MOUZ confirmed Brollan’s departure after his benching earlier in 2026, with the team now building around its current CS2 lineup.
MOUZ confirmed Brollan’s departure after his benching earlier in 2026, with the team now building around its current CS2 lineup.

On Tuesday, July 7, MOUZ announced the departure of Ludvig “Brollan” Brolin, ending his two-and-a-half-year stint with the team.
The Swede joined MOUZ in January 2024 and remained on the Counter-Strike 2 roster until his surprise benching in April, when the team added Adrian “xelex” Vincze from the academy division and acquired Justinas “jL” Lekavicius on loan.
Despite stepping away from the active lineup, Brollan played for MOUZ during the Intel Extreme Masters Cologne Major, helping the team place 12th-14th.
At the time, speculation around Brollan remaining with MOUZ started to build, but the team eventually decided to proceed in a different direction.
Brollan’s exit from MOUZ ends a fairly successful 27-month stint, during which the Swede made two Major semifinals, at BLAST.tv Austin Major and Perfect World Shanghai Major, and won numerous big events, including PGL Cluj-Napoca 2025 and ESL Pro League Season 19.
While he originally joined as a rifler, Brollan transitioned to the role of in-game leader at the start of 2025, replacing Kamil “siuhy” Szkaradek.
Even in his new role, Brollan shined and helped MOUZ become one of the most consistent CS2 teams in the world, reaching 17 straight playoffs.
Things have not been as successful for Brollan and company in 2026, as MOUZ started to show cracks after a third-place finish at PGL Cluj-Napoca, failing to break into the top five across four consecutive events.
The long dry streak led MOUZ to replace Brollan with Dorian “xertioN” Berman as their new in-game leader in April, fielding the Swede just once more during the Cologne Major.
With Brollan out of the picture, MOUZ’s roster remains unchanged, allowing them to continue building synergy ahead of their next campaign at BLAST Bounty Summer, set to begin on July 21.
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Mark Prezelj is a Slovenian esports betting analyst with over 3,500 articles at EsportBet and the founder of Lines64.com — someone who has been reading odds longer than most readers have been watching esports.