Weekend Warriors Rise: 10N8E Ignites the Call of Duty: Mobile Scene in Africa
There’s something different about the energy when the weekend approaches.
For most people, it’s time to relax. But for a growing number of African gamers, Saturday nights now mean one thing: Battle Time.

With the launch of the Weekend Clash Series, 10N8E has stepped boldly into the spotlight, bringing structured, consistent competition to the Call of Duty: Mobile community across Africa. And from the visuals alone, bold orange backdrops, tactical operators locked and loaded, and the unmistakable roar of competition, you can tell this isn’t just another online tournament.
This is a system.
From Casual Matches to Competitive Structure
The Weekend Clash Series isn’t just about showing up and playing. It’s built with intention.
Registration opens midweek and closes Saturday evening: Creating Urgency.
Matches go live every Saturday at 9PM WAT: Creating Consistency.
Players rank every weekend to gain points: Creating Progression.
Monthly ranking tables drop at the end of every month: Creating Accountability.
That’s how you build a competitive ecosystem.
In a region where esports is still fighting for structure, initiatives like this matter. They give players something to train for. Something to prepare for. Something to chase.
A Partnership That Signals Growth
With Monster Energy collaborating alongside 10N8E and the global powerhouse behind Call of Duty backing the ecosystem, this series sends a clear message:
African mobile esports is no longer an afterthought.
It’s organized.
It’s branded.
It’s monetizable.
And it’s growing.
The presence of recognizable partners shows confidence in the African gaming market, and confidence attracts more opportunity.

The Bigger Impact
What makes the Weekend Clash Series powerful isn’t just the branding or the production aesthetic. It’s accessibility.
Call of Duty: Mobile is one of the most accessible competitive titles in Africa. You don’t need a high-end PC. You don’t need a console. You need a phone, skill, and discipline. That lowers the barrier, widens participation and grows talent pools.
And when ranking systems are introduced consistently, raw talent starts turning into recognizable names.
More Than a Tournament
At Esports Africa News, we’ve seen what happens when competition becomes consistent. Players begin to take themselves seriously. Teams start forming properly. Content creators rally around recurring events, viewership grows, The Weekend Clash Series feels like one of those turning points.
Not because it’s loud, but because it’s steady, and steady builds legacy.
Every Saturday night at 9PM WAT, another chapter is written. Another leaderboard shifts. Another unknown player inches closer to recognition. That’s how movements start and not with one massive event, but with consistent weekends that slowly reshape the culture. The Weekend Clash Series isn’t just a tournament. It’s a proving ground.
And Africa is watching.
