To date, Fortnite has distributed $20M USD of its promised $100M prize pool.

The biggest event to date has been the Fall Skirmish, reaching $10M in prize money over six weeks.

Including all known prize announcements, Epic Games still has $20M to put toward unannounced events in 2019.

In May 2018, Epic Games announced that Fortnite was going to distribute a massive $100M esports prize pool over the 2018-2019 season of activities. At the time, there was little more to the announcement than a very large dollar value. Now, as we learn of the $30M Fortnite World Cup, we can delve into the numbers so far to discover how the prizes have been distributed to date and how Epic Games will hit that $100M number this year.

The ongoing series of esports events began (some suggest awkwardly) with the Summer Skirmish, an eight-week event that ran from July to September 2018. According to Esports Earnings data records, the Summer Skirmish prize pool ran to a total of just over $8M. Weekly prize pools increased steadily until there were $1M in prizes each week split across US and European competitions. The final week of the competition gave away over $1.6M in prize money.

The six week Fall Skirmish that followed finished with a total prize pool of over $10M. This was boosted by a $4M prize pool directed toward ‘Clubs’ of players, with a points system deciding which club would win and distribute the prize money through its team.

Aside from these two long-running Skirmish events, the prize pools have been much smaller in all other events to date.

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The Winter Royale event had $1M in prize money, the recent Secret Skirmish offered $500K, while the Australian Open Summer Smash in Australia delivered $285K in total prize money. A further $500K will head to the ESL event in Katowice.

In total, Fortnite has given away only a little more than $20M over eight months of competitions. ‘Only’ being relative to its $100M target. In all-time esports standings, according to Esports Earnings, Fortnite now sits at number five in prize money distribution. After the World Cup event, it will move up to fourth, passing StarCraft II . By the end of its $100M year, Fortnite will move to second place behind Dota 2 .

The World Cup event will see $30M in prize money during the main event, with a further $10M in weekly $1M prizes during the qualifier competitions. This adds a further $40M to the total, taking Fortnite’s total prize pool to $60M.

As part of the World Cup announcement, Epic Games also stated the company will hold weekly $1M tournaments until the end of the year. No detail has been offered on exactly when these competitions will begin, but if we calculate weekly competitions from the end of the World Cup on July 26-28 this year, we could see around 20 weekly $1M prizes offered through to the end of 2019.

Credit: Epic Games

Based on all of these prize pools, whether already distributed or publicly announced by Epic Games, we arrive at a total of $80M in Fortnite prize money. This leaves a further $20M in unannounced prize money for Epic to meet its promise of $100M by the end of 2019.

To date, Dota’s The International holds the top five slots on the all-time chart for single tournament prize pools. This is followed by League of Legends World Championships from the past three years. Ninth place? That’s the Club Standings prize from Fortnite’s Fall Skirmish.

With the announcement of the Fortnite World Cup event, Epic is set to trump Dota 2’s The International as the largest single prize pool in esports history. But it seems Fortnite is still keeping an impressive sum available to throw a few more significant tournaments during the second half of 2019.