тэмцээний эхний хоёр map-д G2 тоглолтын хэмнэлийг гартаа оруулж, тэвчээртэй тоглолтын үр дүнд давуу талыг тогтоосон юм. Эхний 45 минутын турш үргэлжилсэн сунжирсан тоглолтод G2 хоёр ADC бүхий бүрэлдэхүүнээр амжилттай тоглож, эсрэг багийнхаа давуу талыг саармагжуулан цувралыг 2-0 болгож холбосон.
T1 гурав дахь map-д хожил байгуулж хариу барьсан ч дөрөв дэх map-д тоглолт туйлын хурцадмал байдалтай өрнөв. T1-ийн ADC тоглогч Пейз Caitlyn-аар гайхалтай тоглолт үзүүлж, pentakill хийсэн хэдий ч энэ нь багтаа ялалт авчрахад хангалтгүй байлаа.
Шийдвэрлэх мөчид G2-ийн топ тоглогч BrokenBlade Kled дүрээр эсрэг багийнхаа анхаарлыг сарниулан T1-ийн суурь руу нэвтэрч, Nexus-ийг устгаснаар багтаа түүхэн ялалтыг авчирлаа. Энэхүү үр дүн нь T1-ийн хувьд олон улсын тэмцээний хамгийн эрт хасагдсан тохиолдол болон бүртгэгдэв.
Дэлгэрэнгүйг эх сурвалжаас харах
↓Эх сурвалжийг нээх ↓
The League of Legends universe just experienced a massive shift in the matrix. If you have been following the competitive scene for a while, you know that the rivalry between Europe’s G2 Esports and South Korea’s legendary T1 has historically been a pretty miserable affair for western fans.
T1 has spent the last seven years treating G2 like a personal punching bag in international best-of-five series.
But at the 2026 Mid-Season Invitational, the curse was officially broken. G2 Esports went out on the big stage, looked the reigning world champions in the eye, and pulled off a stunning 3-1 victory. The win sends G2 deeper into the lower bracket while handing T1 their earliest international tournament exit in the organization’s history.
Surviving the Chaos of the Long Game
G2 did not just win by getting lucky in a few random skirmishes. They actually won by keeping their composure, which is usually T1’s signature superpower. Game one set the tone for the entire evening, turning into a massive, 45-minute marathon. G2 drafted a double attack-damage-carry composition and calmly waited out the storm.
Even when T1 found their classic mid-game advantages, G2 refused to panic, scaled beautifully into the late game, and secured a grueling first win.
Game two followed a remarkably similar script. T1 jumped ahead early, but G2 used superior objective setups to claw their way back into the driver’s seat. Before anyone could process what was happening, the European top seeds were up 2-0, leaving the global audience completely stunned.
The Most Ridiculous Game Four in Recent Memory
T1 reminded everyone why they are legends by roaring back in game three, but game four was where absolute madness took over. This map pushed the casters to the literal brink of losing their voices. T1’s AD Carry, Peyz, put on an absolute clinic, racking up a staggering 17 kills on Caitlyn. He even secured a spectacular pentakill during a crucial late-game team fight to keep T1’s hopes alive.
Normally, when a player gets a pentakill and hits those kinds of numbers, the game is wrapped up. Instead, Peyz joined a highly exclusive club of players who secured a pentakill on the international stage but still managed to lose the match.
While T1 was busy celebrating the pentakill and trying to mount a massive comeback, G2 top-laner BrokenBlade decided he was finished playing around. Playing on Kled, he ignored the chaotic team fighting happening around the map, charged directly into T1’s base, and single-handedly shredded the Nexus while the rest of the players were distracted.
It was a hilarious, brilliant backdoor play that perfectly encapsulated the wild spirit of G2, sealing a historic victory that fans will be talking about for years.

