The global VALORANT Champions Tour (VCT) is heading south. Starting next week, the best tactical shooter teams on the planet will converge in South America for the first international major of the year: VALORANT Masters Santiago 2026.
With the explosive growth of the Latin American VALORANT scene, Riot Games is finally bringing a flagship Masters event to Chile. The atmosphere promises to be deafening, the stakes are sky-high, and the meta is wide open.
Here is your complete primer on what to expect when the servers go live on February 28th.
Event At A Glance
| Category | Details |
| Dates | February 28 – March 15, 2026 |
| Location | Santiago, Chile |
| Game | VALORANT (Riot Games) |
| Prize Pool | $1,000,000 USD |
| Tier | S-Tier (International Major) |
The LATAM Crowd Factor
If you watched the VCT Americas league over the past few years, you know that LATAM fans bring an unmatched level of passion to esports. Teams like KRÜ Esports and Leviatán have built massive, vocal fanbases.
Bringing an S-Tier event to Santiago means the crowd will be a tangible factor. Historically, international teams traveling to South America have struggled with the sheer volume and pressure of the local crowds. Communication becomes harder, momentum swings feel heavier, and the “home-court advantage” is very real. Expect the Santiago arena to be a pressure cooker for any team facing a South American or Americas-league representative.
The $1 Million Stakes and Championship Points
While the $1,000,000 prize pool is a massive draw—with the lion’s share going to the victor—the true currency of Masters Santiago is VCT Championship Points.
Because this is an early-season Masters event, a strong performance here is critical for teams looking to secure their qualification for VALORANT Champions later in the year. Winning in Santiago practically guarantees a team’s ticket to the world championship, allowing them to experiment and play with less pressure in the subsequent regional splits.
Tournament Format
While Riot often tweaks the exact seeding, Masters events typically follow a grueling, unforgiving structure designed to weed out inconsistent teams:
- The Swiss/Group Stage: The lower-seeded teams from the four International Leagues (Americas, EMEA, Pacific, and China) will battle through a Swiss system or GSL-style groups. Every map matters, and teams that drop two series are sent packing before ever seeing the main stage.
- The Double-Elimination Playoffs: The surviving teams join the top regional seeds in an 8-team double-elimination bracket. This is where the tactical depth of VALORANT shines. Teams must have deep map pools and hidden agent compositions to survive the lower bracket runs.
What to Watch For: The 2026 Meta
As we head into Santiago, the tactical landscape of VALORANT is shifting.
- Double Controller Viability: Teams have been experimenting heavily with double-smokes setups to execute slow, methodical site takes, starving aggressive defenders of information.
- The Duelist Economy: Watch how teams manage the ultimate economy of their primary entry fraggers. With recent economy patches, dry-peeking without utility is punished harder than ever. The teams lifting the trophy in Santiago will be the ones who perfectly coordinate their Initiator utility (flashes and recon) with their Duelist pathing.
The countdown is on. The tactics are set. The $1,000,000 is waiting. Welcome to Santiago.