BIG defeats B8 to secure XSE Pro League Guangzhou 2026 playoffs in $1M CS2 tournament
The German CS2 squad denied B8's comeback attempt with a clean 2-0 sweep, punching their ticket to the playoff stage of the season's first Valve Tier 1 event
BIG just booked their seat at the big table. The German Counter-Strike 2 roster swept B8 with a 2-0 victory on July 5, securing a coveted playoff spot at the XSE Pro League Guangzhou 2026, a tournament carrying a $1 million prize pool and Valve’s highest competitive designation.
The win also delivered the harshest possible verdict for B8: elimination. In the unforgiving Swiss format, there are no consolation rounds, just the door.
How BIG got here
BIG’s path through the Swiss stage has been methodical. The day before their matchup against B8, they took down Ninjas in Pyjamas with a 2-1 scoreline, building momentum heading into what became a decisive elimination match.
For context, the XSE Pro League Guangzhou features 16 of the world’s best CS2 teams competing across multiple stages. Group play is taking place at the Friendship Hall and Canton Fair Complex, two of Guangzhou’s marquee event spaces. The playoffs, where BIG will next compete, move to the South China Agricultural University Gymnasium.
The tournament runs from July 1 through July 12, giving surviving teams a compressed window to fight for their share of the prize pool. That $1 million purse is split evenly between player earnings and club shares.
Why this tournament matters for competitive CS2
The XSE Pro League Guangzhou carries Valve Tier 1 status. This is also the first major CS2 event of the 2026 season following the recent IEM Cologne Major.
The esports economy angle
The 50-50 split between players and clubs in this tournament’s prize distribution is worth noting, with players receiving $500,000 and clubs receiving $500,000.
Guangzhou as a host city also signals something broader. The choice of three distinct venues across different tournament stages, from the Canton Fair Complex to a university gymnasium, shows a city treating competitive gaming as a legitimate spectator sport with real venue strategy.