Power Esports Conference

Power Esports Conference
AbbreviationPEC
Formation2024
Websitepec.leagueos.gg

The Power Esports Conference (PEC) is a collegiate esports scheduling alliance comprising nine NCAA Division I FBS universities.[1] The conference organizes regular-season competition, shared rulesets, and a centralized postseason culminating in a double-elimination championship event at the HyperX Esports Arena in Las Vegas.

Current members include Boise State, Syracuse, Michigan State, Ohio State, Kansas, Nebraska, Baylor, Minnesota, and Utah.[1] Oklahoma and USC are former members.

History

Formation (2024)

The Power Esports Conference was publicly announced in August 2024, with founding institutions unveiling coordinated statements through social media and university websites.[2] The inaugural membership featured:

The conference also confirmed that its first national championship would take place at the HyperX Esports Arena in Las Vegas. Supported titles in the inaugural season included Overwatch 2, VALORANT, Rocket League, and Super Smash Bros. Ultimate.[2]

Expansion (2025)

Ahead of the 2025–26 season, Oklahoma and USC withdrew from the league. In August 2025, the PEC announced the addition of Baylor University, the University of Minnesota, and the University of Utah, bringing membership to nine teams.[3]

Membership

Institution Location Joined Left Notes
Syracuse University Syracuse, New York 2024 Founding member
Michigan State University East Lansing, Michigan 2024 Founding member
Boise State University Boise, Idaho 2024 Founding member
Ohio State University Columbus, Ohio 2024 Founding member
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas 2024 Founding member
University of Nebraska Lincoln, Nebraska 2024 Founding member
Baylor University Waco, Texas 2025 Added for 2025–26 season[3]
University of Minnesota Minneapolis, Minnesota 2025 Added for 2025–26 season[3]
University of Utah Salt Lake City, Utah 2025 Added for 2025–26 season[3]
University of Oklahoma Norman, Oklahoma 2024 2025 Withdrew before 2025–26 season[3]
University of Southern California Los Angeles, California 2024 2025 Withdrew before 2025–26 season[3]
Title Publisher First season sponsored
Overwatch 2 Blizzard Entertainment 2024–25
VALORANT Riot Games 2024–25
Rocket League Psyonix 2024–25
Super Smash Bros. Ultimate Nintendo 2024–25

Format

Regular season

PEC competition consists of a two-part round robin:

  • A fall round robin, in which each team plays every conference opponent once.
  • A spring round robin, repeating the matchups with mirrored hosting designations.

Standings from both halves determine postseason seeding.[1]

Postseason

All conference members qualify for the PEC National Championship in Las Vegas. The event uses a double-elimination LAN format, with match operations administered by the conference in partnership with LeagueOS.[1]

Season summaries

2024–25 season

The inaugural season produced four championship matchups across the supported titles. Boise State and Michigan State each secured two national championships:

  • Boise State – Rocket League, Overwatch 2
  • Michigan State – Super Smash Bros. Ultimate, VALORANT

Syracuse reached the Overwatch 2 grand finals, while Nebraska finished runner-up in Super Smash Bros. Ultimate.

Award Winner
Director of the Year Joey Gawrysiak, Syracuse
Program of the Year Michigan State
Rocket League Coach of the Year Payton Wilkin, Boise State
Valorant Coach of the Year Alexander Mills, Michigan State
Overwatch Coach of the Year Doc Haskell, Boise State
Super Smash Bros Coach of the Year Grayson Harding, Michigan State
Rocket League Player of the Year Cade Hall, Boise State
Valorant Player of the Year Maxwell Humes, Michigan State
Overwatch Player of the Year Johnathan Foraker, Boise State
Super Smash Bros Player of the Year Adam Ismaili-Alaoui, Michigan State


2025–26 season

The 2025–26 season introduced the PEC Kickoff Classic presented by Spectrum Industries, held on 20 September 2025 at the Syracuse Esports Arena. The Rocket League invitational featured four programs, with Boise State defeating Michigan State in the championship match.[3]

The PEC also launched its first official website, pec.leagueos.gg, built and hosted by LeagueOS and updated jointly by the member institutions.[1]

Championships

Season Game title Champion Runner-up Location
2024–25 Overwatch 2 Boise State Syracuse Las Vegas, Nevada (HyperX Esports Arena)
2024–25 Rocket League Boise State Michigan State Las Vegas, Nevada (HyperX Esports Arena)
2024–25 VALORANT Michigan State Boise State Las Vegas, Nevada (HyperX Esports Arena)
2024–25 Super Smash Bros. Ultimate Michigan State Nebraska Las Vegas, Nevada (HyperX Esports Arena)
2025–26 TBA Las Vegas, Nevada (HyperX Esports Arena)

Branding

The conference’s official colors are blue (#0047ab) and white (#FFFFFF). Its official abbreviation is PEC. The league’s shield-style logo is used across broadcast, social media, and website branding.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e "Power Esports Conference". Power Esports Conference. LeagueOS.
  2. ^ a b "Boise State Esports joins Power Esports Conference". Boise State Esports. Boise State University. 3 September 2024.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g "Power Esports Conference expansion announcement". X (formerly Twitter). Power Esports Conference.