
Activision just dropped the official group stage draw for Call of Duty’s 2025 Mobile World Championship Finals, and it’s a spicy one. If you’ve been following the build-up through regionals and Majors, this is where it all comes together.
From 7–9 November, the top 16 CODM teams in the world land in Katowice, Poland for a shot at the $850,000 prize pool. We’ve got familiar giants, fresh blood, and some genuine grudge potential seeded straight into the groups. Here's the full look at who's playing, how it works, and what you’ll want to keep your eyes on.

Let’s start with the pools on Call of Duty betting sites. Activision balanced them using 2024 results and regional placements, which means you’re getting one of the most competitive starts to Champs we’ve seen in years.
| 💡 Group | 👥 Teams |
|---|---|
| A | Elevate, EOCHITL Gaming, GodLike Esports, Amigos Gaming |
| B | Wolves, Street Gaming, Diavolos, Unmythic Dream |
| C | Galorys, Stand Point Gaming, Exclusive, Stalwart Esports |
| D | TLE Esports, S8UL Esports, B34R Clan, Qing Jiu Club |
You’ve got previous champs (Wolves, Elevate), fast-risers like Stalwart, and a few groups where 2nd place is wide open. This isn’t a hope for upsets situation, every group has genuine potential.
The structure’s the same as we’ve seen the past few years. GSL groups into playoffs, but this time it's all packed into three days.
Everything starts with four GSL-style groups, each containing four teams. Every group follows the same path. Opening matches, followed by a winners’ match and a losers’ match, with a final decider to determine who advances. It’s a compact but brutal format where early momentum matters, and slip-ups are hard to recover from. All matches in the group stage are Best-of-5, so teams need to come in sharp from the first round.
Only the top two teams from each group will survive the Friday gauntlet. That cuts the field in half and sets the stage for a tight playoff bracket.

The top eight teams move into a double-elimination playoff bracket. That means if you lose once, you’re not out. But drop two, and your run’s done. All series leading up to the Grand Final remain Best-of-5, keeping the pacing fast but with room for adaptation.
The Grand Final on Sunday is the only Best-of-7 series of the weekend. There’s no bracket reset. Whoever wins the final takes it all, regardless of whether they came from upper or lower bracket. This adds pressure to both sides. The upper finalist doesn’t get a second life, and the lower bracket team can win it all with just one final push.
If you’re watching live, Friday is a non-stop buffet of high-stakes matches. Saturday gets more intense as storylines build in the bracket. But it’s Sunday where everything peaks. One last showdown, full seven-map distance, winner takes home the crown.
The $850,000 prize pool is stacked heavy at the top but gives decent payouts across the board.
| 🔢 Placement | 🤑 Prize (USD) |
|---|---|
| 1st Place | $350,000 |
| 2nd Place | $135,000 |
| 3rd Place | $80,000 |
| 4th Place | $55,000 |
| 5th–6th Place | $42,500 each |
| 7th–8th Place | $24,000 each |
| 9th–12th Place | $17,000 each |
| 13th–16th Place | $7,250 each |
The fun part. Let’s run through the squads that are about to make (or break) headlines in Katowice.
Still the team to beat. They’ve kept the same core since winning in 2024. They don’t just win, they smother.

Fell just short in 2024’s Grand Final. This year’s version is half-new, including veteran shot-caller Kong “Dchen” Zhuyu. Redemption arc locked and loaded.

China’s top seed and 2023 world champs. Still running two members from that title team, plus they’re riding momentum from a Major win earlier this year.

One of the only teams to take a series off Elevate this year. Fast-paced, smart S&D, and plenty of map pool flex. Don't underestimate them.

For those keeping track of regions or building predictions:
| 🌍 Region | 👥 Teams |
|---|---|
| China (CN) | Wolves, Qing Jiu Club, Stand Point Gaming |
| North America (NA) | TLE Esports, UnMythic Dream, EOCHITL Gaming |
| Brazil (BR) | Galorys, Amigos Gaming, Street Gaming |
| India (IN) | GodLike Esports, S8UL Esports |
| Europe (EU) | Exclusive |
| Africa (AF) | B34R Clan |
| Garena (SEA) | Elevate, Stalwart Esports |
| Japan (JP) | Diavolos |
Each pool was built to mix regions and avoid early same-region rematches, so you’ll get cross-meta clashes from the jump.
These are quick hitters, just enough to know the vibe of each pool before the games start.

This format breeds upsets. The teams that come in too confident are the ones who get caught slipping. The ones with clean S&D and discipline will punch above their seed. Best-of-fives mean there’s no room for off-days. A single bad map draft or one team misreading a strat can snowball into an early exit. Meta prep only gets you so far, especially when teams from opposite ends of the globe show up with wild playstyles no one’s scrimmed into.
And that’s what makes CODM Champs weekend so fun. It’s not just the top dogs dominating, it’s the close holds, the clutch 1v2s, the unexpected map picks, and the moments where it feels like anything can happen. One weekend, one LAN, and one team walking away with the title, the trophy, and $350K in their pocket.
Visit Thrillzz