Made in Brazil (esports)

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Made in Brazil
Made In Brazil logo.png
Short nameMIBR, MiBR, mibr
GameCounter-Strike: Global Offensive
Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six: Siege
VALORANT
Founded1 March 2003 (2003-03-01)
LocationRio de Janeiro, Brazil
Head coachAlessandro "Apoka" Marcucci (Counter-Strike: Global Offensive)
Matheus "Budega" Figueiredo (Rainbow Six Siege)
Jordan "stk" Nunes (VALORANT)
ManagerGuilherme "Guille" Scalfi (Rainbow Six Siege)
PartnersItaú
Redragon



1xBet
Monster Energy
Parent groupImmortals Gaming Club
Websitewww.mibr.gg Edit this at Wikidata

Made in Brazil (MIBR) is a professional esports organization with players competing in Counter-Strike: Global Offensive, Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six: Siege and VALORANT. It was a member of the G7 Teams. MIBR was founded on March 1, 2003, in the city of Rio de Janeiro, when the Brazilian businessman Paulo Velloso decided to invest in his son's dream. The organization was dissolved in 2012, but announced it was making a return in March 2016, returning to active play years later in June 2018.[1]

History[]

In January 2018, the MIBR brand was acquired by Immortals.[2] In June of the same year, the roster of MIBR was reformed with the core members of the Luminosity Gaming/SK Gaming roster that won the MLG Columbus Major 2016 and ESL One Cologne 2016. On August 3, 2019, the Immortals Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six: Siege lineup was transferred to the MIBR name days before the Six Major Raleigh 2019.[3]

In September 2020, CSGO coach Ricardo "dead" Sinigaglia was banned from nearly all notable tournaments (those organized by ESL, DreamHack, BLAST Premier, Eden Esports, and Beyond The Summit) following a ban by the Esports Integrity Commission (ESIC) for abusing a bug allowing him to get an advantage over a competing team as a coach.[4][5][6] Later that month, dead, Fernando "fer" Alvarenga, and Epitácio "TACO" de Melo were removed by the organization following terrible results in the past eight months and especially in the past two months after traveling to Serbia from the United States for a bootcamp in Europe during the COVID-19 pandemic. The same day, Gabriel "FalleN" Toledo announced his self-benching from the active MIBR lineup after stating his dissatisfaction with the organization's decision to remove fer and TACO. Vito "kNgV-" Giuseppe also said he "did not agree with the [removal of fer and TACO]." This left only kNgV and trk remaining on the active lineup, the two newest members of the team.

Rosters[]

Counter Strike: Global Offensive division[]

MIBR Counter-Strike: Global Offensive roster
Players Coaches
Handle Name Nationality
chelo  Cespedes, Marcelo   Brazil 
boltz  Prass, Ricardo   Brazil 
exit  Lacerda, Raphael   Brazil 
WOOD7  Cerato, Adriano   Brazil 
Turtle  Anhaia, Matheus   Brazil 
JOTA Substitute player  Willian, Jhonatan   Brazil 
Head coach

Alessandro "Apoka" Marcucci


Legend
  • (I) Inactive
  • (S) Suspended
  • Substitute player Substitute
  • Injured Injury / Illness

Roster updated October 5, 2021.

Rainbow Six Siege division[]

MIBR Rainbow Six Siege roster
Players Coaches
Handle Name Nationality
reduct  Issi, Tassus   Brazil 
Faallz  Moreira, Kaique   Brazil 
LuKid  Sereno, Luca   Brazil 
FelipoX  De Lucia, Felipe   Brazil 
Rappz  Aziz, Enzo   Brazil 
Head coach

Matheus "Budega" Figueiredo


Legend
  • (I) Inactive
  • (S) Suspended
  • Substitute player Substitute
  • Injured Injury / Illness

Roster updated June 5, 2021.

VALORANT division[]

MIBR VALORANT roster
Players Coaches
Handle Name Nationality
gtnziN  Moura, Gustavo   Brazil 
Txddy1  Oliveira, Sérgio   Brazil 
mNdS  Mendes, Rafael   Brazil 
DeNaro  Hipólito, Matheus   Brazil 
jzz  Pedro, João   Brazil 
Head coach

Jordan "stk" Nunes


Legend
  • (I) Inactive
  • (S) Suspended
  • Substitute player Substitute
  • Injured Injury / Illness

Roster updated January 19, 2022.

References[]

  1. ^ "'CS:GO': Lendária organização brasileira, MIBR confirma retorno ao cenário do eSports". ESPN (in Portuguese). Retrieved 25 May 2019.
  2. ^ "Draft5 - O calendário do CS brasileiro". Draft5 (in Brazilian Portuguese). Retrieved 2018-05-03.
  3. ^ "MiBR to extend past CS:GO with brand-new team". Dexerto.com. Retrieved 2019-08-03.
  4. ^ "Esports Integrity Commission statement on exploitation of a bug in CS:GO by team coaches". ESIC. 2020-09-02. Retrieved 2020-09-13.
  5. ^ "dead handed cs_summit ban". HLTV.org. Retrieved 2020-09-14.
  6. ^ "Three separate bans levied against MIBR CS:GO team manager and coach". ESPN.com. 2020-09-02. Retrieved 2020-09-14.

External links[]

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