
The Valorant Champions grand final between Acend and Gambit has set a new peak viewership record for the game with almost 1.1 million concurrent viewers.
The nail-biting five-map thriller between Acend and Gambit hit a peak viewership number of 1,089,068 viewers, according to statistics website Esports Charts. The series, which ended with a 3-2 victory for Acend, is now the most-watched match in the history of Valorant esports. Previously, the record belonged to the grand final of the VCT Stage 2 Masters in Reykjavík, featuring Sentinels and Fnatic, which had garnered a peak viewership of 1,085,850 people. https://twitter.com/EsportsCharts/status/1470158665030246400 The fact that Valorant esports have hit a new peak viewership despite the struggles of North American teams is particularly impressive. Sentinels and Envy crashed out of Valorant Champions in the group stage, while Cloud9 Blue were eliminated in the quarter-finals, leaving three teams from EMEA and KRU Esports of South America left as the event headed into its final weekend of action. Sentinels were the most popular team at the VCT Stage Masters events in Reykjavík and Berlin and had the second-highest average viewership at Valorant Champions with 612,481 people. Their series against FURIA and KRU Esports were in the top five matches for peak viewership in the tournament. Gambit were the most popular team at Valorant Champions, averaging 647,059 viewers, while Acend had the fourth-highest average viewership at 554,461 people.

- Valorant Champions – 1,089,068
- VCT Stage 2 Masters – 1,085,850
- VCT Stage 3 Masters – 811,370
- Twitch Rivals – 692,277
- 100 Thieves Invitational – 443,637
Valorant Champions brought the curtain down on the first full year of international competition in the game, with preparations for 2022 already underway.
- Read more: Everything we know about Valorant Agent 18
On December 10, Riot Games announced the roadmap for next year’s Champions Tour, featuring an off-season tournament series run by third-party organizers, two Masters events in April and July, and one Champions tournament in September. Riot has also announced that it will host a global women’s tournament as part of its Game Changers initiative. The 2022 Champions Tour will kick off in February with the first of two Challengers splits.