
If you’ve landed here after searching “pokeon unic 2026”, you’re almost certainly looking for Pokémon UNITE 2026—specifically the 2026 Pokémon UNITE Championship Series and the big Europe International Championships (EUIC) in London.
Here’s the clean, up-to-date breakdown of what’s been announced, what it means for players, and how to plan if you’re aiming to compete (or just want to attend and watch).
For 2026, the Pokémon UNITE competitive circuit is shifting away from a points-only invite path and into a Regional League structure, with three eight-team leagues covering North America, Europe, and Latin America.
That’s a big deal because it changes the “shape” of the season: fewer teams at the top tier at any one time, more structured matchups, and a clearer narrative for fans to follow week-to-week.
If you’re UK-based (or travelling in), EUIC is back in London and it’s one of the most important stops on the competitive calendar.
Pokémon UNITE at 2026 EUIC (London):
ExCeL also lists public opening times across the weekend (useful for spectators planning travel).
Even if you only care about UNITE, it’s useful to know the broader Championship Series is also adjusting formats and procedures across games (like Swiss round structure and end-of-round updates).
That’s usually a hint that 2026 is being treated as a “reset year” for organised play across the board.
Yes—official listings and venue pages place EUIC 2026 at ExCeL London, Feb 13–15, 2026.
It means each regional UNITE league (Europe/NA/LatAm) is structured around eight top teams competing in a league system, rather than purely laddering points through open events.
Always treat third-party listings as helpful but secondary—use the official event/registration pages linked from tournament organisers (RK9’s page explicitly points to the official event site for “complete and up to date information”).
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