
Team Liquid Alienware kicked off their MSI 2026 campaign against Deep Cross Gaming on June 28 in Daejeon, South Korea. Prediction markets and blockchain-based betting platforms saw increased activity as the Play-In stage got underway.
The best-of-five series pits North America’s LCS runner-up against the second seed from the LCP region.
What’s at stake in Daejeon
MSI 2026, the League of Legends Mid-Season Invitational, runs through July 12, 2026. The Play-In stage occupies the first four days, from June 28 to July 1.
Team Liquid earned their spot by grinding through the LCS lower bracket before finishing as the region’s runner-up.
Deep Cross Gaming qualified as the second representative from the LCP/APAC region. Their roster features Flauren in the top lane, Pop9 in the jungle, HongSuo at mid, Feng as ADC, and ShiauC on support.
The tournament carries implications beyond the immediate trophy. Results at MSI factor into Worlds qualification, meaning every series win or loss ripples forward into the second half of the competitive season.
Crypto betting platforms find their moment
Crypto betting activity saw a noticeable spike during the early days of MSI 2026. The T1 versus Team Liquid matchup peaked at 1.39 million concurrent viewers.
No specific crypto tokens are directly tied to either Team Liquid or Deep Cross Gaming, nor to the MSI event itself. The engagement is coming through betting and prediction markets, not fan tokens or play-to-earn mechanics.
What this means for crypto investors watching esports
The betting volume spikes coinciding with MSI suggest that crypto platforms are successfully capturing a portion of esports wagering that might otherwise flow to traditional sportsbooks.
The risk, as always, is regulatory. Crypto betting exists in a patchwork of legal frameworks globally, and esports betting specifically has attracted scrutiny in several jurisdictions concerned about match-fixing and underage gambling.








