Fnatic has been at the forefront of esports since its founding in 2004, building championship-winning rosters across League of Legends, Valorant, and Counter-Strike. The London-based organization has also developed one of the most sophisticated approaches to merchandise in the industry, thanks in large part to its ongoing partnership with Fulllife, the French gaming lifestyle brand that handles Fnatic’s apparel design and production. Together, they have established a tiered jersey system that gives fans multiple options depending on the competitive moment, and the 2025 Championships Kit represents the pinnacle of that approach.
Crafted specifically for Valorant Champions Paris 2025, the Championships Kit carries the tagline “Born in London, refined in Berlin, to dominate in Paris”, a phrase that traces Fnatic’s journey through European competitive gaming and culminates at the sport’s biggest stage.
Fnatic’s Three-Tier Jersey System
One of the things that sets Fnatic apart from other esports organizations is the deliberate three-tier structure to its jersey lineup. Understanding this hierarchy helps fans identify where the Championships Kit fits:
Pro Jersey (EUR 69.99) serves as the standard competition jersey worn throughout the regular season. It is the most accessible option and features Fnatic’s core branding with current sponsor placements. This is the jersey you see on stage at league play events and qualifiers.
The Championships Kit is a step above, designed exclusively for major tournament appearances. It features distinct design elements that set it apart from the regular Pro Jersey, including unique colorways, refined paneling, and event-specific branding that ties the garment to a particular championship. The 2025 edition is tailored to Champions Paris.
Finally, the Worlds Jersey sits at the top as a premium, limited-run release tied to the year’s most prestigious event. Past Worlds Jerseys have featured elevated materials and collector-oriented packaging.
Design and Details
The 2025 Championships Kit leans into a bold, competition-ready aesthetic that reflects the high stakes of Champions Paris. Fulllife’s design language is evident throughout: the cut is athletic and modern, with structured seams and a tailored fit that avoids the boxy silhouette of many esports jerseys. The color palette builds on Fnatic’s signature black and orange while introducing accent elements specific to the Championships event branding.
Sponsor logos are integrated with the precision that Fulllife has become known for, maintaining visual hierarchy without cluttering the design. The Fnatic crest and Fulllife co-branding are present, reinforcing the partnership that has driven the organization’s apparel quality upward over the past several years.
The Fulllife Partnership
Fnatic’s collaboration with Fulllife has been one of the most consequential brand partnerships in esports apparel. Based in France, Fulllife brings a fashion-forward sensibility to competitive gaming merchandise, treating each jersey release as a design project rather than a commodity product. The result is a catalog of Fnatic apparel that consistently ranks among the best-designed in esports, with attention to fabric selection, construction quality, and visual storytelling that few organizations match.
The Championships Kit is a direct expression of this partnership’s strengths, combining Fulllife’s design expertise with Fnatic’s competitive identity to produce a garment that serves both as functional competition wear and a collectible piece for dedicated fans.
More Fnatic Coverage
- Fnatic 2025 Pro Kit Genesis Collection by Fulllife
- Fnatic Worlds 2025 Jersey by Fulllife
- Fnatic 2024 Championships Kit Base Collection
- Fnatic x Fulllife 2024 Pro Kit

Where to Buy
The Fnatic 2025 Championships Kit Pro Jersey is available through the official Fnatic Shop and Fulllife’s online store. The standard Fnatic 2025 Pro Jersey is priced at EUR 69.99, while the Championships Kit carries a premium over that base price. Check both stores for current stock and sizing availability, as championship-specific releases tend to sell through faster than standard seasonal jerseys.