There might not be a single sports league on the planet whose fans care about viewership numbers as much as the LCS\u2019. And with the 2023 Spring Split in the books, it\u2019s now official: the LCS\u2019 average and peak viewership numbers had another dropoff. Fans are now allowed to drop all of their hot takes.\u00a0<\/p>
This Spring Split, the LCS\u2019 viewership numbers both dropped in comparison to last summer, with the split-wide average falling to a mark of just over 109,000. The league\u2019s best day came, as expected, during yesterday\u2019s grand final match<\/a> between Cloud9 and Golden Guardians, when 271,000 viewers tuned in at its peak, according to esports viewership stats site Esports Charts<\/a>. The finals have been reliable for a split\u2019s peak throughout the LCS\u2019 history: The last time a split\u2019s peak viewership came outside of a final match was in the 2020 Spring Split.\u00a0<\/p>
Still, peak viewership is a relatively weak metric when determining the strength of a league\u2019s viewership numbers. The average watch time of an audience is a better indicator of a loyal fan base, in addition to the total hours watched that the league accrued over the course of a split. Earlier this year, EMEA\u2019s League <\/em>esports director Maximilian Peter Schmidt said that \u201caverage minute audience and hours watched pay the bills\u201d when firing back at some of the takes that began to circulate around the LEC\u2019s viewership discussion<\/a>.\u00a0<\/p>
Even in the hours watched category, though, the LCS is struggling. This split, the LCS accumulated over 14 million hours watched, down from the 19 million it had in the summer of 2022 (albeit with 30 fewer hours of airtime), according to Esports Charts<\/a>. Proportionally, the LCS should have been expected to grab just over 15 million total hours if it was to keep up last summer\u2019s pace with fewer hours on-air.\u00a0<\/p>