The LCO will have its direct qualification to the League of Legends <\/em>World Championship stripped from next year, sources tell Dot Esports, and will instead have to compete in the PCS playoffs for the right to represent Oceania on the global stage. The same is expected for the Mid-Season Invitational qualification too.<\/p>
The move comes as Riot Games tightens League <\/em>pathways worldwide, including moving Turkey\u2019s TCL into Europe’s regional leagues in 2023.<\/p>
Since the formation of the Oceanic Pro League in 2015, the Australian competition has sent its championship squads overseas twice a season for the Mid-Season Invitational and World Championship. The representative rosters often played through wildcard events or, more recently, Play Ins.<\/p>
This system continued from 2021 with the formation of the LCO.<\/p>
An official announcement on the change for the Oceanic region is expected sometime this week following LCO orgs being told after Worlds.<\/p>
The expectation is several Australian teams will join the Pacific Championship for its postseason at the end of Splits One and Two. In the season just gone, this would have seen the LCO represented by squads like The Chiefs, PGG, or ORDER. They would have faced teams like CTBC Flying Oyster and PSG Talon.<\/p>
According to sources, OCE will send two seeded squads.<\/p>
The competition will still host its domestic season, with the two representatives to join the Pacific Championship bracket decided via Split One and Split Two results.<\/p>