1. A Field So Strong It Feels Like a New Era
World Chase Tag® enters 2026 with a sense of acceleration, expansion, and quiet pressure building across the global scene. The confirmed lineup for WCT7’s Open Division reflects that shift: eleven teams already locked in, each carrying their own style and ambitions, with a twelfth slot still open and stirring up speculation.
The Americans return in force, bringing not just the reigning world champions Hollywood Freerunners, but also NYX, Dexterity Depot, and Nimbus. A quartet that dominated the US season. France responds with its strongest trio yet, sending Parkour59, Fakaw Paris, and The Crow, three teams whose styles couldn’t be more different but whose results are impossible to ignore. And then there are the wildcards: UGEN, rising again as the longest standing team in the ecosystem; Rooftop Kings, the Moroccan sensation that shocked Rotterdam & Malaga Chase-Offs™; Fata Morgana, always unpredictable and always threatening; and ParkourMan, the Chinese champions who continue to level up each season. All of them arrive with storylines, rivalries, momentum swings, and scars from past seasons and that combination is exactly what makes this year feel special.
2. The Battle Lines: Waiting for the Draw
Until the official draw takes place in March, the battlefield remains theoretical but the tension is already real. With so many heavyweight teams confirmed and no clear “weak link” among them, the composition of the groups will likely define the entire championship narrative. A favourable draw could propel a dark horse straight into contention; a brutal one could send even a top-tier squad home early.
The truth is simple: this year, there will be no such thing as an easy group. No matter how the names fall, someone is going to end up in a “group of death,” and someone else is going to escape by centimetres. That uncertainty is part of what makes WCT7 feel so alive.
If There Was a Group of Death…
The only confirmed rule heading into the draw is that Hollywood Freerunners and Parkour59 must be separated, each anchoring one of the two groups. Beyond that, any team can land anywhere, which means chaos is very much on the table.
Based on the last 12 months of competition, a theoretical “hardest possible group” almost writes itself. Rooftop Kings have been the breakout team of the Chase-Off™ circuit. UGEN’s resurgence and experience make them dangerous in any bracket. Fakaw Paris are coming off one of the strongest seasons in their history. Dexterity Depot remain one of the cleanest, most tactical US squads. And then there is NYX, the 2025 US Champions whose depth and consistency place them firmly among the very best teams in the world.
Add Hollywood Freerunners or Parkour59 on top of that, and you get a nightmare scenario: a group where six legitimate title contenders collide, but only two can advance. Four world-class teams would be eliminated before even reaching the knockout stage.
It would be the kind of group that shapes the entire championship narrative and forces multiple giants to exit Worlds far earlier than expected.
3. The Legends Who Aren’t Coming And Why It Matters
But as powerful as the confirmed list is, the absences are just as revealing.

Apex, three-time US Champions, Pan-Am Champions, and former World Champions, will not be competing at WCT7 after falling short at the US Championship. For a team built so heavily on identity, legacy, and collective history, missing Worlds is more than a setback, it’s a rupture. Fans are asking the question no one thought they’d have to ask for years: is this the end of the dynasty, or the pause before a brutal renaissance?

KIMEO, vice world champions and French vice-champions as recently as 2023, are also out. Their fourth-place finish at the 2025 French Championship left them just below the qualification line. And while the team remains respected, the conversation has turned toward Benjamin Garcia, one of the most gifted players the sport has ever seen, the Knight of Flight of WCT6. Does he rebuild with KIMEO, or does he move on? The silence is telling.

Then comes Mamba, once World Champions during WCT4, now in the middle of a full rebuild after missing the cut at French Nationals. For a team with such a storied legacy, the road back to elite level is steep but possible, especially given the explosion of French talent in the last two years.

Last but not least, Overground remain in limbo. The team stepped onto the world stage year after year with grit and intelligence, and their captain Dominique Karlin delivered one of the standout performances at WCT6. Their absence feels temporary, and perhaps it is. They remain a possible late wildcard and one of the fan favourites to make a dramatic return.
4. A World Growing Faster Than Anyone Expected
The widening global landscape is reshaping everything. In December 2024, the world counted 26 WCT Quads. Just twelve months later, the number reached 46, nearly double. Every new Quad™ means new athletes, new movement cultures & new teams. And with them come new tactical approaches that established teams now have to prepare for. Spain, Russia, Colombia and others will likely shape the way teams play in a close future. Morocco has already proved its capability with Rooftop Kings; China continues to grow through ParkourMan; Israel expands through Fata Morgana; and France and the US remain superpowers by sheer depth. And now, something new is brewing in the East: rumours of a Japanese National Championship taking place before Worlds.
5. The Final Spot, the Final Question, and the Storm Ahead

With only one wildcard left to announce, the tension rises. That last invite is not just a name on a list, it may shape the entire bracket. Will WCT reward an established team that stumbled? Will they pull from the rising nations whose athletes are rewriting what Chase Tag® looks like? Could the final pick be a league-first: a Japanese team, a new South American force, or a completely unknown squad emerging from a fast-growing community? Each option brings its own political weight, fan debate, and strategic consequences. But one thing is already clear: WCT7 is not just another World Championship. It is the turning point where the old guard meets a sport that is evolving faster than ever. In a year defined by growth, unpredictability, and historic shifts, the final wildcard announcement may be the spark that ignites the biggest Worlds the sport has ever seen.



















