LoL
3MLBB
2VAL
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3KoG
1Dota 2
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9Esports results – live scores, match schedules & tournament stats
Live esports match scores and tournament results across CS2, Valorant, League of Legends, Dota 2, Rainbow Six, and more – updated every 30 seconds. Currently tracking 8 active and upcoming tournaments worldwide with direct stream links to the official broadcast on every match page.
About esportsresults.com
Esportsresults.com is a dedicated destination for esports live scores, esports results, schedules, and tournament data across the world's biggest competitive gaming titles. We track professional esports as it happens, delivering fast, accurate updates for fans and industry professionals.
Follow live results and detailed match information from leading esports leagues and tournaments. From top-tier international events to daily league play, we keep you connected to the competitive esports ecosystem in one place.
Currently active esports tournaments
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Call of Duty League Stage 3 Major Qualifiers 2026
Live · Call of Duty · Tier S
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Esports World Cup EMEA Qualifier 2026
Live · League of Legends · Tier A
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VCT China Stage 1 2026
Live · Valorant · Tier B
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MLBB Super League Thailand Season 1 2026
Live · Mobile Legends: Bang Bang · Tier B
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OCS Korea Stage 1 2026
Live · Overwatch · Tier C · 38,500 United States Dollar
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ACL X ESL Challenger China Season 3 2026
Live · Dota 2 · Tier C · 172000 United States Dollar
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LPLOL Spring 2026
Live · League of Legends · Tier C
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Stake Ranked Episode 2: Closed Qualifier 2026
Live · Counter-Strike 2 · Tier C
How we track esports
Match data is provided by PandaScore – the same data provider used by many of the larger esports aggregators – and is cross-referenced against the official tournament broadcasts. Live scores typically update within 30–60 seconds of an in-game event. Brackets, standings, and stream URLs refresh continuously while events run. No login, no paywall: favourites are stored locally in your browser.
Frequently asked questions
Who is this site for?
Esports fans who want to glance at scores fast, follow a couple of teams without setting up notifications across five apps, and get to the broadcast in two clicks. If you're after deep stats archives, HLTV and Liquipedia are still the best tools for that – nothing here replaces them. This is built for the everyday "what's live right now" check, with editorial framing on top.
How accurate are the live scores?
Scores typically update within 30–60 seconds of the in-game event. The data source is PandaScore, which pulls from tournament organisers and broadcast feeds – the same source many bigger sites use. There's roughly a half-minute lag between something happening on the broadcast and it appearing here. If you ever see a discrepancy, the broadcast is the source of truth.
How do I follow specific teams?
Click the heart icon on a team or match – it's saved locally in your browser, no account needed. The Favorites sidebar surfaces upcoming and live matches for teams you follow, and you'll get a toast when a favourited match goes live (only while the tab is open – there's no push notification system). If you clear browser data, favourites reset. That's the trade-off for not requiring a sign-up.
What time zone are match times shown in?
Your local time zone, auto-detected. We show the time-zone abbreviation (CET, EST, KST, etc.) next to each time so it's unambiguous. Tournament organisers schedule in the host country's time and we convert client-side on every page load.
Where can I watch matches live?
Every match page lists the official stream URLs. CS2 BLAST events are on twitch.tv/blastpremier; ESL events on twitch.tv/eslcs. LoL is on lolesports.com or the regional Twitch channels. Dota 2 lives mostly on twitch.tv/esl_dota2 plus the in-game DotaTV. Riot streams Valorant on twitch.tv/valorant. We surface direct links so you don't have to dig through six sites to find the right cast.
What does this cost?
Nothing. The site is free for everyone, with no registration required and no paywall. Favourites are stored locally in your browser and no email is required to use the site.
Esports terminology
- Tier 1 / S-tier
- Loose informal labels for the biggest events: international scope, six-figure (or higher) prize money, top global teams. The labels aren't official; HLTV / Liquipedia each have their own slightly different tiering systems.
- Bo1 / Bo3 / Bo5 / Bo7
- Best-of-N. Bo1 is one map (~45–60 min), Bo3 is the standard for serious competition (2.5–3.5 hr), Bo5 is reserved for grand finals (4–5 hr).
- LAN / Online
- Whether teams are physically on stage at a venue or playing remotely from their training facilities. LAN matters in CS especially – connection consistency, crowd energy, no cheating concerns.
- Major / Worlds / TI / Champions
- Each game's flagship year-end event. Major = CS2 (twice yearly), Worlds = LoL, TI = Dota 2, Champions = Valorant. The trophy each year's storyline builds toward.
- Group stage / Playoffs
- Most events open with a round-robin or Swiss seeding round (the group stage), then narrow to a single or double-elimination playoff bracket. Most fans tune in heavily during playoffs.
How to watch esports live
Every match page on this site lists the stream URLs the official broadcasters publish – Twitch first for most events, YouTube as a parallel feed, Bilibili / Huya / Douyu for Chinese tournaments, Afreeca for Korean. Most major events broadcast in five or six languages, with the language indicator shown next to each stream button so it is easy to pick the cast that matches your preference.
Editorial review: Teemu Pesonen · Last reviewed: