PUBG: Battlegrounds On May 9, 2024, as part of TSM's announcement video stating that they were one of the members of the Esports World Cup Foundation Club Support Program (funded by the Saudi Arabia Public Investment Fund), the organization announced its return to
PUBG: Battlegrounds by signing the Shoot To Kill roster, who qualified for the PUBG Global Series for seasons 3 and 4. TSM had previously been involved in
PUBG: Battlegrounds esports from 2017, when the game was known as ''PlayerUnknown's Battlegrounds'', to 2022, including rosters in Europe and North America (TSM's NA core who were released when they first left
Battlegrounds would end up forming Shoot To Kill).
Overwatch Team SoloMid acquired an
Overwatch team on July 22, 2016. The original team consisted of Jake "torkTJO" Lepoff, Nicolas "NicolasTJO" Aubin, Joey "jkw" Wavering, Joe "Joemeister" Gramano, Jackson "Shake" Kaplan, and Anthony "harbleu" Ballo. On August 8, 2016, the whole TSM squad transferred to compLexity Gaming. Team SoloMid lost on Overwatch Open Tournament and BTS Overwatch Cup in 2016, and dropped their roster and
Overwatch altogether on May 5, 2017. In May 2024, TSM returned to
Overwatch esports for the North American FACEIT League, signing seven players, three coaches, and two analysts, which were part of Timeless before the organization left
Overwatch. In October 2024, TSM announced they were parting ways with their Overwatch roster
Call of Duty Team SoloMid acquired a team to compete at 2016 CoD: World League in February 2016. The team, which took less than 2 weeks to assemble, consisted of Cole "ColeChan" Chancey, Jonathan "Pacman" Tucker, Jordan "ProoFy" Cannon, and Jamal "Whea7s" Lee. On July 7, 2016, TSM announced their withdrawal from CoD, and that the team would be going separate ways. This is due to the team's performance in the World League Stage 2. The team finished near the bottom of their rankings. The team's early roster consisted of players Saintvicious, Chaox, TheOddOne, Locodoco, and Reginald himself. In the years that followed, TSM continued to evolve, making roster changes and competing in various tournaments and leagues. They won the 2011 MLG Providence
League of Legends tournament and achieved success in several other events. In the
Season Two World Championship, Team SoloMid reached to the quarterfinals. While they struggled to make significant progress in international events, TSM remained dominant in North America, securing multiple NA LCS titles during this period. In 2018, TSM went through a rebuilding phase with roster changes but encountered challenges. They missed the World Championship for two consecutive years, in 2018 and 2019. In 2020, TSM experienced a resurgence, winning their seventh LCS title. However, their performance at the 2020 World Championship was underwhelming as they failed to advance from the group stage. The organization saw a major overhaul in 2021, with a new roster and Bjergsen transitioning from player to head coach. Subsequent years brought more roster changes and adjustments, but TSM struggled. They went through multiple head coaches, including Bjergsen, and tried various players in different roles. In 2023, TSM decided to exit the LCS and sold their franchise slot.
PUBG Mobile / BGMI Team SoloMid announced on March 6, 2020, that it had entered the Indian esports scene by partnering with the Indian PUBG Mobile team,
Entity Gaming. Entity, which won the 2019 PUBG Mobile Club Open (PMCO) Asia Fall and later placed fifth in the global finals, was renamed TSM Entity (TSMxENT) following the partnership announcement. TSM officially released this lineup on July 22, 2021, ending their partnership with Entity Gaming in the Indian region. Team SoloMid signed the former PUBG Mobile Roster of
Stalwart Esports on July 30, 2021, as their Battlegrounds Mobile India (Indian version of PUBG Mobile) roster.
''Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six Siege'' Team SoloMid acquired a
Rainbow Six Siege team on June 16, 2019, the day before the beginning of Pro League Season 10. The original roster consisted of Matthew "Achieved" Solomon, Khalil "b1ologic" Pleas, Jason "Beaulo" Doty, Tommy "Krusher" Samuel, Bryan "Merc" Wrzek, and Owen "Pojoman" Matura as coach. In early July, it was announced would compete in Dreamhack Valencia 2019 where they would defeat Team Reciprocity and Team One Esports while being eliminated by top European team, Looking For Org, in the quarter finals. From the middle of July to August, Pojoman played in place of Krusher citing confidence issues from the latter. With Pojoman playing, TSM qualified for the Six Major Raleigh 2019 through the North American online qualifier and placed 5–8th in the main event, defeating
MiBR and
PET Nora-Rengo losing only to Team Empire, the eventual champions, and
G2 Esports, the world champions. On August 24, less than a week after the Major, b1ologic stepped down from the team for personal reasons. To replace him and Krusher, Pojoman moved to a player role and his former teammate from
SK Gaming and
DarkZero Esports, Sam "Jarvis" Jarvis joined. To replace Pojoman as a player, the former coach of
Evil Geniuses, Aaron "Gotcha" Chung joined. This new roster would compete in Dreamhack Montreal 2019 on September 6–8. In Dreamack Montreal, TSM defeated both top Brazilian team
FaZe Clan and mixed American-European Susquehanna Soniqs during the group stage. In the playoffs, TSM defeated fellow North Americans,
Rogue, top French team BDS Esport, and another top Brazilian team of
Team Liquid during the grand final. This victory guaranteed a place in the Six Invitational 2020, the
Rainbow Six Siege world championship. In North American Pro League Season 10, TSM placed 6th, narrowly avoiding relegation after defeating top teams such as Rogue and Spacestation Gaming. On November 25, Gotcha returned to Evil Geniuses as a player, and Jarvis was replaced by another member of EG, Emilio Leynez "Geometrics" Cuevas. At the 2020 Six Invitational (SI), TSM came 3rd losing 0:2 to
Ninjas In Pyjamas in the Lower Bracket Finals. On June 3, Pojoman stepped down as a player to become the team's new head coach, being replaced by Brady "Chala" Davenport on July 27, who transferred from
SpaceStation Gaming. Due to the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic, the Six November 2020 Major was cancelled and was divided into separate regional events. North America was one such region which TSM played and came 1st, beating
SpaceStation Gaming 3:1 in the Grand Finals. Following this regional major win, the team achieved another 1st, beating DarkZero 3:1 in the NAL 2020 US Division finals, ahead of 2021 SI. On May 11, the 2021 Six Invitational took place in Paris where TSM took 1st place in the group state, but were knocked out of the tournament by
Team Liquid in the Lower Bracket Semi-final, earning them 4th place. For the rest of 2021, TSM results were lackluster, coming 2nd, 13th–15th, and 5th in their next three tournaments. This meant in order to compete in the 2022
Six Invitational world championship, they had to win the North American Closed Qualifiers, which they did, beating Parabellum Esports 3:0 in the Grand Final. On February 8 in Stockholm Sweden, the 2022 SI group stage started, with TSM coming 3rd in group C, granting them a place in the playoffs with their first match against
Ninjas in Pyjamas, the team that beat them in 2020 SI. This time TSM won 2:0 and they continued to win until the Upper Bracket Final against Team Empire, where they lost 1:2. This meant they had to win the Lower Brack Final against
FaZe Clan to rematch Team Empire in the Grand Finals, which they did 2:0. After going through the North American Qualifiers to earn a place in the 2022 Six Invitational, fighting through the group stage and the playoffs, then losing in the upper bracket final, only to regain their place after a win in the lower bracket final, TSM rematch Team Empire in the Grand Finals for the 1st place prize of $1,000,000. After 4 games, 54 rounds, and 3 overtimes, TSM win the
2022 Six Invitational 3:1.
Vainglory Team SoloMid acquired Team Alliance's Vainglory roster on March 10, 2016. The team, upon acquisition, composed of Michael "FlashX" Valore, Nick "CullTheMeek" Verolla and Mico "MICSHE" Dedicatoria. During their run as Team Alliance, they had won the Vainglory International Premier League, with substitute ShinKaigan filling in for iLoveJoseph, an original Team Alliance member, due to school conflicts. Team SoloMid has won two of the past three championships since being acquired. During the 2016 Vainglory Summer Live Championships, Team SoloMid went 9–0 throughout the event, beating runner-up Hammers Velocity with a 3–0 score. On July 19, 2018, TSM announced that it had disbanded their Vainglory division.
Counter-Strike 2 TSM acquired a Danish squad in January 2015. On December 3 TSM announced the roster had been released, citing internal problems. The ex-TSM team first played under the name "Team Question Mark" until founding their own organization,
Astralis. Astralis would go on to win four
Majors,
ELEAGUE Major Atlanta 2017 FACEIT Major London 2018,
IEM Katowice 2019 Major, and
StarLadder Major Berlin 2019. TSM announced a new North American roster on January 19, 2016. On March 8, 2016, TSM revealed the departure of Daniel "vice" Kim. On January 14, 2017, TSM announced the departure of their entire CS:GO roster. On August 29, 2023, TSM announced a new CSGO roster consisting of Audric "JACKZ" Jug, former
ENCE player Valdemar "valde" Bjørn Vangså, former
Cloud9 player Timofey "interz" Yakushin, Cai "CYPHER" Watson and Mădălin-Andrei "MoDo" Mirea. Former
G2 and
Vitality coach Rémy "XTQZZZ" Quoniam and Lambert Prigent became the team's head coach and assistant coach respectively. After only just over a month with the organisation, on October 7, TSM released XTQZZZ. By the end of 2024, TSM benched their whole Counter-Strike lineup and have yet to field a new roster, effectively exiting Counter-Strike esports.
Valorant Team SoloMid acquired a
Valorant team on May 22, 2020. The roster consists of Matthew "WARDELL" Yu, Yassin "Subroza" Taoufik, James "hazed" Cobb, Taylor "drone" Johnson, and Stephen "reltuC" Cutler. All of these players retired from CS:GO to compete in TSM's Valorant roster. TSM also added Braxton "brax" Pierce to their Valorant roster at the end of March 2021 and released him before July as returned to T1. The organization benched Cutler for Sean "bang" Bezerra on June 29, 2021. The TSM roster had a strong start in the Valorant competitive scene, gaining the top 3 places in many of the Invitational Series and Cups hosted by other teams. TSM also claimed second place in First Strike North America with a defeat against 100 Thieves. As the new year progressed, the team started in a decline from their 2020 explosive start, not making the regional finals of Masters 1 and then not making it to Masters 2 which could've gotten them a place in Valorant's first International LAN event. After some roster changes for the beginning of Stage 3 Challengers 1, TSM looked progressively better, but was beaten by Noble, a disbanded team which they will acquire future teammate Aleko "LeviathanAG" Gabuniya. In Challengers 2, TSM rode through with close games to win the tournament and qualify for Challenger Playoffs. However, they did not make it to the second LAN event in Berlin and ended placing in the bottom 2 of 8 teams. It was then unable to go to the Last Chance Qualifiers to qualify for Champions since an NA team didn't win Valorant's Berlin LAN event, as it is finished 11th in the North American circuit point standings. In 2022, TSM rode had a tumultuous beginning, after falling in the Open Qualifier #1 to Akrew after their dramatic forfeit win over T1 after the "help sewers" incident. Later, TSM went into the 2nd Open Qualifier, falling even earlier, as they lost to Built by Gamers, ending their Stage 1 Challengers run. However, they were able to prove themselves as a great squad coming into Stage 2, as they were able to beat every team except Faze Clan to earn a spot into Stage 2 Challengers. Once they got to the main group stage though, they ended up with a 1–4 record with their only win coming against
100 Thieves, ending their 2022 Valorant season as they didn't have enough points for the Last Chance Qualifier. Coming into the 2023 season, with a new squad of Corey, NaturE, seven, gMd, and Hazed, TSM looked like a favorite in the new format of Valorant eSports. Looking to get to Valorant Ascension and get a franchised spot, they were easily one of the contenders, as they were immediately invited to the Valorant Challengers League for North America. They made a statement in the first split, winning 4 of their 5 games, with their only loss coming to M80. They did make a change mid-split, swapping in Kanpeki for Hazed for week 3, and won 3 in a row after that. However, their strong split came to a screeching halt in the Mid-Season Face Off, as they lost to Moist Moguls in the first round, before losing to Oxygen Esports to end their run as the 5th–6th place team. Going into Split 2, with the exact same team, TSM looked to be a heavy-hitter again, by beating
Shopify Rebellion in the first week, but later lost 3 of their 4 final games after that. Similar to Split 2, their run in playoffs to make ascension was also very grim, as they lost both matches to Moist Moguls and
Faze Clan, ending their season. After that, TSM announced that they would drop their entire team and coaches amid the long uncertain off-season. TSM announced their exit from Valorant esports in November 2025. == Rosters ==