Aurora PH: From 0-4 to 4-0, M7 World Champions
They got swept out of MPL PH Season 16 Grand Finals by Team Liquid PH. Four games. Zero wins. The "chokers" label that followed Aurora Gaming since their MPL days just got louder.
Three months later, they walked into Tennis Indoor Senayan in Jakarta, swept Alter Ego 4-0, and picked up the M7 World Championship trophy worth $320,000. The sixth consecutive MLBB world title for the Philippines. First ever M-series crown for RORA.
Grabe. The full circle is almost too cinematic to be real.
#How RORA Got to Jakarta
Aurora Gaming PH entered M7 as the second seed from MPL PH Season 16. They ran a 15-1 record during the regular season, then got blanked 4-0 by TLPH in the Grand Finals. Meanwhile, Alter Ego came in as Indonesia's second seed too, behind MPL ID Season 16 champions ONIC.
Two runner-ups. One grand finals. Nobody predicted this matchup.
In the Swiss Stage, Alter Ego actually posted a perfect 4-0 record, sweeping through Turkey, Chile, and Myanmar without dropping a game. They looked sharp. On paper, they had the form advantage heading into the Knockout Stage.
Aurora, for their part, went 3-1. They dropped Game 1 to regional rivals TLPH in Round 1, then rattled off three straight wins over CFU Gaming (Cambodia), Team Zone (Mongolia), and Team Spirit (CIS). Not a flawless run, but they found their groove.
The Knockout Stage is where the real story started.
#The Road Through Jakarta
Aurora's first Knockout Stage match was a rematch against TLPH, and RORA made it count, beating them 2-1 in the quarterfinals. Revenge served cold. Alter Ego, meanwhile, pulled off a 2-0 upset over ONIC in the other QF matchup.
Upper Bracket Semifinals saw the two eventual finalists meet for the first time. Aurora controlled the pace, built clean drafts, and dismantled Alter Ego 3-1 to advance to the upper bracket finals. Alter Ego got knocked down to the lower bracket.
The upper bracket finals against Selangor Red Giants was the match that made my heart drop. SRG went up 2-1. Aurora, backs against the wall, ran it back and took Games 4 and 5 to punch the first Grand Finals ticket.
Meanwhile, Alter Ego was doing something special in the lower bracket. They ran through Team Spirit, Team Liquid PH, and then SRG in succession. A lower bracket Finals run that reminded everyone why they were dangerous.
So RORA vs AE was set. The same matchup they'd already played. Aurora won it once. Alter Ego had three more games of tournament data since then and came in hungrier.
#Grand Finals Recap: RORA Dominates Start to Finish
Game 1
Alter Ego came in aggressive, repeatedly invading Aurora's jungle early to disrupt their tempo. Aurora didn't panic. They rotated, stabilized lanes, and by the 10-minute mark started winning team fights through layered crowd control. Light on Hylos posted a 3/1/10 KDA, anchoring the vision game and setting up every engage.
Aurora secured Lord, cracked the mid-lane turret, and closed it out in 15 minutes. Clean. Clinical. Ominous for Alter Ego.
Game 2
Both teams played cautious early, then Aurora broke the stalemate at 4 minutes with kill pressure and Turtle control. Edward on Sora posted a 6/2/6 KDA and led the charge, but it was Aurora's collective macro that strangled Alter Ego's resources. Sixteen minutes, another Aurora win.
Two games in and Alter Ego hadn't found an answer.
Game 3
This is the one where Aurora just broke Alter Ego's spirit. Yazukee got picked off before the first Turtle even spawned. DemonKite on Fredrinn hit three kills by the 3-minute mark. Aurora built a 4k gold lead before the six-minute mark.
Domengkite on Granger hit his power spike and the game was already over. Lord, base, done.
Under 11 minutes. Fastest game of the series. Match point: 3-0.
Game 4
Alter Ego tried to answer with Yi Sun-Shin for Yazukee. Aurora countered with Yue on Zetian to neutralize that vision advantage. Alter Ego forced fights out of desperation and Aurora punished every single one.
At the 7-minute mark, Aurora secured Turtle and followed immediately with a four-man pickoff. Five-kill lead, 5k gold up, and Alter Ego had no room left. Aurora marched down mid, and the trophy was theirs.
Final result: Aurora Gaming PH 4-0 Alter Ego Esports.
#Light: The Roamer Who Won the World
Dylan "Light" Catipon earned the Finals MVP, and it wasn't even close. His numbers across the series were absurd for a roamer: 3/1/10 on Hylos in Game 1, 1/0/12 in Game 2, 2/0/15 in Game 3, 2/1/11 in Game 4.
But the stats don't capture everything. Light was everywhere. He set vision, denied enemy jungle access, baited out battle spells, initiated fights on Aurora's terms, and peeled when his cores needed it. Alter Ego never figured out how to deal with him.
He became the first roamer in M-Series history to win the Finals MVP. That's not a small thing. In a meta that usually rewards mid-laners and junglers with MVP recognition, Light flipped the script entirely.
In an interview with Manila Standard, Light reflected on the win with characteristic humility. "Parang sunod-sunod lahat, kaya parang hindi pa siya nag-si-sink in sa akin," he said. He also admitted the M7 experience was different precisely because Aurora came in as the underdogs: "Mas mahirap kasi hindi kami nag-champion sa MPL PH, so iba rin sana yung confidence boost."
No MPL title. No home-crowd energy. Just belief, preparation, and one of the cleanest Grand Finals performances in M-series history.
#The Storylines That Made This Hit Different
Yue finally has his ring. The MPL PH Season 16 Regular Season MVP, Kenneth "Yue" Tadeo, has been one of the best mid-laners in the region for years. Fans called him "uncrowned" for too long. After the Game 4 winner, RORA fans in the crowd started chanting his name. He earned it.
Edward's second world title. EXP laner Edward "Edward" Dapadap won his first M-series crown with Blacklist International at M3. Now he adds M7 with Aurora. Two different teams, two different eras, same result: championship.
The 15-1 to 0-4 to 4-0 arc. This will be talked about for years. Fifteen wins in the regular season. Then nothing in the Grand Finals. Then Aurora went to the biggest stage in mobile esports and ran a perfect 4-0. You cannot write this better.
Philippines: six in a row. From M2 in 2021 to M7 in 2026, no other country has won the M-series. Not Indonesia, not Malaysia, not China. Six straight. The dynasty is real.
#What Alter Ego's Loss Means for Indonesia
This was AE's best international run in franchise history. They knocked out ONIC, their own domestic rival, and beat TLPH in the lower bracket. They deserved to be in the finals.
But it's also three straight years that an Indonesian team lost to a Filipino squad in the M-series Grand Finals. ONIC fell at M5, Liquid ID fell at M6, AE falls at M7. The PH vs ID rivalry remains the defining one in MLBB, but right now Indonesia is searching for an answer the Philippines just keeps refusing to give them.
SRG from Malaysia took third, continuing their strong international form after MSC 2025. Watch for them at EWC and M8.
#What's Next
Light himself said it best: "Yung pag-champion namin, isang araw lang naman yun. After that, challenger ulit kami sa upcoming MPL."
Aurora's work doesn't stop. MPL PH Season 17 is coming. TLPH and every team in the league will have a chip on their shoulder. And with M8 announced for Istanbul, Turkey, the first M-series outside Asia, Aurora Gaming will be defending with a target on their back.
For the rest of the PH scene, RORA just raised the ceiling again. This is what the grind is for.
Letsgo, Philippines. Six and counting.
For more MLBB esports coverage, check out the tier list and stay locked in for MPL PH Season 17 updates.


