France Télévisions to Air Esports World Cup Live From Paris Starting July 7

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France Télévisions will start daily coverage of the Esports World Cup on July 7, moving one of the largest tournaments in competitive gaming off Twitch and onto national television.

Key Takeaways

  • France Télévisions starts daily Esports World Cup coverage on France 2 and france.tv on July 7.
  • The 2026 tournament in Paris carries a $75 million prize pool across 25 tournaments and 24 games.
  • Team Falcons won the 2025 Club Championship after viewership hit 750 million, up 50% from 2024.

Esports World Cup Gets Exposure to Tens of Millions

The channel group operates France 2, France 3, France 4, France 5, and France Info, along with the streaming platform france.tv. It reaches French households at rates other broadcasters rarely match. During the Paris 2024 Olympics, the group reached about 60 million people in France, or 96% of the population age 4 and older. The opening ceremony alone drew 24.4 million viewers.

This year, the Esports World Cup runs from July 6 to August 23 at Paris Expo Porte de Versailles. The venue hosted events during the 2024 Olympics and regularly holds Paris Games Week. Organizers moved the tournament out of Riyadh for the first time since it launched, though Saudi Arabia remains the event’s primary backer through the Esports Foundation.

A Paris Stage

The 2026 edition includes more than 2,000 players from over 200 clubs across more than 100 countries. Twenty-five tournaments will run across 24 games, including Valorant, League of Legends, Dota 2 and Counter-Strike 2. The prize pool tops $75 million, up from about $70 million in 2025 and $60 million at the 2024 launch.

Viewership has climbed with the money. The 2024 event drew about 500 million viewers and 250 million hours watched. In 2025, those numbers rose to 750 million viewers and 350 million hours watched, with peak concurrent viewership near 8 million during a League of Legends match won by Gen.G. Team Falcons won the 2025 Club Championship, a standings system that rewards clubs for performance across every game rather than a single title.

France has its own stake in the outcome. Karmine Corp, Team Vitality and Gentle Mates draw large followings inside the country, and players will compete in front of home crowds for the first time at this scale. The French Ministry of Sport, Youth and Community Life signed a memorandum of understanding with the Esports Foundation ahead of the event, a sign that government offices now treat esports as a category worth formal recognition.

Why Linear TV Matters Here

French esports viewing has stayed mostly digital. Surveys put online consumption above 80% of total esports viewing in the country. Traditional broadcasters have offered little coverage until now. France Télévisions’ daily programming, likely a mix of highlights, studio analysis and match segments, puts the tournament in front of viewers who don’t already watch Twitch or Youtube.

That audience includes older viewers and families, groups sponsors have had trouble reaching through streaming alone. Roughly 11.8 million people in France age 15 and older reported watching or playing esports in 2023 survey data. Broadcast exposure could push that number higher by drawing in casual viewers who tune in for a segment on France 2 without seeking out a livestream.

The Numbers Behind the Industry

Reports show that global esports revenue is projected near $5.1 billion in 2026, according to market data, with growth continuing toward $6.2 billion by 2030. The United States leads single-country revenue at more than $1.3 billion, while the Asia-Pacific region accounts for about 57% of global viewership.

Global esports audiences reached roughly 640.8 million people in recent estimates, a figure some forecasts expect to approach 925 million by 2030. Revenue increasingly comes from media rights, advertising and ticketing rather than prize pools alone, a shift the Esports World Cup‘s club-based scoring system was built to support.

An opening ceremony on at La Seine Musicale will feature performances from DJ Snake and Aya Nakamura. The tournament runs in weekly blocks, with Valorant, Apex Legends, and Dota 2 opening the schedule before League of Legends, Rocket League, Street Fighter 6, and other titles follow through late August.

Production challenges remain. Esports matches run across multiple simultaneous streams with fast pacing built for viewers who already understand the games. Packaging that format for a general broadcast audience requires editing choices that traditional sports producers don’t usually face. France Télévisions has experience with that kind of adaptation from its Olympics and Tour de France coverage, where cumulative viewership regularly tops 42 million across stages.

Ticket sales for the Paris event are open, and the tournament runs through the city’s peak summer tourist season. Organizers have said Riyadh remains part of long-term plans, with a return expected in 2027.

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