On paper, it’s a straightforward announcement. In context, it’s one of the more compelling storylines heading into Worlds.
The WCT6 Reality Check
Let’s be honest about where Quality Movement was two years ago: not ready.
Their WCT6 Worlds debut was the kind of tournament you learn from, not the kind you brag about. The Swedish squad arrived with enthusiasm but left with a clear understanding of the gap between domestic training and elite international competition.
Most teams would have treated that as a ceiling. Quality Movement treated it as a starting point.
What followed was a methodical two-year investment in becoming a real contender.
Quality Movement doubled down on infrastructure. Training consistently on their home Quad™ in Sweden, the only permanent setup in Scandinavia. They hosted events to build competitive reps. They showed up to every Chase-Off™ that would have them, accumulating match experience against increasingly strong opposition.
The approach was unsexy but effective: get on the Quad™, learn, repeat.
Rotterdam: The Arrival
The Rotterdam Qualifier was supposed to be another step in the process. It became something more.
Quality Movement tore through the bracket, stringing together wins and building momentum into the late rounds. Their run ended against Fakaw Paris, currently ranked fourth in the world, in a match so close it required video review on the final chase.
They lost. Barely. To a top-five team. In a match that could have gone either way.
For anyone who’d written off Quality Movement as a developmental squad, Rotterdam was a wake-up call. This team can hang with the elite.
The Rankings Lie (For Now)
Quality Movement sits 24th in WCT’s new ELO rankings. That number is technically accurate and practically meaningless.
ELO systems are backward-looking by design. They measure where you’ve been, not where you’re going. Quality Movement’s ranking reflects two years of rebuilding. The early losses, the learning curve, the gradual climb. It doesn’t yet account for the team that nearly knocked off Fakaw in Rotterdam.
By the time WCT7 concludes, expect that number to look very different.
The Wild Card Gamble

WCT’s wild card selections are always interesting to dissect. The league has to balance competitive merit, geographic representation, and narrative appeal.
Quality Movement checks all three boxes.
Competitively, they’ve earned it. The Rotterdam run proved they belong in the conversation. Geographically, they’re the first Scandinavian team in the sport and narratively, the redemption arc practically writes itself.
It’s a smart pick. It’s also a pick that puts pressure on Quality Movement to deliver. Wild cards that flame out early get forgotten. Wild cards that make noise become part of the sport’s mythology.
The Paris Field
The complete Open Division lineup:
Qualified:
- Hollywood Freerunners (USA) — Defending champions, world No. 1
- NYX (USA) — US Champions
- Dexterity Depot (USA) — US Silver
- Nimbus (USA) — US Bronze
- Parkour59 (France) — French Champions
- Fakaw Paris (France) — French Silver
- The Crow (France) — French Bronze
- ParkourMan (China) — Chinese Champions
Wild Cards:
- UGEN (UK)
- Fata Morgana (Israel)
- Rooftop Kings (Morocco)
- Quality Movement (Sweden)
Four American teams. Three French. Four wild cards representing the UK, Israel, Morocco, and Sweden. It’s the most geographically diverse Worlds field yet, and arguably the deepest.
What to Watch
Quality Movement’s ceiling is genuinely unknown, which makes them one of the more intriguing teams in the bracket. If Rotterdam was a peak performance, they’ll be competitive but likely fall in the quarters. If Rotterdam was a baseline, if they’ve continued to improve in the months since, they could be dangerous.
The team has nothing to lose and everything to prove. That’s a useful mindset heading into a tournament where the favorites are clearly defined and the pressure sits elsewhere.
Hollywood Freerunners will carry the weight of defending their title. Parkour59 will face home-crowd expectations. Fakaw knows they’re capable of winning it all. Rooftop Kings arrive with momentum and hype.
Quality Movement? They just need to show that Rotterdam wasn’t a fluke.
If they do, the story gets a lot more interesting.
The WCT7 World Championships take place June 6-7, 2026, at Les Arènes in Évry-Courcouronnes, France. Tickets available at worldchasetag.com.




















Really happy to see the Swedishs back at it. All these stories in Instagram with the #WCT7 was for a good reason. Maybe the Mutant Quad is better than a normal one, we can probably see some surprise from them at Worlds !