With the conclusion of last year’s Dota 2 Pro Circuit, anticipation is building for The International 2024. Valve has promised exciting new changes to...
In an eagerly awaited announcement, the renowned esports spectacle, World Cyber Gaming (WCG), has confirmed its upcoming venture to Jakarta, Indonesia. Slated to transpire...
With just one more week left in the regular season of Singapore’s first Mobile Legends: Bang Bang (MLBB) professional league, the question on everyone’s lips is: just who is the favourite to come out tops?
Every Monday, Ulti takes a look at some of the trending issues in the world of esports and turns them into memes. Here’s this week’s Hall of Fame/Shame.
When women unite, they can send a powerful message. And the Kartini Day Ladies Showdown is the perfect platform to showcase their talents in esports and make a stand for feminism.
The online charity event will be held on April 21, the birthday of Raden Adjeng Kartini, an Indonesian activist who fought for education for girls and women’s rights in the late 1800s and early 1900s. Its main highlight will be an esports tournament which will see 20 female esports personalities duke it out in League of Legends: Wild Rift and Valorant, with 10 players facing off in each game.
Singapore-based esports organisation RSG announced on April 15 that it has secured a US$1 million (S$1.33 million) investment from FrontSight Capital Fund, the esports fund managed by private equity firm Tembusu Partners.
Team Flash's Amraan Gani will be competing in the FIFA 21 Global Series East Asia qualifiers on April 17. But what is his advice for budding esports pro?
She looks like Thor, has a hammer like Thor and even has hair like the Asgardian god. But Dota’s 2 newest melee hero Dawnbreaker is not a solo hero like the son of Odin is portrayed in comics. No, she’s a unique blend of toughness and support, with plenty of utility on the battlefield.
Magical dragons, elves, sorcerers, Moon Goddesses, demons, and of course tragic backstories. Dota 2’s Netflix series seems to have hit all the nails on the nose within the magical genre, for both the hardcore fan and the casual viewer alike.
While Covid-19 forced much of the world to stay home in January, more than 50 of the world’s best Mobile Legends players gathered at Singapore’s Shangri-La Hotel to compete in an on-site tournament for a US$300,000 (S$402,210) prize pool at the Mobile Legends: Bang Bang (MLBB) M2 World Championship.
The internet is divided today about just what possessed Invictus Gaming’s Zhou “Emo” Yi to post that legendary “?” mark. Was he feeling emo? Was it simply a typo? Psychological warfare? Was he trolling?
It started out threatening to end before it even began. But end, it did: the ONE Esports Singapore Major concluded with a bang as dark horse Invictus Gaming (IG) pulled off a stunning comeback against favourites Evil Geniuses (EG) to claim the Major.