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The top of the esports earnings table has looked the same for years: Dota 2 players, Dota 2 players, and more Dota 2 players. N0tail leads at $7.18m. The next nine names are almost all from the same game. Then, at rank 23, Kyle “Bugha” Giersdorf becomes the first non-Dota player on the list — a 16-year-old who won $3 million in a single afternoon in New York.
All figures on this page are verified tournament prize money from esportsearnings.com and cover career totals. They do not include salaries, streaming revenue, sponsorships, or equity. For players like Faker, that distinction matters enormously — his $1.8m prize total is a footnote compared to his actual wealth.
The 25 Highest-Earning Esports Players of All Time
Based on data from esportsearnings.com as of June 2026. Dota 2 accounts for 22 of the top 25 positions. The exceptions are Bugha (Fortnite, #23), aBeZy (Call of Duty, #not shown) and a handful of CS:GO veterans outside the top 25.
| Rank | Handle | Real Name | Nation | Game | Prize Money |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | N0tail | Johan Sundstein | 🇩🇰 Denmark | Dota 2 | $7,184,163 |
| 2 | JerAx | Jesse Vainikka | 🇫🇮 Finland | Dota 2 | $6,486,623 |
| 3 | Miposhka | Yaroslav Naidenov | 🇷🇺 Russia | Dota 2 | $6,250,134 |
| 4 | ana | Anathan Pham | 🇦🇺 Australia | Dota 2 | $6,024,411 |
| 5 | Yatoro | Ilya Mulyarchuk | 🇺🇦 Ukraine | Dota 2 | $5,990,099 |
| 6 | Collapse | Magomed Khalilov | 🇷🇺 Russia | Dota 2 | $5,985,474 |
| 7 | Ceb | Sébastien Debs | 🇫🇷 France | Dota 2 | $5,949,442 |
| 8 | Topson | Topias Taavitsainen | 🇫🇮 Finland | Dota 2 | $5,898,810 |
| 9 | Mira | Miroslaw Kolpakov | 🇺🇦 Ukraine | Dota 2 | $5,661,262 |
| 10 | KuroKy | Kuro Takhasomi | 🇩🇪 Germany | Dota 2 | $5,295,698 |
| 11 | Miracle- | Amer Al-Barkawi | 🇯🇴 Jordan | Dota 2 | $4,913,585 |
| 12 | Matumbaman | Lasse Urpalainen | 🇫🇮 Finland | Dota 2 | $4,873,086 |
| 13 | MinD_ContRoL | Ivan Ivanov | 🇧🇬 Bulgaria | Dota 2 | $4,704,032 |
| 14 | TORONTOTOKYO | Alexander Khertek | 🇷🇺 Russia | Dota 2 | $4,562,226 |
| 15 | GH | Maroun Merhej | 🇱🇧 Lebanon | Dota 2 | $4,391,703 |
| 16 | Ame | Wang Chunyu | 🇨🇳 China | Dota 2 | $4,386,914 |
| 17 | Puppey | Clement Ivanov | 🇪🇪 Estonia | Dota 2 | $4,345,228 |
| 18 | Zai | Ludwig Wåhlberg | 🇸🇪 Sweden | Dota 2 | $4,292,756 |
| 19 | SumaiL | Sumail Hassan | 🇵🇰 Pakistan | Dota 2 | $4,171,871 |
| 20 | y` | Zhang Yiping | 🇨🇳 China | Dota 2 | $4,090,790 |
| 21 | Faith_bian | Zhang Ruida | 🇨🇳 China | Dota 2 | $3,998,029 |
| 22 | Nisha | Michał Jankowski | 🇵🇱 Poland | Dota 2 | $3,885,789 |
| 23 | Bugha | Kyle Giersdorf | 🇺🇸 USA | Fortnite | $3,784,225 |
| 24 | Saksa | Martin Sazdov | 🇲🇰 N. Macedonia | Dota 2 | $3,706,159 |
| 25 | Cr1t | Andreas Nielsen | 🇩🇰 Denmark | Dota 2 | $3,600,375 |
Bugha at rank 23 is the outlier. Every other player in the top 25 plays Dota 2. The next non-Dota player after Bugha — dupreeh (CS:GO, $2.2m) — would rank around 35th overall. That gap illustrates how completely The International’s prize pool model has reshaped the all-time earnings table.
Why Dota 2 Players Dominate the Earnings Table
Dota 2’s The International runs a crowdfunded model unlike anything else in esports. Valve sells a Battle Pass — a seasonal content pack — and puts 25% of all revenue directly into the TI prize pool. At its peak in 2021, fans spent over $160m on Battle Pass items, inflating the prize pool to $40m. The winning team earned more from one weekend than most traditional athletes earn in a career.
That model created a one-off era of prize money that no other game has matched. The International 2024 saw Valve shift to a publisher-funded pool of $2.7m — still competitive by most standards, but a stark drop. The players at the top of the all-time earnings table are mostly veterans of TI8, TI9, and TI10, the three tournaments where the prize pools were largest. N0tail, JerAx, Ceb, Topson, and ana — the OG roster that won both TI8 and TI9 — make up five of the top eight spots as a direct result.
The Highest Earner in Each Esport
Strip out the Dota 2 dynasty and every major title has one player who has collected more prize money than anyone else in it. The gap between first and second within each game is often enormous — and the gap between games is larger still.
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| Game | Top Earner | Prize Money | Key Tournament |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fortnite | Bugha | $3,784,225 | Fortnite World Cup 2019 ($3m solo) |
| CS:GO / CS2 | dupreeh | ~$2,200,000 | 4× Major champion (Astralis) |
| Honor of Kings | HuaHai | ~$1,940,000 | HoK International Championship 2022 |
| Call of Duty | aBeZy | $1,875,655 | CDL Championship (multiple) |
| League of Legends | Faker | ~$1,800,000 | 5× LoL World Championship |
| StarCraft II | Serral | ~$1,600,000 | WCS Global Finals 2018 |
| Valorant | C0M | $329,613 | Valorant Champions 2023 |
Valorant’s modest figures reflect the game’s age — the VCT circuit only launched in 2021, and prize pools are growing steadily. Riot Games has committed to expanding tournament funding, so the top Valorant earners will look very different in five years. aBeZy sitting above Faker surprises most people, but Call of Duty’s CDL has run consistent high-value events since 2020.
Faker — The Richest Player Who Earns Most Off Prize Money
Lee Sang-hyeok has won the League of Legends World Championship five times (2013, 2015, 2016, 2023, 2024) and the LCK ten times. He was the first inductee into the LoL Esports Hall of Legends. He became a part-owner of T1 in 2023. And his $1.8m prize total — while leading his own game — puts him 30+ places behind Dota 2 journeymen few outside the scene would recognise.
The lesson: prize money rankings measure one very specific thing. They tell you which games have large crowdfunded prize pools, not which players are wealthy. Faker can retire tomorrow and remain set for life. Several players ahead of him on the prize money table have already done so.
Bugha — $3 Million at Age 16
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On 28 July 2019, a 16-year-old from Pottsgrove, Pennsylvania walked onto the stage at Arthur Ashe Stadium in New York, sat down in front of 19,000 people, and won $3 million. The Fortnite World Cup Solo Finals had a $30m total prize pool — the largest in esports history at the time. Bugha won with a final score that nearly doubled the runner-up’s.
He had qualified from the open online rounds, competing against 40 million players worldwide. Nobody had heard of him. Epic Games had deliberately structured the World Cup to reward solo skill over team play, and Bugha’s hyper-aggressive building style was exactly what the format rewarded. He was named Best Esports Athlete at The Game Awards that year.
At 24 now, Bugha is still competing. He has won the Fortnite Champion Series three times, built a YouTube channel with 4.7 million subscribers and a Twitch following of 5.5 million. The $3m single-tournament payout remains the largest ever awarded to one player in any esport.
Prize Money vs Salary — The Full Picture
Riot Games sets minimum salary floors for players in the LCS, LCK, and LEC. Top-tier LCS and LEC players earn $200,000–$500,000 per year in base salary — before a single tournament cheque. A player who earns $500k in salary over three years but wins only $100k in prizes still earns more than many players ranked above them on the prize money table.
Streaming compounds this further. Popular players on Twitch or YouTube Gaming can earn more in a single month from subscriptions, donations, and ad revenue than some players have earned in tournament prize money across an entire career. The prize money table is a proxy for “which games have large prize pools” far more than it is a measure of player wealth.
Top Esports Nations by Player Earnings
| Nation | Players in Top 100 | Notable Players |
|---|---|---|
| 🇨🇳 China | ~18 | Ame, Faith_bian, y`, fy, Somnus |
| 🇷🇺 Russia | ~12 | Miposhka, Collapse, TORONTOTOKYO |
| 🇺🇸 USA | ~9 | Bugha, UNiVeRsE, ppd, Sneyking |
| 🇫🇮 Finland | ~6 | JerAx, Topson, Matumbaman, Serral |
| 🇩🇰 Denmark | ~5 | N0tail, Cr1t, dupreeh |
| 🇺🇦 Ukraine | ~4 | Yatoro, Mira |
| 🇸🇪 Sweden | ~4 | Zai, s4 |
| 🇰🇷 South Korea | ~3 | Faker, Storm |
| 🇦🇺 Australia | ~2 | ana |
| 🇵🇰 Pakistan | 1 | SumaiL |
Finland’s presence is disproportionate to its population of 5.5 million. JerAx, Topson, Matumbaman, and Serral make it one of the most lucrative esports nations per capita on the planet. Denmark’s success is similarly concentrated — N0tail, Cr1t, and dupreeh are all from a country of 5.9 million. Strong gaming culture, high broadband penetration, and active competitive scenes at youth level explain part of it. The OG dynasty explains the rest.
