The world's best fighting game players meet once a year in Las Vegas to settle arguments that have been running online all year. EVO is where the ranked standings become real.
What does EVO feel like? The Mandalay Bay ballroom floor transforms into a cathedral of controllers — hundreds of setups running simultaneously while the crowd noise builds toward top 8. The atmosphere mixes the intensity of a UFC main event with the community warmth of a family reunion. EVO is the rare competition where the crowd knows every player by their tag, where an unknown player from anywhere in the world can defeat a legend on the world stage, and where a single combo clip can become a viral moment watched by millions. First-timers describe the open bracket as overwhelming and immediately addictive. Veterans describe it as a homecoming.
Is EVO worth it? If you play fighting games at any level — casual to competitive — yes. The open bracket lets anyone enter and compete against the field. Side tournaments run constantly throughout the weekend across dozens of games. Even if you never enter a bracket, watching the top players perform at this level changes how you see the game. If you've never played a fighting game but love the energy of high-stakes competition, EVO's top 8 finals are some of the most dramatic live sports experiences you'll find anywhere. This is not for spectators looking for passive entertainment. It is for people who understand that a single button input made wrong is the difference between winning and losing — and find that beautiful.
What to know before you go: The open bracket fills fast — register the moment registration opens or expect to wait. Pool play runs most of Friday and Saturday; top 8 finals are Sunday afternoon. Wear comfortable shoes — the venue floor is enormous and you will walk miles. The Las Vegas heat in late July is extreme; plan transit between hotels. Side events, merch lines, and creator meet-and-greets run all weekend in the community hall adjacent to the main floor. Get there early on Sunday for top 8 — seating fills before the doors formally open.
EVO is on Falkor's Nation's Best list because it is one of the few events in sports where a genuinely global skill hierarchy is established in real time on a single weekend. When the EVO champion is crowned, every player in the world knows the result. That is rare. The tournament also functions as the gaming industry's most visible annual benchmark — developer announcements, new characters revealed, and industry deals announced poolside. For anyone in or adjacent to competitive gaming culture, Las Vegas in late July is the center of the world for three days. The affiliate click is the receipt. Discovery is the point.
Today· Jun 27
$10
GameSync San Diego, 2860 Main St, …
June's Dragon Ball Sparking Zero community night at GameSync in downtown San Diego on June 27. The meta has evolved since launch — new techniques, new character tiers, new answers to the old dominant strategies — and so has the local competition.
Full bracket, character variety encouraged, and the kind of crowd energy that only Dragon Ball generates in a live room. GameSync is the right venue for this: a fighting game community arcade with an audience that grew up with the franchise and takes it seriously without losing the joy. This is not casual. It is the San Diego FGC choosing the game it wants to compete at, which means the skill level is real and the matches are worth watching even if you are not in the bracket.
Show up early to warm up. Bracket play starts after an open practice period. 2860 Main St in Barrio Logan — free street parking available after 6 PM. All skill levels welcome. The regulars will explain the matchups. Dragon Ball Sparking Zero rewards style as much as execution. This is the game the community chose. Show up.
Today· Jun 27
$10 entry
GameSync San Diego, 2860 Main St, …
GameSync San Diego, 2860 Main St. June 27th. $10. The GameSync Monthly Open in June — the end-of-spring competitive gaming tournament where the season's first half gets its honest accounting, and the players who have been building their games since the new year find out what they've actually built.
June is the inflection point of the competitive gaming year. The spring regionals are over. The summer majors are being announced. The players who will be making runs at major events later in the year use the June Monthly to benchmark themselves before the summer calendar gets serious. The title list rotates — fighting games, platform fighters, card games — which means every Monthly is a fresh puzzle over familiar infrastructure.
$10 at the door. June 27th at GameSync, 2860 Main St. gamesync.us for the title list and bracket format. Show up prepared. The GameSync Monthly draws the competitive players who have been coming all year. June is when the scores start meaning something for the back half of the calendar. Get in the bracket.
Tomorrow· Jun 28 – Jul 12
Daejeon Convention Center II, Daej…
Daejeon. The Daejeon Convention Center II, South Korea. Sixteen teams, one bracket, and the mid-season argument that settles nothing but ignites everything about which region actually has the best League of Legends in the world. The Mid-Season Invitational 2026 runs June 28th — and if you've followed the LCS or any international league this split, you already know which narratives are arriving with the teams.
MSI is the first international event where the split's breakout teams meet squads they haven't faced before. The power rankings that looked obvious domestically get tested in real time, and the gaps that existed in February may have closed by June — or widened in ways nobody predicted. The group stage is where theories get stress-tested. The bracket is where they break.
Watch parties and broadcast events run at gaming bars and esports venues across San Diego and Los Angeles for every MSI match day — find your venue early, because the semifinals and finals draw the kind of crowds that require arriving before the doors open. The full broadcast schedule is at lolesports.com/msi. If you follow this game, this is the match window where the year starts to make sense.
In 4 days· Jul 1 – Sep 30
Shelter Island Drive, San Diego, C…
San Diego's blue whale season runs from July through September, when the largest animals ever to exist on Earth — blue whales measuring up to 100 feet and weighing up to 200 tons — feed in the deep water canyons offshore of Point Loma. San Diego sits at the edge of one of the best blue whale feeding areas on the Pacific Coast, and the summer season brings predictable encounters with these animals at distances measured in feet from small whale watching vessels.
Multiple operators run blue whale-focused trips during peak season from Shelter Island, Harbor Island, and the Embarcadero. Trips typically run 3-4 hours and target the canyon edges southwest of Point Loma where upwelling brings the krill concentrations that support blue whale feeding. When conditions are right, multiple blues are visible simultaneously from a single vessel.
Blue whales are the largest animals ever to have lived. Being within 50 feet of one — watching it surface to breathe, hearing the exhalation, seeing the scale of the animal relative to the boat — is a recalibration of perspective that most people who experience it describe as one of the most significant moments of their lives.
Operators include Seaforth Sport Fishing, H&M Landing, and San Diego Whale Watch. Most offer naturalist-guided trips with marine biologists or experienced naturalists providing commentary. July through August are peak season; September trips can also be productive. Book in advance during July-August as popular departures fill. Dress in layers — ocean temperatures can be 20°F cooler than shore even in summer.
In 5 days· Jul 2
From $65
Los Angeles Convention Center, 120…
Anime Expo 2026 — Day 1 opens Thursday, July 2 at the Los Angeles Convention Center. Anime Expo is the largest anime convention in North America, drawing over 100,000 fans to the Los Angeles Convention Center each summer. The 2026 edition runs July 2-5 across all four days, with a massive 340,000-square-foot Exhibit Hall, Artist Alley, J-Pop and ani-song concerts, industry panels, anime premieres, cosplay competitions, autograph sessions, and gaming areas.
The convention is organized by the Society for the Promotion of Japanese Animation and runs continuously across all four days. Each day brings different programming, exclusive announcements, and guests from across the anime, manga, and J-Pop industries. Saturday and Sunday draw the largest crowds; Thursday and Friday move at a more manageable pace for exhibit hall access.
The Los Angeles Convention Center is located at 1201 S Figueroa St, Los Angeles, CA 90015, steps from the EXPO/Convention Center Metro station. Badge pickup opens before the convention; pick yours up early to avoid lines. Tickets are available at anime-expo.org. Single-day and four-day badges are offered, with four-day badges providing the best value for full-weekend attendees.
In 6 days· Jul 3
From $65
Los Angeles Convention Center, 120…
Anime Expo 2026 — Day 2 continues Friday, July 3 at the Los Angeles Convention Center. Anime Expo is the largest anime convention in North America, drawing over 100,000 fans to the Los Angeles Convention Center each summer. The 2026 edition runs July 2-5 across all four days, with a massive 340,000-square-foot Exhibit Hall, Artist Alley, J-Pop and ani-song concerts, industry panels, anime premieres, cosplay competitions, autograph sessions, and gaming areas.
The convention is organized by the Society for the Promotion of Japanese Animation and runs continuously across all four days. Each day brings different programming, exclusive announcements, and guests from across the anime, manga, and J-Pop industries. Saturday and Sunday draw the largest crowds; Thursday and Friday move at a more manageable pace for exhibit hall access.
The Los Angeles Convention Center is located at 1201 S Figueroa St, Los Angeles, CA 90015, steps from the EXPO/Convention Center Metro station. Badge pickup opens before the convention; pick yours up early to avoid lines. Tickets are available at anime-expo.org. Single-day and four-day badges are offered, with four-day badges providing the best value for full-weekend attendees.
In 7 days· Jul 4
$5 entry
5005 Shawline St Suite B, San Dieg…
The monthly Pokemon TCG League Challenge at Artificer San Diego runs in Linda Vista — one of San Diego's dedicated hobby gaming spaces, purpose-built for exactly this kind of organized play. League Challenges are the consistent competitive foundation that builds the players who perform at Regionals: local, structured, and meaningful to season standings in ways that casual play never is.
Three divisions: Masters, Seniors, Juniors. 60-card Standard, Swiss rounds, top cut, prizes. Artificer draws a competitive-minded crowd — the players who come monthly are building toward something, and the rounds reflect it. The Championship Points earned here accumulate toward the World Championship invite pool, which means a good day at Artificer is a good day on the season, full stop.
Artificer San Diego is at 5005 Shawline St, Suite B, San Diego. artificersd.com for registration and entry details. Registration at 10 AM, rounds at 11 AM. Come with your best 60. Come knowing the meta. The Artificer field has been doing the same preparation you have.
In 7 days· Jul 4
$5 entry
7626 Miramar Rd Suite 3900, San Di…
TCS Rockets, 7626 Miramar Rd, San Diego. July 4th. $5. The Pokemon TCG League Challenge on the Fourth of July — the community tournament that keeps the San Diego competitive scene sharp on the holiday weekend, for the players who would rather be sleeving cards than watching fireworks from a parking lot.
League Challenges are the competitive infrastructure that builds the players who win Regionals. Smaller than a City Championship, more structured than casual play, a League Challenge forces real decisions — test your list against opponents who have tuned their decks against the meta that arrived last weekend. The July 4th edition draws the players who are serious enough to show up anyway.
$5 entry. July 4th at TCS Rockets, 7626 Miramar Rd. tcsrockets.com for the format and registration details. The San Diego competitive Pokemon community is real and present, and the League Challenge circuit is where it lives between the major events. Come with your best list. See where you land. The fireworks can wait.