Brawl Stars NA Finals set

Brawl Stars revealed its NA Monthly Finals field, with teams like TeamElektros and Tribe Gaming locked in for the April 19 event — so the regional competitive season is heating up. The announcement lays out the rostered contenders and gives a clear date for your calendar if you follow mobile esports (x.com). For fans, that means two weeks to scout team comps and meta shifts before the finals. (x.com)

Brawl Stars has now fixed the North American field for its April Monthly Finals, and that matters because this is not a one-off weekend bracket. It is part of the game’s 2026 championship circuit, which runs in monthly stages and turns each regional final into both a payday and a points race. The North America event is scheduled for April 19, with eight teams in a single-elimination bracket playing for a $34,000 prize pool and championship points that feed the larger season. (liquipedia.net) The newly locked teams show how compressed this region has become. Team Elektros and Tribe Gaming made the cut, as the original announcement highlighted, but they are joined by ZOOS Esports, Only Realm, STMN Esports, I’m Hungwy, Vic Day, and Vatic Esports. That list is the real story. It mixes old brands with newer names, which is exactly what a healthy regional circuit is supposed to do. The format does not reward reputation. It rewards surviving the monthly qualifier and showing up again a few weeks later on finals day. (liquipedia.net) That structure is why April feels bigger than a routine qualifier recap. Under the 2026 rules, Brawl Stars splits its competitive year into a Spring Split from February through April and a Summer Split from June through August. April is therefore the end of the first stretch, not just the next stop on the calendar. A strong finish here can stabilize a team’s season before the circuit shifts forward, while a bad one can leave a roster chasing ground after the break. (assets.blast.tv) Recent results make the bracket easier to read. In March’s North America Monthly Finals, Only Realm won the event, beating Tribe Gaming in the grand final, while Team Elektros and ZOOS Esports finished in the semifinal tier. That matters because four of the April qualifiers are coming in with proof that they were already near the top of the region last month. This is less a fresh shuffle than a rematch machine. The names change around the edges, but the core fight is starting to repeat. (liquipedia.net) The competitive details also explain why fans get two weeks to obsess over draft trends. Monthly Finals matches are played as best-of-five matches made up of best-of-three sets, which gives teams room to adapt and punishes shallow preparation. March’s event data already showed a defined meta, with Crow drawing by far the heaviest ban rate, while Leon, Spike, Mortis, and Belle all saw frequent use. When the same region reconvenes in April, viewers are not just watching mechanical skill. They are watching whether teams learned anything from the last patch cycle and the last final. (liquipedia.net) Supercell’s esports site makes that spectator loop explicit. The company is pushing the official event hub as a place to watch live, make predictions, and earn in-game rewards during broadcasts. That turns the Monthly Finals into more than a niche competitive stream. It becomes a recurring ritual that links the pro scene back to the ordinary player base, which is one reason Brawl Stars has kept treating mobile esports as a live service rather than a separate product. On April 19, North America’s eight qualified teams will play that out online, one bracket round at a time. (event.supercell.com)

Get your own daily briefing

Scout delivers personalized news, insights, and conversations tailored to your role and industry.

Download on the App Store

Shared from Scout - Be the smartest in the room.