Made in Brazil

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Made in Brazil
Made In Brazil logo.png
Abbreviation mibr
operator Made in Brazil EE Ltda
Manager BrazilBrazil Paulo Velosso
Headquarters BrazilBrazil Rio de Janeiro
founding year 2003
Teams

Made in Brazil (mibr) is a Brazilian e-sports - Clan , the beginning of the year in 2003 Rio de Janeiro was founded. He was known worldwide primarily for his Counter-Strike 1.6 team, which traveled to Europe and the USA several times a year to train and take part in tournaments. Mibr's greatest success was first place at the 2006 Electronic Sports World Cup , where the team won $ 52,000. He was the most successful South American clan in Counter-Strike 1.6 and a founding member of the G7 teams, which have since been disbanded .

In 2005 the well-known Norwegian Counter-Strike player Ola "elemeNt" Moum played for Made in Brazil after leaving Team NoA . Due to a lack of commitment and frequent trips abroad, which made regular training difficult, he was dismissed after a few months.

In November 2009, Made in Brazil separated from the rest of the players after Raphael "cogu" Camargo had resigned . Although the organization let new players play under their names in the coming months, they could not convince and were fired again. Made in Brazil was finally dissolved in spring 2012. On June 7, 2018, the clan confirmed its return, which took place on June 23, 2018 through the purchase of the brand by Immortals and the takeover of the SK Gaming team .

Main achievements in Counter-Strike

date space competition Prize money Roster
Dec 2003 5. CPL winter 2003 00$ 6,000 BrazilBrazilEduardo "Corassa" Corassa Eduardo "Eduzin" Chagas Carlos "KIKO" Segal Rafael "pava" Pavanelli Rafael "Pred" Velloso
BrazilBrazil
BrazilBrazil
BrazilBrazil
BrazilBrazil
May 2005 1. CPL Brazil 2005 0$ 12,000 BrazilBrazil Raphael "cogu" Camargo Carlos "KIKO" Segal Rafael "pava" Pavanelli Rafael "Pred" Velloso Marcus "xed" Pais
BrazilBrazil
BrazilBrazil
BrazilBrazil
BrazilBrazil
July 2006 1. ESWC 2006 0$ 52,000 BrazilBrazil Bruno "bruno" Ono Raphael "cogu" Camargo Lincoln "fnx" Lau Carlos "KIKO" Segal Renato "nak" Nakano
BrazilBrazil
BrazilBrazil
BrazilBrazil
BrazilBrazil
Feb 2007 1. shgOpen 2007 120,000 DDK BrazilBrazil Bruno "bit" Lima Bruno "bruno" Ono Raphael "cogu" Camargo Lincoln "fnx" Lau Renato "nak" Nakano
BrazilBrazil
BrazilBrazil
BrazilBrazil
BrazilBrazil
June 2007 2. GameGune 2007 00€ 6,000
Dec 2007 1. DreamHack Winter 2007 110,000 SEK BrazilBrazil Bruno "bit" Lima Thiago "btt" Monteiro Olavo "chucky" Napoleão Lincoln "fnx" Lau Wellington "ton" Caruso
BrazilBrazil
BrazilBrazil
BrazilBrazil
BrazilBrazil
June 2008 1. GameGune 2008 0$ 12,000 BrazilBrazil Bruno "bit" Lima Thiago "btt" Monteiro Olavo "chucky" Napoleão Norberto "Lance" location Wellington "ton" Caruso
BrazilBrazil
BrazilBrazil
BrazilBrazil
BrazilBrazil
Oct 2008 2. EM III - Los Angeles 0$ 10,000 BrazilBrazil Bruno "bit" Lima Thiago "btt" Monteiro Raphael "cogu" Camargo Lincoln "fnx" Lau Renato "nak" Nakano
BrazilBrazil
BrazilBrazil
BrazilBrazil
BrazilBrazil
Oct 2008 3. EM III - Montreal 00$ 6,000
Nov 2008 1. EM III - American Finals 0$ 25,000
May 2019 1. Esports Championship Series Season 7 - North America $ 24,000
Nov 2019 3rd - 4th CS: GO Asia Championships 2019 $ 50,000
Dec 2019 5th - 6th cs_summit # 5 $ 1,500+

Current team members

Counter-Strike: Global Offensive

Alias Surname role
TACO Epitacio de Melo Rifler
kNgV- Vito Giuseppe Rifler
meyern Ignacio Meyer Rifler
BrazilBrazil TrapN Gabriel Toledo AWPer, in-game leader
BrazilBrazil fer Fernando Alvarenga Rifler (entry fragger / lurker)
BrazilBrazil dead Ricardo Sinigaglia Team manager
FinlandFinland lurppis Tomi Kovanen General manager

Individual evidence

  1. Made in Brazil Esportes Eletrônicos Ltda
  2. cogu Announces retirement. hltv.org, November 23, 2009, accessed July 31, 2015 .
  3. Made in Brazil release team. hltv.org, November 25, 2009, accessed July 31, 2015 .
  4. mibr close doors. hltv.org, March 14, 2012, accessed on July 31, 2015 .
  5. Luis Mira: Immortals confirm MIBR acquisition; unveil ex-SK roster. hltv.org, June 23, 2018, accessed on July 15, 2018 .
  6. CPL Pentium® 4 Processor Winter 2003 Championship (Counter-Strike) esportsearnings.com
  7. 2005 CPL World Tour Stop Brazil (Counter-Strike) esportsearnings.com
  8. ^ Electronic Sports World Cup 2006 (Counter-Strike) esportsearnings.com
  9. shgOpen 2007 (Counter-Strike) esportsearnings.com
  10. ^ Euskal Encounter's GameGune 2007 (Counter-Strike) esportsearnings.com
  11. DreamHack Winter 2007 (Counter-Strike) esportsearnings.com
  12. ^ Euskal Encounter's GameGune 2008 (Counter-Strike) esportsearnings.com
  13. Extreme Masters Season III - Global Challenge: Los Angeles (Counter-Strike) esportsearnings.com
  14. Extreme Masters Season III - Global Challenge: Montreal (Counter-Strike) esportsearnings.com
  15. Extreme Masters Season III - American Championship Finals (Counter-Strike) esportsearnings.com
  16. MIBR. Accessed December 2, 2019 .
  17. CS: GO Asia Championships 2019 - Liquipedia Counter-Strike Wiki. Retrieved December 9, 2019 .
  18. Freaks 4U Gaming GmbH freaks4u.com: Coverage: cs_summit # 5 «99Damage.de - CS: GO. Retrieved December 16, 2019 .