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BetBoom Team faces Team Falcons in round 2 of IEM Cologne Major as crypto remains absent from esports’ biggest stage

BetBoom Team faces Team Falcons in round 2 of IEM Cologne Major as crypto remains absent from esports’ biggest stage

Two CS2 powerhouses clash in the Swiss stage while traditional gambling sponsors continue to dominate the esports sponsorship landscape, leaving crypto on the outside looking in.

BetBoom Team and Team Falcons are set to square off in round 2 of the IEM Cologne Major 2026 Swiss stage on June 12, with both squads riding momentum from opening-round victories.

Here’s the thing that makes this interesting for the crypto world: one of the biggest esports events of the year, with a prize pool estimated between $1.17 million and $1.25 million, has zero verified blockchain or crypto sponsorships attached to it. Not from the teams. Not from the tournament organizer. Nothing.

The matchup and what led here

Both teams enter the round 2 clash with identical 1-0 records after convincing performances on June 11.

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Team Falcons took down G2 Esports 2-1, which is the kind of result you’d expect from a roster featuring karrigan, NiKo, m0NESY, TeSeS, and kyousuke. The Falcons are currently ranked among the global top four in CS2.

BetBoom Team, meanwhile, dispatched The MongolZ by the same 2-1 scoreline. For a squad ranked approximately 17th globally in CS2, that’s a strong statement. BetBoom was only founded in April 2022, growing out of the former Winstrike Dota 2 roster.

The IEM Cologne Major 2026 itself runs from June 2 through June 21, with Stage 3 following the Swiss format from June 11 to 15. Playoffs are scheduled for June 18 through 21.

Where crypto isn’t: the sponsorship gap in esports

The IEM Cologne Major draws millions of viewers globally and commands a prize pool north of a million dollars. Traditional gambling operators, not crypto platforms, continue to hold the dominant sponsorship positions.

During the 2021-2022 crypto bull run, blockchain companies were pouring money into esports sponsorships. FTX had its name plastered across League of Legends events. Crypto.com signed deals with major teams and tournaments. Then the bear market hit, FTX collapsed, and many of those sponsorship dollars evaporated overnight.

BetBoom itself is a conventional gambling operator, not a crypto company. The name on the jersey tells you everything about where esports sponsorship dollars are flowing right now.

What this means for crypto investors watching the esports space

The revenue models in esports remain heavily dependent on sponsorship income, media rights, and merchandise. Tournament organizers and teams got burned by partnerships that disappeared when market conditions turned south during 2022 and 2023. A one-year deal signed during a bull market that gets canceled six months later doesn’t build partnerships. It destroys them.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

BetBoom Team faces Team Falcons in round 2 of IEM Cologne Major as crypto remains absent from esports’ biggest stage

BetBoom Team faces Team Falcons in round 2 of IEM Cologne Major as crypto remains absent from esports’ biggest stage

Two CS2 powerhouses clash in the Swiss stage while traditional gambling sponsors continue to dominate the esports sponsorship landscape, leaving crypto on the outside looking in.

BetBoom Team and Team Falcons are set to square off in round 2 of the IEM Cologne Major 2026 Swiss stage on June 12, with both squads riding momentum from opening-round victories.

Here’s the thing that makes this interesting for the crypto world: one of the biggest esports events of the year, with a prize pool estimated between $1.17 million and $1.25 million, has zero verified blockchain or crypto sponsorships attached to it. Not from the teams. Not from the tournament organizer. Nothing.

The matchup and what led here

Both teams enter the round 2 clash with identical 1-0 records after convincing performances on June 11.

Advertisement

Team Falcons took down G2 Esports 2-1, which is the kind of result you’d expect from a roster featuring karrigan, NiKo, m0NESY, TeSeS, and kyousuke. The Falcons are currently ranked among the global top four in CS2.

BetBoom Team, meanwhile, dispatched The MongolZ by the same 2-1 scoreline. For a squad ranked approximately 17th globally in CS2, that’s a strong statement. BetBoom was only founded in April 2022, growing out of the former Winstrike Dota 2 roster.

The IEM Cologne Major 2026 itself runs from June 2 through June 21, with Stage 3 following the Swiss format from June 11 to 15. Playoffs are scheduled for June 18 through 21.

Where crypto isn’t: the sponsorship gap in esports

The IEM Cologne Major draws millions of viewers globally and commands a prize pool north of a million dollars. Traditional gambling operators, not crypto platforms, continue to hold the dominant sponsorship positions.

During the 2021-2022 crypto bull run, blockchain companies were pouring money into esports sponsorships. FTX had its name plastered across League of Legends events. Crypto.com signed deals with major teams and tournaments. Then the bear market hit, FTX collapsed, and many of those sponsorship dollars evaporated overnight.

BetBoom itself is a conventional gambling operator, not a crypto company. The name on the jersey tells you everything about where esports sponsorship dollars are flowing right now.

What this means for crypto investors watching the esports space

The revenue models in esports remain heavily dependent on sponsorship income, media rights, and merchandise. Tournament organizers and teams got burned by partnerships that disappeared when market conditions turned south during 2022 and 2023. A one-year deal signed during a bull market that gets canceled six months later doesn’t build partnerships. It destroys them.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.