
Melee Creeps’ Death Slam NA #3 Win Puts Eido Back In The NA vs EU Spotlight
Melee Creeps won Death Slam Invitational NA #3, beat Lowkey W 3-0 in the final, and gave Eido another clean competitive result to anchor his streamer profile.
The headline is simple: Melee Creeps did not just survive the bracket. They finished it cleanly.
Melee Creeps got the kind of result that makes a streamer profile feel current again. At Death Slam Invitational NA #3, played across the May 16-25, 2026 event window with a $10,000 prize pool, the team finished first and beat Lowkey W 3-0 in the grand final.
The bracket run was not soft. Deadfrag’s event archive lists Melee Creeps over Bird with Clock 2-0, over Abrahams 2-0, over Floormen 2-1 in the upper bracket, and over Lowkey W 3-0 in the final. DEM.GG’s event page separately lists Melee Creeps as first place with the $5,000 top prize, Lowkey W second, Floormen third, and Abrahams fourth.
For Eido, that is the useful part. The public conversation around Melee Creeps had been noisy: roster changes, DLNS losses, connectivity jokes, and the usual argument over whether a closed-alpha esport should be judged like a finished game. Death Slam NA #3 gave the team a cleaner answer: win the bracket, beat both NA and EU opponents, and put another result on the board.
It also helps explain why Eido remains one of the better Deadlock streamers to follow if you care about competitive play. His channel is not just a ladder feed with a famous name on it. It is attached to a roster that is actively shaping NA’s tournament story, and his individual hero pool sits inside a team that keeps ending up in the money rounds.
The Profile Takeaway
The short version for Eido watchers: if you want a Deadlock streamer whose games connect to actual bracket stakes, Death Slam NA #3 is the receipt. Melee Creeps were not simply “in the scene.” They won one of the bigger late-May events and did it while the NA vs EU debate was loud enough to matter.