MIBR is a Brazilian esports project founded back in 2003. The tag lasted until 2012, when it was shut down after a run of poor results on the pro scene. In 2018, the brand was brought back after Immortals bought the tag and signed former SK Gaming players.
The main office is in Rio de Janeiro, and Counter-Strike is the organization's most successful division.
Over the years, the team has played hundreds of tournaments, built a name worldwide, and earned a strong reputation with esports fans.
MIBR Achievements
Some of MIBR's biggest achievements from Global Offensive through the move to CS2:
Tournament
City and dates
Placement
Prize money
ZOTAC Cup Masters 2018
Wan Chai, August 24-26, 2018
1st place
$200000
IEM Katowice 2019
Katowice, February 13-March 3, 2019
3rd place
$70000
CS:GO Asia Championships 2019
Shanghai, November 20-24, 2019
3rd place
$50000
Flashpoint Season 1
Los Angeles, March 13-April 19, 2020
2nd place
$250000
CCT Season 1 Online Finals #3
Online, September 18-25, 2023
2nd place
$40000
BetBoom Dacha Dubai 2023
Dubai, December 5-10, 2023
3rd place
$30000
Global Esports Tour Rio de Janeiro 2024
Rio de Janeiro, April 18-20, 2024
3rd place
$20000
ESL Challenger Melbourne 2024
Melbourne, April 26-28, 2024
1st place
$50000
ESL Pro League Season 20
St. Julian's, September 3-22, 2024
3rd place
$45000
Perfect World Shanghai Major 2024
Shanghai, November 30-December 15, 2024
9th-11th place
$20000
PGL Astana 2025
Astana, May 10-18, 2025
5th-8th place
$31250
BLAST.tv Austin Major 2025
Austin, June 3-22, 2025
17th-19th place
$10000
ESL Challenger League Season 50: South America - Cup #2
Online, September 8-22, 2025
1st place
$8000
StarLadder Budapest Major 2025
Budapest, November 24-December 14, 2025
23rd-24th place
$10000
Circuit X Redemption Curitiba
Curitiba, January 21-25, 2026
1st place
$14000
ESL Challenger League Season 51: South America - Cup #1
Online, February 17-25, 2026
1st place
$8000
How Much They Earned by Year
MIBR's prize money since 2023 is shown in the table below:
Year
Prize money
2023
$158281.78
2024
$200000
2025
$132703.24
2026
$39750
MIBR Roster History
More than 30 esports players have played Counter-Strike for MIBR over the years. It is one of the oldest organizations on the scene - the team first appeared in 2003 and was relaunched in 2018 with a new international roster.
First Roster and Results
MIBR's first CS:GO lineup after the 2018 return featured Gabriel "FalleN" Toledo as captain, alongside Fernando "fer" Alvarenga, Marcelo "coldzera" David, Jake "Stewie2K" Yip, and Tarik "tarik" Celik.
That lineup quickly became competitive at tier-one level, won ZOTAC Cup Masters 2018 (2018), finished 2nd at BLAST Pro Series: Istanbul 2018 (2018), and placed top 3-4 at FACEIT Major: London 2018 (2018).
The team also placed 5th-6th at ELEAGUE Premier 2018 and 7th-8th at ESL One Cologne 2018, locking in its spot among the top teams.
2022-2024 Roster
From 2022 to 2024, MIBR rebuilt the roster several times. The team moved from a five-man lineup with Rafael "exit" Lacerda, Marcelo "chelo" Cespedes, Jhonatan "JOTA" Willian, Matheus "Tuurtle" Anhaia, and Adriano "WOOD7" Cerato to a roster built around exit, Breno "brnz4n" Poletto, Felipe "insani" Yuji, Rafael "saffee" Costa, and Andre "drop" Abreu. In 2024, ahead of the Shanghai Major, Lucas "Lucaozy" Neves also joined the starting lineup.
During this stretch, MIBR qualified for PGL Major Antwerp 2022, refreshed its core with academy players and former FURIA members, won ESL Challenger Melbourne 2024, reached 3rd-4th place at ESL Pro League Season 20, and played at Perfect World Shanghai Major 2024.