James White, the creator of Flesh and Blood, announced the launch of the Flesh and Blood World Tour during his keynote presentation last weekend in Osaka, Japan for the game’s third World Championship. Full details for the yearlong World Tour are now available, including prizing for top finishers and point breakdowns for each relevant event type.
The Flesh and Blood World Tour is the name for the organized play circuit for the quickly growing hit Trading Card Game. It encompasses the more than 130 events taking place in 2025 spanning World Championships, Pro Tours, Callings, Battle Hardened events and National Championships and awards $1.5 Million across those tournaments. The World Tour is also introducing the first Player of the Year race for the game, which will award prize money for the top three finishers in each of Flesh and Blood’s three regions: North and South America, Europe, and APAC.
Players will earn World Tour Points for top finishes in the five above-mentioned event types. When the season ends at the 2025 World Championship, which will take place in the United States, the player with the most points will be named the Player of the Year and take home $25,000 of the $100,000 Player of the Year prize pool. The top finishers in the other two regions where the POY didn’t come from will earn $15,000 each. The second-place finishers in each region will get $10,000 each, and third-place finishers receive $5,000 each.
The breakdown for how points are awarded per event can be seen below:
World Championship
- 1st place — 32 World Tour Points
- 2nd place — 28 World Tour Points
- 3rd-4th place — 24 World Tour Points
- 5th-8th place — 20 World Tour Points
- 9th-16th place — 16 World Tour Points
- 17th-24th place — 12 World Tour Points
- 17th-24th place — 6 World Tour Points
Pro Tour
- 1st place — 28 World Tour Points
- 2nd place — 25 World Tour Points
- 3rd-4th place — 21 World Tour Points
- 5th-8th place — 18 World Tour Points
- 9th-16th place — 14 World Tour Points
- 17th-24th place — 10 World Tour Points
- 17th-24th place — 5 World Tour Points
Calling
- 1st place — 16 World Tour Points
- 2nd place — 14 World Tour Points
- 3rd-4th place — 12 World Tour Points
- 5th-8th place — 10 World Tour Points
- 9th-16th place — 8 World Tour Points
- 17th-24th place — 6 World Tour Points
- 17th-24th place — 3 World Tour Points
Nationals (More Than 128 Players)
- 1st place — 16 World Tour Points
- 2nd place — 14 World Tour Points
- 3rd-4th place — 12 World Tour Points
- 5th-8th place — 10 World Tour Points
- 9th-16th place — 8 World Tour Points
- 17th-24th place — 6 World Tour Points
- 17th-24th place — 3 World Tour Points
Nationals (65-128 Players)
- 1st place — 12 World Tour Points
- 2nd place — 11 World Tour Points
- 3rd-4th place — 9 World Tour Points
- 5th-8th place — 8 World Tour Points
- 9th-16th place — 6 World Tour Points
- 17th-24th place — 4 World Tour Points
- 17th-24th place — 2 World Tour Points
Nationals (Less Than Or Exactly 64 Players)
- 1st place — 9 World Tour Points
- 2nd place — 8 World Tour Points
- 3rd-4th place — 7 World Tour Points
- 5th-8th place — 6 World Tour Points
- 9th-16th place — 4 World Tour Points
- 17th-24th place — 3 World Tour Points
- 17th-24th place — 1 World Tour Points
Battle Hardened (96 Or More Players)
- 1st place — 4 World Tour Points
- 2nd-8th place — 2 World Tour Points
- 9th-16th place — 1 World Tour Points
Battle Hardened (Under 96 Players)
- 1st place — 2 World Tour Points
- 2nd-16th place — 1 World Tour Points
The Player of the Year race and the accrual of World Tour Points begins this weekend with the Battle Hardened event in Hiroshima, Japan.
Read the official announcement from Legend Story Studios.