Riyadh Bound: 87 Nations Enter ENC Regional Qualifying for $1.32M
Eighty-seven national Counter-Strike rosters have cleared the open qualifier stage of the Esports Nations Cup and now advance to regional qualifying, with 24 spots available at the $1,320,000 main event scheduled for Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, from November 10–15 – the Esports World Cup Foundation billing its open qualifier series as the largest in Counter-Strike history.
Nine Slots Lost, Format Still Enormous
The original scope called for 96 national qualifiers worldwide. Nine were cancelled after drawing zero entries – five in Sub-Saharan <a href="https://absafricatv.com/south-africa-mens-squad-named-for-fih-hockey-world-cup-2026/” title=”South Africa Men's Squad Named for FIH Hockey World Cup 2026″>Africa, two in North America, two in Oceania – trimming the field to 87. That attrition is a familiar story for national-team esports outside established regions, though losing North American and Oceanian slots is a harder pill to swallow given those scenes’ club-level depth.
The 87 teams now compete across ten regional brackets from July 17–19: Western Europe, Eastern Europe, North America, South America, Middle East & Central Asia, North Africa, Sub-Saharan Africa, South & East Asia, Southeast Asia, and Oceania. The regional stage determines which 24 nations make Riyadh. For context on how ENC fits within the broader 2026 international calendar, the 2026 esports tournament calendar outlines the full competitive schedule.
Notable Rosters and Familiar Names
Several qualifiers assembled lineups with genuine tier-one credibility. Ukraine consolidated the fnatic core of Rodion ‘fEAR’ Smyk, Dmytro ‘jambo’ Semera, and Nikita ‘jackasmo’ Skyba alongside Viktor ‘sdy’ Orudzhev and Sergiy ‘DemQQ’ Demchenko. Bulgaria went with the Acend trio of Teodor ‘SPELLAN’ Nikolov, Dimitar ‘Skrimo’ Yanulov, and Hristiyan ‘REDSTAR’ Pironkov.
Germany’s lineup is among the more intriguing constructions: M80’s Elias ‘s1n’ Stein and Fritz ‘slaxz-‘ Dietrich combined with BIG’s Johannes ‘tabseN’ Wodarz and David ‘prosus’ Hesse, with former G2 IGL Jan ‘Swani’ Müller slotting in as coach. Great Britain has smooya back on a national stage – Owen ‘smooya’ Butterfield qualified alongside Sebastian ‘volt’ Maloș, Oscar ‘AZUWU’ Bell, Jack ‘Gizmy’ von Spreckelsen, Cai ‘CYPHER’ Watson, and coach Max ‘MiGHTYMAX’ Heath.
France saw Djoko reunite with Ex3rcice, with Thomas ‘Djoko’ Pavoni linking up with his former 3DMAX teammate Pierre ‘Ex3rcice’ Bulinge. GenOne contributed players to both the Belgian and French qualifiers. Lithuania fields Justinas ‘jL’ Lekavicius and Vilius ‘tAk’ Keserauskas – two players who carry genuine top-tier pedigree. Roland ‘ultimate’ Tomkowiak, recently benched by Liquid, qualified for Poland alongside Betclic and KOLESIE players.
In the Americas, Canada runs Joshua ‘steel’ Nissan and Justin ‘FaNg’ Coakley, while Argentina is built on three BESTIA players and Brazil on a trio from ODDIK. Chile pairs XSE Pro League Guangzhou MVP Matias ‘HUASOPEEK’ Ibañez Hernandez with David ‘dav1deuS’ Tapia Maldonado. Australia’s qualifier features INS and Vexite from FlyQuest alongside aliStair and Liazz from THUNDER dOWNUNDER – arguably the strongest Oceanian lineup realistically assemblageable.
One bracket-relevant upset already on the board: Johnny Speeds fell in the Sweden qualifier final to roamsfiest, a ranked-179 outfit. Sweden’s club scene has produced consistent top-tier talent for years, and roamsfiest advancing over a lineup from a ranked org is the kind of result that signals national qualifiers carry real variance regardless of player pedigree.
What’s at Stake in the Regional Stage
ENC is a multi-title event, but HLTV’s coverage – and the qualifier structure described here – covers Counter-Strike specifically. The main event prize pool structure has players paid individually, with the format separating this from standard club-side prize splits. That distinction matters when evaluating roster motivation; national pride plus individual payouts is a different incentive stack than a shared team cut. The Esports World Cup Foundation has positioned ENC as a national-team counterpart to the club-focused Esports World Cup, which confirmed a $75M prize pool for its 2026 edition.
With regional brackets running July 17–19, the qualifier field collapses quickly. Thirty-six teams were never going to reach Riyadh from 87 – the cut is brutal, and the Western and Eastern European brackets carry most of the recognisable names. Those two regions will be the ones to watch for form signals heading into November.
