Brazilian esports organisation Team Solid has secured new commercial sponsorship agreements with hardware manufacturers Kingston Technology and Redragon Brasil.

According to information exclusive to The Esports Radar, the Redragon deal includes R$200,000 (approximately $40,000 USD), provided in the form of products.

The tech partnerships were finalised following the team’s victory at VALORANT Challengers Brazil, the primary national league organised by Riot Games. The agreements are part of a plan by Team Solid to position itself as a premier player in the Brazilian esports scene across branding, content and market relevance.

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“The triumph in Challengers demonstrates the competitive level that the team has achieved at this moment. The arrival of the new sponsors follows this result and allows us to take a step forward in structure and preparation for the season,” stated Victor Hugo Cebratelli, Esports Specialist and COO of Team Solid.

Maicon Souza, Partnership Manager at Redragon Brasil, commented on the community alignment: “Redragon believes that performance should be accessible to all, and being alongside a team like Team Solid, which is experiencing an important moment within the competitive scene, reinforces this purpose.”

This new hardware supply will operate alongside existing backing from WEG, a Brazilian multinational technology corporation that provides financial support to the organisation and integrates the NoPing connection optimisation service as a sponsor.

Discussing the endemic investment, Marcelo Setubal, Channel Marketing Manager for Kingston in Brazil, added: “It is not just about offering high-performance products to an extremely demanding audience, but also about giving back to the community, actively supporting the development of the scene, especially the competitive one. By sponsoring teams, we evolve together with the ecosystem.”

These agreements come amid an ongoing industry shift documented since 2025, which can be described as a global race for control over the core of esports environments. Endemic hardware, peripheral, and furniture brands are heavily intensifying their competition for team and on-stage real estate.

This trend is reflected across multiple equipment categories globally. In the peripheral and component space, brands like Logitech G have scaled regional operations through partnerships with organisations like KRÜ and Dplus KIA, alongside a €2.5 million performance research investment at the University of Limerick. Similarly, HyperX has expanded into the League of Legends EMEA Championship (LEC) circuit and partnered with FENNEL in Japan, while CORSAIR recently secured a seven-figure agreement with FaZe Esports.

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