
The International 2025 will be remembered for its breathtaking matches and Team Falcons’ incredible championship run, but it also left fans with an unexpected void.
For the first time since 2017, the tournament concluded without unveiling a new hero, breaking an eight-year tradition that had become one of the most anticipated moments of the Dota 2 calendar. The absence of this reveal was felt across the community, especially since it had become such a defining element of The International experience.

Since TI 2018, Valve has consistently used the event to introduce fresh faces to the roster, creating hype that extended well beyond the grand finals. Players still recall the shock of Mars and Grimstroke being announced together in 2018, followed by Snapfire and Void Spirit in 2019. While the pandemic delayed TI10 in 2020, the tradition resumed strongly with Marci in 2021, Muerta in 2022, Ringmaster in 2023, and Kez in 2024.
Each reveal became a spectacle in itself, driving excitement, shaping strategies for the future, and giving fans a reason to celebrate even after the tournament’s conclusion. That consistency made the silence at TI 2025 all the more jarring. Instead of speculation about new abilities or lore, social media buzzed with disappointment, as viewers kept expecting something that never arrived.
For many, it highlighted how much the tradition had become intertwined with the identity of The International, elevating it beyond just a competition into a showcase of Dota 2’s evolving universe. As the community looks ahead to TI 2026 in Shanghai, questions linger. Was this a one-off omission like TI 2017, or does it signal a shift in how Valve plans to deliver future content?
Without clarification, players and fans are left to speculate about whether the magic of those iconic reveals will return. What’s clear is that The International 2025, despite delivering outstanding gameplay, also reminded everyone how traditions can shape expectations. The hope now is that the stage that once introduced heroes destined to change the game will again serve as the launchpad for Dota 2’s next era.