FFWS Nepal 2026 Spring Champions, EWC Slot and Prize Pool

2 minutes

Read Time

FFWS NEPAL 2026 SPRING

Free Fire World Series (FFWS) Nepal 2026 Spring Grand Final concluded on 24, May (Sunday). All 12 teams from Nepal played of total 6 matches and DRS Gaming becomes Champions of FFWS Nepal 2026 Spring. They will also get slot in EWC 2026 Free Fire.

The tournament ran from April 24 and went through multiple stages — Qualifier, Group Stage, Knockout, and Grand Finals — testing every team’s consistency, composure, and hunger to qualify for the biggest stage in Free Fire esports. It was not just another regional event. For every team that competed, this was their shot at the Esports World Cup 2026.

FFWS Nepal 2026 Spring Points Table

  1. Tonde Nepal Esports – 125 pts
  2. DRS Gaming – 120 pts (Champions)
  3. BB.S9X Esports – 100 pts
  4. Horaa Esports – 92 pts
  5. Kathmandu Esports – 90 pts
  6. Mantra Nepal – 73 pts
  7. Hidden Leaf – 66 pts
  8. GB Esports – 65 pts
  9. Closer 2 Death – 57 pts
  10. No More Mercy – 51 pts
  11. Dada Gang – 50 pts
  12. PNL Esports – 45 pts

The Grand Finals used the Champion Rush format — where teams battle until one side crosses the pre-determined Champion Rush Point threshold and then secures a Booyah to claim the title. It is one of the most thrilling formats in competitive Free Fire, where momentum swings can flip the entire leaderboard in a matter of minutes.

Sixth match become final match where Tonde Nepal Esports eliminate Horaa Esports at 12th position and then after sometime BB.S9X Esports eliminate TGR but left with a single Survivor. Now left with two teams having champion rush activated where BB.S9X Esports get eliminated by DRS Gaming with all 4 players surviving, final fight between Hidden Leaf and DRS 2v4 match, HLX have no chance as they were on lower ground and DRS Gaming becomes Champions with total of 120 points.

Prize Pool Distribution

  1. DRS Gaming – NPR 500,000 ($3,332)
  2. Tonde Nepal Esports – NPR 250,000 ($1,666)
  3. BB.S9X Esports – NPR 200,000 ($1,333)
  4. Horaa Esports – NPR 150,000 ($1000)
  5. Katmandu Esports – NPR 100,000 ($666)
  6. Mantra Nepal – NPR 50,000 ($333)
  7. Hidden Leaf – NPR 40,000 ($266)
  8. GB Esports – NPR 35,000 ($233)
  9. Closer 2 Death – NPR 30,000 ($200)
  10. NoMoreMercy – NPR 25,000 ($166)
  11. Dada Gang – NPR 20,000 ($133)
  12. PNL Esports – NPR 18,000 ($119)
  13. Crimson Nova – NPR 17,000 ($113)
  14. Last Soul – NPR 16,000 ($106)
  15. A Esports – NPR 14,000 ($93)
  16. Lutyen Gamer – NPR 13,000 ($86)
  17. Veteran Esports – NPR 12,000 ($80)
  18. OperaX Esports – NPR 10,000 ($67)

*Rupees are fix amount teams receive, dollars can vary.

Nepal’s Free Fire ecosystem has been quietly growing over the past two years, and this edition of FFWS proved exactly that. The level of competition was noticeably sharper compared to previous seasons. Teams came prepared — with tighter rotations, smarter zone plays, and more disciplined endgame decision making. The days of relying purely on raw fragging are gone. Nepal’s top teams are now playing structured, tactical Free Fire that can compete at an international level.


About the Author

Pranav Sharma Avatar

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *