Predecessor’s competitive summer kicks off with $14,000 on the line and the best teams from Europe and North America
29/05/2026 - 12:10
The competitive scene of Predecessor continues to grow step by step, and its next major test already has a date. The PCC Summer Summit is about to begin, gathering some of the most prominent teams from Europe and North America over three weeks of competition. The tournament is designed to determine who truly dominates Omeda Studios’ MOBA right now.
While the game is still consolidating its presence within the genre, events like this reflect an increasingly evident reality: Predecessor wants to build a rock-solid competitive ecosystem while expanding its player base. The Summer Summit will feature a $14,000 total prize pool—a modest figure compared to industry giants like League of Legends or Dota 2, but highly significant for a scene that is still in its growth phase.
The tournament will unfold over three weeks, pitting the top rosters from the Europe (EU) and North America (NA) regions against each other. The goal is not only to crown regional champions but also to continue strengthening the competitive structure organized by the Predecessor Championship Circuit (PCC), which has become the premier hub for the game's Esports.
The importance of the event goes well beyond the prize money. Since its inception, Predecessor has carved out a very specific niche in the market: reclaiming part of the essence of Paragon, Epic Games’ MOBA which shut down its servers in 2018 but still retains a surprisingly loyal community.
Many of the heroes, mechanics, and concepts that made Paragon popular have been rebuilt and expanded by Omeda Studios. This has allowed Predecessor to inherit not just a built-in player base, but also a competitive drive that has followed the project since its earliest Early Access phases.
The Summer Summit will also serve as a showcase for the current state of the meta. In MOBAs, tournaments act as laboratories where new strategies, surprise picks, and specific team compositions emerge, which later trickle down into the entire community's ranked matches. What happens during these weeks will likely shape how Predecessor is played for much of the summer.
Another key aspect is the regional dynamic. Europe and North America have developed slightly different competitive styles since the inception of the PCC circuit. Historically, European teams have tended to prioritize more disciplined, controlled executions, while North America usually showcases a more aggressive approach focused on generating early advantages. Tournaments like the Summer Summit allow for a direct comparison of how both regions have evolved.
The timing of the tournament coincides with a crucial phase for the game itself. Over the last few months, Omeda Studios has consistently expanded the hero roster, tweaked progression systems, and refined competitive balance to prepare Predecessor for long-term expansion. Keeping an active esports scene running is a vital part of that strategy.
While a $14,000 prize pool won't break global records, it represents something massive for this community: a fresh opportunity to prove that Predecessor can sustain a serious, consistent competitive circuit as it scales.
Over the next three weeks, the top squads from both sides of the Atlantic will fight for the trophy and their share of the prize pool.
But in a scene that is still defining its identity, there is much more at stake than cash: it’s about who can claim the ultimate bragging rights as the competitive benchmark for Predecessor in 2026.
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