What happened to the 16-year-old who suddenly won $3 million at the Fortnite World Cup?

Leksand extended the winning streak beat AIK

At the age of 16, the American Kyle “Bugha” Giersdorf was already taken care of: he took part in the Fortnite World Cup in summer 2019 and won the main prize: a whopping 3 million US dollars. But how did the career of the shooting star go afterwards?

How did Bugha win the $3 million?

  • The Fortnite World Cup took place on a single day, on July 28, 2019 in New York: 100 players had managed to qualify for the Solo World Cup with online tournaments for weeks: Twitch star Ninja consistently failed to qualify at the time and got a little more desperate from week to week.
  • The winner of the World Cup was determined in 6 rounds in which all 100 candidates competed against each other. Bugha was able to win the 1st game and get 9 kills – in the 5 other games he didn’t win, but collected a lot of points because he stayed alive for a long time and made it to the endgame.
  • In the end, Bugha secured 59 points. That put him well ahead of the second player, Psalm, who had picked up just 33 points. Bugha won $3 million in that single day – almost half of which went on taxes, but it was still a staggering sum for the 16-year-old.
  • Fortnite: The time a black hole swallowed you all

    There has never been so much prize money at Fortnite

    Did he keep winning money after that? In his further career, after 2019, Bugha continued to be successful in Fortnite and got good rankings. But he never came close to his huge profit from 2019 again, because Fortnite was no longer about such high sums as at the World Cup. This was a unique experience (via esportearnings):

  • In 2019, Bugha won $3.07 million, including the Fortnite World Cup
  • In 2020 it was $94,020
  • In 2021 it was $171,450
  • In 2022, Bugha won $154,675
  • Bugha won $3 million at the World Cup. In the 4 years around it was “only” $492,986 in prize money.

    Why was there never again as much money as for Bugha? After the Fortnite World Cup, Epic never hosted such a big event for so much prize money, instead they fragmented e-sports, took it online and ran many smaller prize money tournaments throughout the year.

    Epic Games itself cited “Covid” as the reason why the World Cup was no longer played live on site.

    In fact, the World Cup also proved to be a structural problem for Fortnite, for a year everything revolved around this one day in July. The hype was relatively high before and during the World Cup. After the World Cup was played, however, interest in Fortnite dropped significantly.

    That was obviously a problem for Epic Games, because Epic Games presumably wants Fortnite to be relevant especially at Christmas, when the wallet is loose and the kids are buying new skins en masse. A spike in Fortnite interest in July and a dip in interest thereafter wasn’t really in the spirit of Epic Games. But the World Cup caused just such a drop in interest.

    Fortnite: Twitch Viewership Plunges – Is It Just Tfue and Ninja?

    In retrospect, there were great doubts as to whether everything went “clean” at the World Cup

    This could be the real reason there was never another World Cup like this: In addition, there were considerable doubts about the sporting integrity of the event in retrospect: Many of those who made big gains at the World Cup had trained with a 19-year-old coach, Hugh Gilmour, also known as Destinyjesus. His “protégés” had won $17 million out of $30 million at the World Cup.

    There was a serious suspicion that the coaching mainly consisted of the coach’s players making agreements about where they should land on the map and what their routes should look like from there. One goal could be that the coach’s players avoid each other for as long as possible at the Fortnite World Cup and thus increase their chances of winning.

    Because in Fortnite, those who survive for a long time and don’t waste their resources fighting top players of the same strength have the best chance of winning. At the World Cup, therefore, players who played defensively and didn’t enter every fight tended to win, while hot-blooded pistolos got a lot of kills but also dropped out of a round early.

    While it was never really clarified how much manipulation was involved, there is certainly a reason why Epic Games left it at a single World Cup: The “Battle Royale” format is simply too susceptible to manipulation and collusion.

    Streamer Myth hasn’t been as good as Bugha in Fortnite for a long time – but has built a remarkable career as a streamer on Fortnite.

    Bugha makes Twitch Top 50 with Fortnite victory behind him

    How was Bugha doing outside of esports? Like many e-athletes in Fortnite, Bugha is active on Twitch, where he had almost no viewers before the World Cup. Immediately after the World Cup success, however, his numbers increased:

  • In 2018 Bugha had an average of 8 spectators
  • In 2019 there were 8,380 – especially after his World Cup victory, his popularity jumped enormously
  • In 2020 he was able to increase the number of viewers to 12,130 on average
  • The big Fortnite hype was over in 2021: the number of viewers dropped to 7,053
  • In 2022 he still had 3,384 spectators
  • Bugha got his own skin in Fortnite.

    Bugha making the most of his moment in glory – is the clean man of Fortnite

    How was he after the win? Bugha is a very good Fortnite player and a nice young man, but is not now suspected of being insanely entertaining or having “star potential” like other Fortnite-era Twitch streamers.

    The most successful streamers from this era like Tfue, Pokimane, Ninja, Nickmercs, TimTheTatman or Myth are unique in their own way, entertaining and retaining viewers.

    These streamers have used Fortnite to build careers on Twitch and have been relevant for years. Some, like TimTheTatman and Myth, have cashed their success in a lucrative YouTube deal. Bugha doesn’t quite play in the league.

    However, Bugha managed to get quite a bit out of his moment in glory at the Fortnite World Cup. So he got his own skin in Fortnite from Epic in mid-2021. He entered into promotional deals with a clothing brand and a bank.

    What happened to the 15-year-old who his mom took out of school so he could spend more time in Fortnite?

    Bugha is loyal to Fortnite to this day – but his team is giving up

    Unlike other well-known Fortnite players like Benjyfishy, ​​Ninja or Tfue, who have all turned their backs on Fortnite over the years, Bugha never did and to this day almost exclusively shows Fortnite on his Twitch channel.

    However, Bugha also notices that something is getting out of Fortnite. At Christmas 2022, his Fortnite team Sentinels said goodbye to e-sports in Fortnite and the 19-year-old has to look for a new team.

    Bugha thanks the team for the “era” and this “memorable chapter of his career” – but is also looking forward to starting a new chapter in 2023.

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    It’s safe to say that Bugha made the most of his opportunities and huge win in 2019:

    Bugha is scandal-free, a “clean man” compared to other Fortnite players and Twitch streamers like young Clix.

    When Epic Games introduced Bugha and his family in a home story in 2019, the world of Bugha and his family looked so sparkling clean and perfect that many fans were jealous of how close the family was and how great it all was.

    Fortnite tells about the world champion – kids are jealous because of their parents

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