2024 League of Legends World Championship final
A scene at The O2 Arena during the match. | |||||||
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| Date | 2 November 2024 | ||||||
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| Venue | The O2 Arena, London, United Kingdom | ||||||
| Attendance | 14,700 | ||||||
| MVP | Lee "Faker" Sang-hyeok | ||||||
| Live Broadcast | |||||||
| Announcers | English Aaron "Medic" Chamberlain Andrew "Vedius" Day Sam "Kobe" Hartman-Kenzler Korean Chun "Caster Jun" Yong-jun Lee "CloudTemplar" Hyun-woo Jeong "NoFe" No-chul Chinese Guan "Zeyuan" Zeyuan Wang "Remember" Chi-te Qian "Mile" Chen | ||||||
| Viewers | 6.9 million (peak excluding China) | ||||||
The 2024 League of Legends World Championship Final was a League of Legends (LoL) esports series between Bilibili Gaming and T1 on 2 November 2024 at The O2 Arena in London, England, marking the fourteenth final of a LoL World Championship and the final championship series to take place under the two-split competitive calendar as a new split structure and competitive calendar for the game's esports ecosystem was implemented by the game's developer Riot Games since 2025.
It was the third straight final for T1, who entered the series as defending champions, having won the 2023 edition on home soil. T1 were one of four Korean representatives from the League of Legends Champions Korea at the 2024 tournament, the others being 2024 Mid-Season Invitational champions Gen.G, Hanwha Life Esports, and Dplus Kia. Bilibili Gaming were one of four Chinese representatives from the League of Legends Pro League alongside Top Esports, LNG Esports, and 2023 finalists Weibo Gaming.
The series was a best of five and was played in front of 14,700 spectators, with 6.9 million peak viewers excluding China, the highest in the tournament's and in esports history. That also made it just the second esports tournament to pass the 6 million peak viewer mark. The series ended 3–2 in favor of T1, who mounted a comeback of two consecutive victories after facing a 1–2 series deficit after three games.
Lee "Faker" Sang-hyeok earned his fifth World Championship and his second Most Valuable Player honors. The series also marked the fifth World Championship for T1, having won previously in 2013, 2015, 2016, and 2023. It also marked the first successful championship defense of a defending world champion since 2016 when then-SK Telecom T1 clinched back-to-back titles, and the second time the LCK's fourth seed clinched the world championship since DRX in 2022.