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Live esports scores

Follow esports at work

Sport Spreadsheet follows live esports — League of Legends, Counter-Strike 2, Dota 2 and Valorant — as match scores and series state inside a spreadsheet. The audience already works at a screen, and a bracket of results reads as plain data.

Esports is the sport built for the desk: the audience is already at a computer, and the biggest events — Worlds, the Majors, The International, Champions — run for days across global time zones, landing squarely in working hours. Here's how to follow the brackets from your desk without a stream giving you away.

Why esports is hard to follow at work

The big tournaments are long, daytime, international affairs — a group stage can run all week — so play routinely overlaps your workday wherever you are. A live esports broadcast is a bright, busy stream that's obvious on a shared screen; a table of match results is not.

Esports we cover

CompetitionRegionCoverage
League of LegendsInternationalBeta
Counter-Strike 2InternationalBeta
Dota 2InternationalBeta
ValorantInternationalBeta

What you can follow

Live match scores and series state across League of Legends, Counter-Strike 2, Dota 2 and Valorant, laid out as rows in the grid rather than a video feed. (Esports data is provided by PandaScore; a site admin enables it with a key — see the setup guide.)

Guides by competition

Questions

Which esports can I follow at work?
League of Legends, Counter-Strike 2, Dota 2 and Valorant — live match scores and series state, each as a sheet tab that reads as ordinary data.
Why does esports suit a spreadsheet disguise so well?
The audience already works at a computer, and a bracket of match results is a table of numbers to begin with — so following a tournament looks exactly like watching a dashboard.

Open the spreadsheet

Today's esports fixtures and the live table are one quiet tab away. Free, instant, no account.

Follow Esports at Work — Live LoL, CS2, Dota 2 & Valorant Scores · Sport Spreadsheet