The FFWS 2025 finals kicked off with nonstop action from the opening drop right through to the closing circle. The pace never let up, with squads pulling off surprises and others dropping the ball, but Buriram United grabbed the win in the end. Let's break down what happened.

Free Fire World Series 2025 Winner Buriram United

How did BRU win the championship?

Buriram United put up the steadiest performance across the whole event. They blended bold pushes with sharp map control. Time and again, they dodged tight jams and fought their way back into contention.

  • Kept reliable spots match after match
  • Landed fewer kills, but they hit hard when it counted
  • Nailed smoother shifts around the map
  • Jumped into scraps only when it made sense

All that kept them out in front during the finals.

Vasanaa’s brilliance: The real hero of the finals

Ffws 2025 Mvp Vasanna 1024x579

One name dominated the chatter around the FFWS finals: Vasanaa.

His aim in firefights, quick steps, and smart calls swung nearly every round his squad's way.

  • Pulled off clutch saves in multiple 1v3s
  • Handled exposed spots with top-notch cover use
  • Locked in prime setups for his team every time

Word is, a couple more rounds and he'd have walked away with MVP.

Fluxo comeback: Started slow but ended strong

Fluxo told a different tale. They hit rough patches up front, but turned it around big in the closing games.

  • Early game: Messy map moves
  • Mid game: Coming up short in clashes
  • End game: Clean picks and consistent top-three runs

That late surge reminded everyone this crew's cut out for the spotlight.

AG Global’s aggressive playstyle

AG Global stuck to a single gear in the finals—direct, speedy, and all-out attack. It boosted them at times and burned them at others.

Positive:

  • Snagged quick early takedowns
  • Locked down zones right off the bat

Negative:

  • Pushed too far too fast
  • Dove into open brawls

Dialing back just a notch could've pushed them onto the podium.

Falcons ESport: Played well but fell a little short

Falcons ran a sharp game plan overall, but a handful of critical slips left them hanging. They'd line up perfectly, only for thin cover or crossfire from rivals to tank their runs.

  • Solid execution from start to finish
  • But wound up exposed in the late circles too often

That kept them out of the top two.

Which teams disappointed?

A bunch of squads came in with big hype but couldn't deliver.

  • Botched early landings
  • Took off in the wrong directions
  • Wasted shots on dumb scraps
  • Faded before hitting the final zones

Those slip-ups hit extra hard in events this size.

Short analysis of final matches

Match 1

Cautious opener with a focus on holds. BRU and Falcons owned the key positions.

Match 2

AG Global charged in hard. Racked up kills but left their setups exposed.

Match 3

Vasanaa’s clutch moment. This one flipped the whole flow.

Match 4

Fluxo’s comeback started here. They read the circles spot-on.

Match 5

Falcons lined up strong but caught in a vise from both flanks.

Match 6 (Final Match)

BRU kept it cool with minimal gambles, then clinched the title on placement alone.

It drove home the point: raw frags aren't enough—it's the clever plays, circle awareness, and crew coordination that seal deals. Even top talent needs solid backing to shine.