VALORANT Masters Bangkok 2026 drew 4.3 million peak concurrent viewers. That is not a typo. Over four million people watched a single esports event at the same time.
For context, that number rivals major traditional sporting events. It surpasses the average viewership of many NBA playoff games and MLB World Series broadcasts. The audience skews young, tech-savvy, and highly engaged. These are exactly the consumers that small businesses struggle to reach through traditional advertising.
Esports sponsorship is no longer a niche opportunity reserved for Fortune 500 brands. In fact, regional teams, streamers, and tournament organizers are actively seeking business partners at every budget level. But this space comes with legal complexity that most small business owners have never encountered. Get it wrong and you can lose your investment. Get it right and you can build real brand equity with one of the fastest-growing audiences in entertainment.
Here is what you need to know.

How Esports Sponsorship Agreements Are Structured
A gaming sponsorship agreement is a contract between your business and an esports entity: a team, a tournament organizer, a streamer, or a game publisher. Your business provides money, products, or services. In return, the esports entity provides visibility, branding opportunities, and audience access.
The Key Elements Every Agreement Needs
Scope of sponsorship. Define exactly what you are sponsoring. A full season? A single tournament? A set number of streaming hours per month? Specificity here prevents disputes later.
Deliverables. Spell out what the esports entity will do for you. Logo placement on jerseys, shoutouts during streams, branded social media content, and booth space at live events are all common deliverables. Avoid vague language like “reasonable promotion.” Instead, require specific numbers, timelines, and platforms.
Payment terms. Outline the total amount, payment schedule, and any performance bonuses. If your deal includes a bonus for viewership milestones, define the calculation method clearly upfront.
Term and termination. Specify how long the deal runs, what constitutes a breach, and how either party can exit early. These clauses protect you from being locked into underperforming partnerships.
Representations and warranties. The esports entity should confirm they have the authority to offer the rights they are selling. Your business should confirm that any products or materials you provide comply with applicable laws.
Many small business owners rely on generic templates for these agreements. Unfortunately, that approach carries real risk. Esports sponsorship contracts include elements that standard business contracts simply do not address. A sponsorship attorney who understands the gaming industry can negotiate terms that genuinely protect your investment.
Intellectual Property Rights in Esports Sponsorship
This is where confusion most commonly costs small business owners money.
When you sponsor an esports team, you are not buying unlimited rights to their brand. Esports intellectual property includes team names, logos, player likenesses, game footage, and social media content. Your agreement must specify exactly which rights you receive and how you can use them.
A Common and Expensive Mistake
A small business sponsors a VALORANT team and assumes they can use the team’s logo and player photos in their own marketing. They run social media ads featuring these elements and start driving traffic. Then a cease-and-desist letter arrives because the agreement only granted the right to appear on the team’s channels, not to use the team’s IP in the sponsor’s own advertising.
To avoid this, your agreement should address three things. First, define which specific logos, images, names, and content you can use. Second, list every permitted use: your website, paid advertisements, product packaging, retail locations. Third, clarify whether your IP license expires when the sponsorship ends or whether you retain limited rights for a wind-down period.
The Game Publisher Layer
There is an additional layer most sponsors overlook. Riot Games owns VALORANT and maintains strict guidelines about how game assets and branding appear in commercial contexts. Consequently, sponsoring a team does not grant you rights to Riot’s intellectual property. Depending on your marketing plans, you may need separate permission from the publisher.
Think of it like sponsoring a band that performs at a venue. Sponsoring the band gives you no right to use the venue’s name or the songs the band plays if a record label owns those songs. Each layer of IP has its own owner and its own rules.
Negotiating Exclusivity Clauses and Naming Rights
Why Exclusivity Matters and How to Draft It
Exclusivity means your business is the only sponsor in your product category associated with a particular team, player, or event. Without it, a direct competitor could sponsor the same team next month and dilute the association you have built.
Effective exclusivity clauses require precision. Therefore, define the category narrowly enough to protect your competitive position. “Beverages” is too broad if you sell energy drinks. “Energy drinks” is better. You may also want to consider adjacent categories like “performance supplements” or “hydration products” depending on your competitive landscape.
Also specify the scope: does exclusivity cover just team-level partnerships, or does it extend to individual players’ personal endorsement deals? One business paid a premium for category exclusivity with a team, only to find that individual players could still sign competing personal deals. The team honored the contract because the exclusivity clause only covered team-level arrangements. More careful drafting would have prevented that outcome.
Naming Rights Agreements
Naming rights deals in esports involve putting your company’s name on a team’s training facility, a tournament series, or the team name itself. These agreements require careful attention to several issues. What happens to the naming rights if the team rebrands or folds? Additionally, what quality control standards govern how your brand name appears? Finally, what termination triggers allow you to exit if your brand becomes associated with controversy?
Morality clauses and reputation protection provisions are essential in naming rights agreements. Without them, you may have no legal basis to remove your branding if a key player becomes involved in a public scandal. In traditional sports, these provisions are standard. In esports, however, they still require deliberate negotiation.
Protecting Your Investment: What Small Business Owners Need to Know
Due Diligence Before Signing
Not every esports organization is financially stable. Some teams fold mid-season, leaving sponsors without deliverables and without practical recourse. As a result, before signing, request financial disclosures, verify the organization’s track record, and confirm they hold the rights to offer what they are promising.
Get Everything in Writing
The esports industry moves fast and its culture is informal. Handshake agreements, verbal promises, and email chains are common. Do not rely on any of them. A written contract protects your investment and provides your only real recourse if something goes wrong.
Require Measurement and Reporting
Your agreement should require the esports entity to deliver data on impressions, engagement rates, and any other relevant metrics. Without reporting obligations in the contract, you cannot evaluate whether the sponsorship delivers value.
FTC Compliance Obligations
The FTC requires sponsored content disclosures in esports just as in any other advertising context. If a streamer or team promotes your product, the sponsorship must be clearly disclosed. Furthermore, your agreement should require the sponsored party to comply with all applicable advertising regulations. Failure to do so can expose both parties to regulatory scrutiny.
Plan for Disputes
Your contract should specify the dispute resolution process, governing law, and jurisdiction. Arbitration and mediation clauses provide faster and less expensive resolution than litigation. Build this into the agreement from the start rather than negotiating it after a conflict arises.
Why Carbon Law Group Is the Right Partner for Your Esports Sponsorship
The VALORANT Masters Bangkok 2026 viewership numbers confirm that this industry is not slowing down. Small businesses that enter the esports space now with the right legal foundation can build brand equity with an audience that will only become more valuable.
At Carbon Law Group, we help small businesses draft, review, and negotiate gaming sponsorship agreements that protect their interests. We advise on IP rights, so you know exactly what you can use and what requires additional authorization. Moreover, we structure exclusivity clauses and naming rights agreements that deliver real competitive value. And we ensure your marketing activities comply with FTC guidelines and applicable advertising regulations.
Contact Carbon Law Group today to schedule a consultation. Your esports sponsorship investment deserves the same legal protection you would bring to any other major business partnership.
Take the next step book your consultation today, and safeguard your brand’s future.
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