The Garena-hosted professional Garena Free Fire world championship tournament is known as the Free Fire World Series (FFWS). A total prize fund of US$2 million is up for grabs. By peak live viewer count, the 2021 event became the most watched esports event in the world.

Free Fire History
Free Fire History


Game Overview

The Squad Battle Royale mode found in the Free Fire video game is utilized in the Free Fire World Series. 52 individuals, divided into 13 teams of four, drop onto an island without armor or weapons. Players must search for weapons, armor, and medical supplies once they are on the ground. Using the weapons they've collected, players can knock down other players. The game is won by the last team to survive. Points are awarded to players based on survival time and the number of eliminations.

Game History

Histories The 2019 Free Fire World Series took place in November at Barra Olympic Park in Rio de Janeiro and offered a prize pool of $400,000 to the winners. The championship featured 12 teams from Brazil, Thailand, Indonesia, Vietnam, the Middle East, India, Latin America, North America, and Eurasia. The Corinthians, representing Brazil, won it.[4] The event had a peak live viewership of 1.9 million.[5] Because of the Coronavirus pandemic, the Free Fire World Series 2020 had to be replaced with the Free Fire Continental series, which took place on April 19. There were three separate Free Fire Continental Series events: Asia, EMEA, and Americas. The occasion was transferred live on YouTube and had 1.5 million pinnacle live watchers. There was a $300,000 prize fund. There were a total of 18 teams competing in each region for a $300,000 prize pool. EXP Esports won the Asian region, Sbornaya Chr won the EMEA region, and Team Liquid won the American region.[6][7][8] In 2021, Garena announced the Free Fire World Series, which had a prize pool of $2 million.[9] The event took place in May 2021 at Marina Bay Sands, Singapore. which had 4 million peak viewers.[10] The FFWS 2022 was held in May 2022 at the Resort World Sentosa convention center. A total of 18 teams compete for the FFWS trophy, which was won by Phoenix Force (EVOS Esports TH).[11] At the event, 18 teams from various regions competed for a $2 million prize pool. Attack All Around won the championship.[12] The event had a maximum of 1.4 million concurrent viewers during the grand finale, which was a decrease of 4 million viewers from the 2021 viewership. This was partially attributable to the ban on Free Fire in India.[13] The second FFWS event of 2022 took place in Bangkok, Thailand.[14] The event featured 17 teams from all over the world.[15] The $2 million prize pool is up for grabs. EVOS Phoneix, which finished in second place at the initial FFWS event in 2022, won the championship.

Free Fire History
Free Fire History


The Autódromo Internacional Nelson Piquet, also known as Jacarepaguá, was a former Formula One circuit that hosted the Brazilian Grand Prix a number of times in the 1980s. In 1990, the Grand Prix returned to its original home at the Autódromo José Carlos Pace, Interlagos. This is the location of the Barra Olympic Park. To make way for the City of Sports Complex, a group of three venues built for the 2007 Pan American Games in Rio de Janeiro, Jacarepaguá was partially demolished. The Maria Lenk Aquatic Center hosted diving, swimming, and synchronized swimming competitions; the Rio Olympic Arena hosted basketball and artistic gymnastics competitions; and the Barra Velodrome hosted speed roller skating competitions. The initial plan for the complex called for the construction of a massive entertainment complex that was valued at R$ 500 million and contracted to private firms. As a result, construction of the City of Sports was not without its setbacks. Despite these obstacles, the venues were completed in time for the games in July 2007 and cost a relatively cheaper R$ 205 million to construct, with venues that were smaller than originally planned.[4] In 2009, Rio de Janeiro successfully bid to host the 2016 Summer Olympics and Paralympics.[4] Opposition efforts by preservationists of the Jacarepaguá, the unsuitable soil at the construction site, and numerous strike actions by workers all contributed to the delay in the venue's construction.[4 The Jacarepaguá was going to be completely demolished, and there were plans in the works for a new assortment of venues at the City of Sports, which would be rebranded as the Barra Olympic Park. The International Cycling Union, on the other hand, did not accept the Barra Velodrome as a suitable location for the Olympics' track cycling competitions. The Rio Olympic Velodrome, which was constructed immediately west of the Rio Olympic Arena, was conceived as a replacement for the Barra Velodrome, which was demolished in 2013. It was decided that the costs of upgrading the velodrome would be comparable to those of building a new venue[5]. The Olympic Tennis Center, the Carioca Arenas, the Olympic Aquatics Stadium, which was built on the site of the former Barra Velodrome, and the Future Arena are some of the other new Olympic venues.

In Barra Olympic Park, the local broadcaster Rede Globo constructed a studio for its coverage of the Games.

Free Fire History
Free Fire History


Marina Bay Sands (short for: MBS) is a integrated resort in Singapore that faces Marina Bay. The resort, which is owned by the Las Vegas Sands Corporation and opened in 2010, was ranked as the most expensive standalone casino property in the world at S$8 billion (US$6.88 billion). It also has a 2,561-room hotel, a 120,000-square-foot convention center, a 74,000-square-foot (800,000-square-foot) mall, a museum, a large theater, "celebrity chef" restaurants, two floating crystal pavilions, art and science The 20-hectare resort was designed by Moshe Safdie architects.[4][5] The complex includes three towers that are topped by the Sands Skypark, a skyway connecting a 150 m (490 ft) infinity swimming pool on top of the world's largest public cantilevered platform, which overhangs the north tower by 66.5 m (218 ft).[6][7] Although Marina Bay Sands was originally scheduled to open in 2009, its construction was Las Vegas Sands, the owners, were also under pressure from the global financial crisis to put off other projects in order to finish the integrated resort. The Singapore authorities gave their blessing to the owner's plan to open the integrated resort in stages.[8] The resort and SkyPark were officially opened on June 23 and 24 2010 as part of a two-day celebration, following the opening of the casino on April 27 of that year.[9] The SkyPark opened the following day. The theater was finished in time for Riverdance's first performance on November 30. On December 18, Michelle Kwan performed at the opening of the artificial ice indoor skating rink. The integrated resort was completed when the ArtScience Museum opened to the public and a 13-minute light, laser, and water show called Wonder Full debuted on February 19, 2011.

On February 17, 2011, Marina Bay Sands celebrated its grand opening. In addition, it marked the opening of seven celebrity chef restaurants.[10] On September 18, 2011, and September 22, 2011, respectively, the two tenants, Louis Vuitton and Pangaea Club, opened the floating pavilions, the final part of Marina Bay Sands.[11] By 2026, a fourth tower is expected to be built at the resort. The expansion plan was made public at the beginning of April 2022. The new tower will have one thousand hotel rooms and a concert venue that can hold 15,000 people.