Here is the short version. A crypto betting site called Dexsport just signed a long-term deal with OG Esports, one of the most famous teams in competitive gaming. From now on, OG's Counter-Strike 2 squad will play under the name OG.Dexsport.
That kind of co-branded name is normal in esports. Think of it like a sports jersey covered in sponsor patches, except the patch is built into the team name itself.
So what is Dexsport? It is a "Web3" betting platform. Web3 just means it runs on crypto rails. Instead of signing up with an ID, you connect a crypto wallet, place bets in tokens, and pull your money out fast. There is no KYC, the industry term for the photo-ID checks you get on a normal sportsbook. Whether you like that idea or not depends on where you stand on regulation. But it is a real and growing slice of the betting world.
OG is a serious pick for them. The org has been around since 2015 and is best known for winning the Dota 2 world championship two years in a row, in 2018 and 2019. Nobody has done that since. Their CS2 team is captained by Casper "cadiaN" Moller, a veteran in-game leader who other pros tend to respect.
What does the deal actually include? More than a logo on a jersey. Dexsport says fans can expect giveaways, behind-the-scenes videos with the players, special promotions during big tournaments, and joint social content. The companies are also leaning on an earlier link: Dexsport added Chiliz (ticker CHZ), the token used across a lot of sports fan apps, to its platform earlier in 2026, and ran a $50,000 CHZ giveaway.
Why it matters: Crypto money is quietly becoming a regular part of esports sponsorship again, and deals like this one are how betting brands reach a young, online audience without buying a Super Bowl ad.