
Xaxas
21.04.2026
IEM Rio 2026 delivered one of the most deceptive Counter-Strike tournaments in recent memory. On the surface, it looked chaotic. Upsets, shaky favorites, and volatile playoff runs created the perfect storm for risky Pick’ems calls. But when the dust settled, the result was brutally simple. Vitality won everything.
And they did it in dominant fashion.
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Heading into the playoffs, questions surrounded Vitality. They had already lost their streak to Falcons and looked vulnerable against G2 earlier in the event. For many Pick’ems players, this was the moment to look elsewhere and separate from the pack.
That turned out to be the wrong call.
Vitality opened playoffs by dismantling Natus Vincere 2-0. Mirage was a statement. ZywOo posted a staggering 2.53 rating, shutting down every attempt NAVI made to establish control on their T sides. Dust2 followed the same script. Clean, structured Counter-Strike with zero room for comeback.

This was the first reminder that Vitality’s “weakness” was relative. Even when they drop maps, their floor remains higher than almost every team in the world.
The semi-finals reinforced a pattern that defined the entire event.
Vitality faced FURIA, a team fueled by momentum, confidence, and a roaring home crowd. Early rounds suggested another chaotic series, but once Vitality stabilized their CT sides and found rhythm on the T side, the outcome became inevitable. They closed the series 2-0 with control, not flair.

On the other side of the bracket, Spirit shocked Falcons with a dominant 2-0. Falcons had been one of the most hyped teams in the tournament after beating Vitality earlier, but their reliance on individual firepower collapsed against Spirit’s coordinated setups and improved team play.
This result quietly set up the most important storyline of the event. Not Falcons. Not FURIA. But a revitalized Spirit against the most consistent team in CS2.
The grand final was expected to be competitive. Spirit had momentum, depth, and multiple players stepping up. For stretches, they delivered.
But Vitality never lost control.
Mirage was the only map where Spirit looked capable of taking over. They built a late lead and pushed the game to its limit. But one slip in overtime was enough. Vitality punished immediately, with ropz taking over in clutch situations and closing the map.

That moment defined the series.
On Nuke, Spirit started strong with a solid CT half. But a few lost anti-eco rounds flipped the economy and the map. Vitality capitalized without hesitation, showcasing one of the most important CS2 fundamentals. Punish mistakes instantly.

Dust2 was a formality. Vitality took control early and never let Spirit back into the game.

The final scoreline read 3-0. The reality was even more one-sided.
No conversation about this event is complete without ZywOo.
He delivered one of the most dominant playoff performances in recent CS2 history. Across seven playoff maps, he consistently posted elite ratings, averaging well above 1.50 and taking over games at critical moments.

His impact against NAVI set the tone. His consistency against FURIA maintained control. And in the grand final, even when others stepped up, he remained the backbone of every round.
This was his 31st career MVP award.
At this point, it is no longer about peaks. It is about sustained excellence.
With this victory, Vitality secured back-to-back Intel Grand Slams and became the first team in Counter-Strike history to achieve that feat.
They win in different ways. They win close series. They win blowouts. They adapt mid-match, recover from mistakes, and punish every weakness.
From a CS2 Pick’ems perspective, they represent the ultimate safe pick. Not because they look perfect, but because they always find a way to win.
At this level, consistency is everything.
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GoCore Pick’ems guide recap: where predictions missed. The Gocore Pick’ems guide understood the structure of the bracket, but misread the stability of the teams.
Falcons were predicted as tournament winners. Their form and firepower made them look like the most dangerous team in Rio. But once their individuals stopped winning duels, their system collapsed. Spirit exposed that completely in the semi-finals.
FURIA were projected as a finalist based on momentum and crowd advantage. In reality, their reliance on chaotic rounds made them inconsistent in longer series. Vitality shut them down with structure and discipline.
Spirit were labeled as a high-risk pick dependent on donk. That proved outdated. Players like tN1R stepped up, giving the team a balanced approach that carried them to the grand final.
The biggest misread, however, was Vitality. Their dropped maps and loss to Falcons created doubt. But their clutch ability, adaptability, and consistency made them the most reliable Pick’ems choice from start to finish.

The lesson is simple. Choose battles wisely with consistent teams. Take risks only when form clearly supports it.
After the final, apEX said there is no secret. Just hard work and staying one step ahead.

That sounds simple. It is not.
This Vitality roster has now built a case that goes beyond a single tournament or even a single season. Multiple titles, back-to-back Grand Slams, and a level of consistency rarely seen in Counter-Strike.
So the question becomes unavoidable.
Is this the greatest CS2 team of all time?
Or do you still place Astralis’ era above them?
That is where Pick’ems logic meets legacy debates. Numbers, trophies, and dominance all matter. But so does context, competition, and longevity.
Now it is your call.
Xaxas
21.04.2026
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