Apex Legends ALGS Year 5 Championship Packs Sapporo Dome
More than 30,000 fans packed Sapporo's Daiwa House Premist Dome for the ALGS Year 5 Championship, featuring 40 teams and a $2 million prize pool. Organizers confirmed a return to Sapporo in 2027.

The Apex Legends Global Series Year 5 Championship landed in Sapporo and delivered a full-throttle live esports experience. From January 15 to 18 the Daiwa House Premist Dome hosted over 30,000 attendees for four days of high-level play, with 40 teams from six regions competing for a reported $2 million prize pool.
The scale of the event underscored ALGS' continued push to be a global circuit that rewards both top-tier competition and spectator engagement. On-site perks included Twitch Drops for remote viewers, multiple watch parties inside the venue and across the city, and cosplayer meet-and-greets that kept the community vibe lively between matches. Electronic Arts confirmed the turnout, and event organizers indicated the same venue will host ALGS again in 2027, reinforcing Sapporo's growing role as an international esports destination.
For competitive fans the tournament offered a concentrated look at meta evolution and regional matchups. Forty squads representing six regions brought diverse playstyles and roster strategies, giving viewers a window into how rotations, aggressive drops, and endgame decision making are shifting in the current season. That variety matters for players tracking the meta or teams planning scrims and preparation for the next cycle of qualifiers.
Spectators saw a blend of production-value features and community-focused programming. The combination of live broadcast on the official ALGS Twitch and YouTube channels with on-site activations meant both local attendees and global viewers had avenues to engage. Twitch Drops extended the watch-from-home reward loop, while in-person watch parties allowed fans to cheer and debrief plays together between matches.

The decision to return to Sapporo in 2027 has implications for fans and local organizers. For regional communities it signals a reliable international stop where local businesses, cosplayers and grassroots events can build around a recurring tournament. For traveling fans and teams, having a confirmed host city on the calendar helps with planning logistics, travel budgets, and practice schedules well ahead of future seasons.
What this means for players and fans is clear: ALGS is consolidating festival-style championships that merge top competition with spectator perks, and Sapporo is becoming one of those anchor cities. If you missed the live action, catch the full broadcast on the official ALGS Twitch and YouTube channels and start mapping travel and practice plans for the series as it heads toward its next Sapporo return in 2027.
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