IEM Cologne Stage 1 Round 4 Matchups Locked as Elimination Peaks
Round 4 matchups are locked at IEM Cologne Major Stage 1, with the field now sorted into 3–1, 2–2, and 1–3 records heading into the most consequential day of the Swiss phase. Teams carrying a 1–3 record face immediate elimination from the $1,250,000 Major, while 3–1 sides are one win from securing Stage 2 entry – three wins advance, three losses exit, no exceptions.
Stage 1 Round Results Recap
The opening three rounds at the Palladium in Cologne have produced a sharply sorted bracket. Full results through Round 3 are tracked in our Stage 1 Round 3 matchups update, but the headline outcomes shaping Round 4 are as follows.
- Three rounds of Swiss play have elevated several sides to 3–1, placing them one win from a confirmed Stage 2 berth.
- A cluster of teams sits at 2–2, meaning any further loss ends their Major run entirely.
- Teams at 1–3 enter Round 4 in a straight elimination best-of-three – win or go home.
The Swiss format’s BO3 threshold kicks in for all advancement and elimination matches from this point, shifting the pressure from map-level volatility to full series execution. Any team that needed three rounds to find their rhythm has no margin left.
Bracket Status: Who’s Safe, Who’s Surviving, Who’s In Danger
3–1 (one win from advancing): Teams in this group control their own Stage 2 destiny – a single series win confirms a place in the 16-team pool opening June 6.
2–2 (must-win territory): Every team at this record is one loss from elimination. The Swiss system is unforgiving at this stage; there is no lower bracket to fall into, only an exit from Cologne entirely.
1–3 (elimination match): Teams here play a straight survival match. A loss ends their IEM Cologne Major campaign before Stage 2 begins. The 2–2 versus 1–3 pairings are the sharpest elimination scenarios of the tournament so far, with teams on both sides of those matchups facing the same consequence.
Round 4 Matchups Confirmed
All Round 4 pairings are now set, matching teams by record in standard Swiss fashion. Advancement matches pit 3–1 sides against each other, while elimination matches pair the 1–3 teams in BO3 series where the loser exits the Major.
- 3–1 vs. 3–1 matchups – winner advances to Stage 2, loser drops to 3–2 and exits
- 2–2 vs. 2–2 matchups – winner survives to Round 5, loser is eliminated
- 1–3 vs. 1–3 matchups – straight elimination best-of-threes, loser exits the Major
All advancement and elimination matches at this stage are contested as best-of-threes, meaning a single map advantage no longer decides a team’s Major fate – series depth and in-match adjustments become the defining factor. The 2–2 bracket in particular carries the sharpest collective weight, with multiple seeded sides fighting to stay alive.
Tournament Context and Forward Look
IEM Cologne 2026 is the first Cologne event to carry full Major status in the CS2 era, marking Cologne’s fourth CS Major overall and its first under the Valve Major banner – a distinction that makes every elimination match here count toward Major history, not just circuit points. The prize pool structure rewards survival heavily: $500,000 goes to the champion, with shares scaling down to $20,000 for 12th–16th place finishers.
Teams advancing through Round 4 roll directly into Stage 2’s Swiss pool on June 6, before Stage 3 opens June 11 and the LANXESS Arena playoffs run June 18–21. For context on what awaits the survivors, our coverage of BetBoom and GamerLegion’s Stage 2 decider outlines the format and stakes teams will face next. ESL’s broader CS2 circuit investment – including the elevated IEM China prize pool – underlines how performance at Cologne carries weight across the full season calendar.
Round 4 decides which eight teams make Stage 2 and which eight leave the Palladium without a playoff path – the teams at 1–3 have one series left to save their Major, and the teams at 2–2 are one loss from joining them on the exit list.