While 100 Thieves were busy dismantling MIBR in a 2-1 quarterfinal victory at the Esports World Cup Valorant 2026 in Paris, something arguably more consequential for the crypto world was happening off-screen. France has rolled out new regulations allowing licensed cryptocurrency firms to sponsor esports teams, a move that could reshape how both industries fund themselves and interact with audiences.

The match itself, played on July 10, 2026, was decisive in the way that only lopsided map scores can be. 100 Thieves posted a 13-2 demolition on Fracture.

The match and what it means for the tournament

The EWC Valorant 2026 tournament, running July 2 through July 12 in Paris, features 16 of the world’s best teams competing for significant prize money. MIBR’s elimination slots them into the 5th through 8th placement bracket, where they and fellow quarterfinal casualty Gentle Mates each take home $90,000.

For MIBR, this loss carries a familiar sting. 100 Thieves had already beaten them 2-0 during the VCT 2026 Americas Stage 1 playoffs back in May. That makes this a repeat performance, the kind of head-to-head dominance that starts becoming a psychological problem for the losing side.