StarLadder has officially announced the anniversary StarSeries 20, which will take place on September 16–20, 2026 in the Schengen zone and will be the organizer’s only tier-1 LAN event of the season. Due to a date clash with the Summer Major, the Spring StarSeries has been cancelled — but the brand itself is returning to big CS2, and that alone has already sparked strong community reactions.
Anniversary Season: StarSeries Back in Tier-1
The official announcement was accompanied by a teaser instantly reminiscent of the golden era of StarLadder: a dark stage, individual player booths, face intros on giant screens — the unmistakable style of the old StarSeries.
StarLadder emphasized that this is only the beginning of a “new era” — the company has already confirmed:
- another tier-1 LAN in 2027 (October 20–24),
- several tier-2 events throughout 2026.
But the central highlight will be StarSeries 20 — symbolic, anniversary-branded, and fully integrated into the VRS system.
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Spring StarSeries 2026 Cancelled: The Major “Eats” the Calendar
Alongside the announcement, StarLadder delivered an important update: there will be no Spring StarSeries in 2026.
Spring StarSeries 2026 is cancelled due to a scheduling clash with the Summer Major dates.
The Summer Major 2026 occupies one of the tightest windows among guaranteed global events, completely eliminating the opportunity for StarLadder to host a spring LAN. There was simply no calendar slot left.
Thus, StarSeries 20 becomes the only tier-1 StarLadder event in 2026.
🎉 StarLadder & StarSeries – The Story Continues in 2026–2027!
The Anniversary StarSeries 20 arrives 2026 Fall in the Schengen zone 🇪🇺
8 teams, $500,000 prize pool, and only one champion 🏆
📅 Main Event: September 16–20, 2026
And the journey doesn’t stop – the next Tier-1… pic.twitter.com/Mltzh6sBsz
— StarLadder CS2 (@StarLadder_CS) November 12, 2025
StarSeries 20 Structure: VRS Invites, Online Qualifiers, and LAN Finals
Participants: 8 Teams
- 4 direct invites — the highest global VRS teams (July 6, 2026 update).
- 4 teams from online qualifiers:
- 2 from Europe,
- 1 from North America,
- 1 from South America.
StarLadder preserves the traditional StarSeries format but fully integrates it into the Valve Regional Standings ecosystem.
Qualifier Schedule and Format
EU Closed Qualifier — July 22–26, 2026
- 16 teams
- GSL Groups + Play-in
- 2 LAN slots
NA Closed Qualifier — July 28 – August 2, 2026
- 8 teams
- Double Elimination
- 1 slot
SA Closed Qualifier — July 28 – August 2, 2026
- 8 teams
- Double Elimination
- 1 slot
All qualifiers will be held online.
Main Event (LAN) — September 16–20, Schengen Zone
StarLadder has not yet disclosed the exact location, but the following is confirmed:
- Format: Double Elimination
- All matches: BO3
- 8 teams on stage
- Media Day: September 16
- LAN in classic StarSeries style with booths and large-scale production
StarSeries 20 Prize Pool — $500,000
StarLadder maintains its traditional prize distribution split between players and organizations.
The breakdown is as follows:
- 1st place:
– $100,000 to players
– $100,000 to the club
- 2nd place:
– $65,000 to players
– $65,000 to the club
- 3rd place:
– $35,000 to players
– $35,000 to the club
- 4th place:
– $20,000 to players
– $20,000 to the club
- 5–6th places:
– $10,000 to players
– $10,000 to the club
- 7–8th places:
– $5,000 to players
– $5,000 to the club
The total prize pool of $500,000 makes StarSeries one of the largest independent tier-1 LAN tournaments of 2026.
Visa and Integrity Requirements
StarLadder highlighted several important rules for all participants:
- the tournament is held within the Schengen visa zone,
- teams are responsible for securing their visas; if they fail, the invite may be passed to another team,
- players banned by Valve or ESIC are not allowed to compete,
- the organizer reserves the right to revoke an invite in cases of proven match-fixing or severe misconduct.
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Why Is StarLadder Coming Back Now?
Analysts point to several reasons behind StarSeries returning in 2026:
- CS2 has stabilized after two years of patches and revised competitive formats.
- The VRS ecosystem has simplified inviting and seeding teams.
- The downsizing of BLAST Premier opened calendar space for independent events.
- Demand for non-ESL LAN tournaments increased after criticism of “monopolization” of the scene.
StarLadder is planning a slow but confident comeback to the tier-1 CS2 ecosystem.

