AG.AL Wins KWC 2025 After Epic Reverse Sweep
AG.AL Wins KWC 2025 After Epic Reverse Sweep
Redemption in Riyadh: AG.AL’s Road to Glory
In the sun-scorched spotlight of the Amazon Esports Arena in Riyadh, AG.AL cemented its legacy with a comeback narrative ripped straight out of esports folklore. Down 3-1 to TT Global in the KWC 2025 grand finals, the reigning KPL Spring champions clawed back—one game, one kill, one clutch play at a time—to defend their world title. AG.AL Wins KWC 2025
Call it resilience. Call it grit. Call it what you want. But this was AG.AL with its back to the wall, refusing to be dethroned.

Opening Volley: Zoe’s Quick Strike Sets the Tone
Game 1 belonged to AG.AL from the moment the referee blinked. Meng “Shuai” Jiajun’s Dolia and Chen “Zoe” Jiahao’s Menki unleashed a coordinated beatdown that left TT Global scrambling.
The match ended in under 12 minutes with a clean 8-2 scoreline. Zoe’s KDA may have only read 2/0/3, but his map pressure and tempo control made every TTG rotation feel like a bad decision.
If AG.AL’s Game 1 confidence were a stock, analysts would’ve screamed “Buy!”

TTG’s Triple Threat: The Storm Before the Comeback
Then came the TT Global avalanche.
Game 2 saw Jiang “Crane” Lijie’s Shi turn into a walking nightmare for AG.AL’s midlane, clocking in a 6/1/12 stat line that even old-school MOBA fans would respect. It took 21 minutes of technical precision and patient vision control to turn the tide.
In Game 3, Yue “Snowy” Caiying brought the heat with Meng Ya—five kills, four assists, and a masterclass in backline bullying. AG.AL’s Dolia looked less like a playmaker and more like a piñata.
Game 4? That one should have come with a spoiler alert.
Tempest Dragon became a warzone. AG.AL tried to contest it, but Wu “Qing” Jinxiang’s Mayene executed a surgical denial. TT Global reached match point with a sigh of relief and maybe a bit too much celebration.
YiNuo Sparks Life: Marco Polo and the Rally Begins
Game 5 was where AG.AL stopped sulking and started swinging.
Xu “YiNuo” Bicheng’s Marco Polo racked up five kills with the kind of sharp shooting that would make a sniper jealous. For the first time since Game 1, AG.AL dictated lane priority and forced TTG to react.
Game 6? That was a soap opera.
Zoe’s Musashi broke into the backline late, snuck past TTG’s vision, and executed a textbook backdoor while everyone else was busy rehearsing a team fight. One moment of brilliance. One moment of madness. And suddenly, we were staring at Game 7.
Ultimate Battle: Augran vs. Hou Yi, Arli vs. the World
In the final game, both squads ran mirror lineups with fan-favorite cores—Fatih, Augran, Princess Frost, Liang. But it was the farm lane divergence that sealed fate.
AG.AL’s YiNuo trusted in Arli. TTG’s Snowy banked on Hou Yi. One was calculated aggression, the other was hopeful poking.
Zoe’s Augran put theory to rest with an early double kill, deleting Qing and Zou “Joy” Weixin before their support rotation was even halfway loaded. The map tilted. The snowball rolled. And by minute 15, TTG was out of chances and AG.AL was back on top.

Legacy Secured: Trophies, Payouts, and MVP Honors
The scoreboard read 4-3. AG.AL took home $750,000 and 1000 club points—chump change for a world title, but a mountain for morale. TT Global didn’t leave empty-handed, pocketing $460,000 and 750 points.
Chen “Zoe” Jiahao walked away with $10,000 and the MVP trophy, and—let’s be honest—the approval of every analyst who watched the match with their mouths open and eyes wide.
Call it a comeback. Call it destiny. Just don’t call AG.AL anything but world-class.

