RKK (RRQ Keliling Kota): When RRQ Chose to Come Closer to the Kingdom

In Indonesian esports, and even in modern entertainment in general, everything often feels centered around Jakarta.

If not Jakarta, then at least Java.

The biggest events, the loudest stages, the most accessible venues, the most visible communities — most of them tend to gather around the same familiar places. It is understandable, of course. Jakarta has the infrastructure, the media, the brands, and the spotlight.

But Indonesia has never been only Jakarta. Indonesia is not only Java either.

Behind every city, every island, and every long road between provinces, there are fans with the same passion. Sometimes, even stronger passion. Fans who may not always get the chance to attend major esports events, but still support, watch, cheer, and believe with all their heart.

That is the spirit behind RKK — RRQ Keliling Kota (RRQ’s City-to-City Community Tour).

RKK is not just a watch party program. It is not just a community activation. It is not just a roadshow. At its heart, RKK is RRQ’s way of saying: we see you, we hear you, and we are coming to you.

As of May 2026, RKK has traveled through 112 city stops across 61 different cities in Indonesia. From major esports hubs to cities that are often far from the national spotlight, RKK has become one of RRQ’s most meaningful community movements.

And like many meaningful journeys, it started humbly.

RKK Season 1 began in Tangerang on February 24, 2023, with only 42 fans attending the event. A small beginning, but not a small moment.

Because from that day, something started moving.

That first season eventually reached 12 cities and welcomed around 2,000 fans in total. Semarang became the final stop of Season 1 on March 25, 2023, closing the first chapter of a journey that would continue to grow far beyond its original scale.

A few months later, RKK returned for Season 2. From July 14 to September 24, 2023, RRQ visited 16 cities, and nearly 7,000 fans came to laugh, cheer, scream, and sometimes cry together with the Kingdom.

Then came Season 3, held from March to May 2024. At that time, RRQ Hoshi’s journey in MPL Indonesia Season 13 was not easy. The team struggled through the Regular Season and nearly missed the Playoffs.

But the Kingdom did not disappear. Instead, they showed up.

Across 16 cities, more than 8,000 fans came to support RRQ. Not only when the team was winning. Not only when everything looked perfect. But also when the journey was difficult.

That is when loyalty becomes real. Because anyone can cheer during victory.
But the Kingdom has proven again and again that they can also stand tall during hard moments.

One fan from Semarang described their connection with RRQ as something that had been built for years:

“I’ve been a fan of RRQ since the RRQ Endeavour era in Point Blank back in 2017. I became a fan because RRQ players have always been incredibly skilled.”
— Kingdom from Semarang

For context, the journey from Palu to Manado is around 944 kilometers by land through Trans-Sulawesi — a distance that shows just how far some fans are willing to go for RRQ.

“I came all the way from Palu to Manado just to meet Pak AP, gather with other members of the Kingdom, and support RRQ in person.”
— Kingdom from Palu

And perhaps the most direct expression of loyalty came from Elio, a Kingdom from Tanawangko, North Sulawesi:

“When did I become an RRQ fan? Since the beginning of the MLBB division in 2017. Why? Because RRQ runs in my blood, boss!”
— Kingdom from Tanawangko, North Sulawesi

That is RKK in its purest form.

Not just an event.
Not just a crowd.
But years of loyalty finally meeting face to face.

A Journey Across 7 Seasons

From Season 1 to Season 7, RKK has continued to expand, not only in scale but also in meaning. Some cities have become regular homes for the Kingdom. Others became first-time destinations that proved esports passion can grow anywhere.

Here is the complete list of RKK cities from every season:

RKK Season 1 — 12 Cities

Jakarta, Depok, Tangerang, Bekasi, Bandung, Manado, Surabaya, Semarang, Yogyakarta, Medan, Palembang, Pontianak.

RKK Season 2 — 16 Cities

Depok, Bogor, Tasikmalaya, Bandung, Sumedang, Pontianak, Banjarmasin, Purwokerto, Semarang, Solo, Malang, Surabaya, Pekanbaru, Lampung, Yogyakarta, Bali.

RKK Season 3 — 16 Cities

Tasikmalaya, Cirebon, Garut, Karawang, Palembang, Makassar, Yogyakarta, Jember, Samarinda, Banjarmasin, Tegal, Purwokerto, Malang, Kediri, Batam, Padang.

RKK Season 4 — 16 Cities

Semarang, Pekalongan, Serang, Cirebon, Banyuwangi, Balikpapan, Banjar Baru, Pangkal Pinang, Padang, Medan, Manado, Lampung, Surabaya, Madiun, Cianjur, Bandung.

RKK Season 5 — 16 Cities

Surabaya, Madura, Jambi, Bandung, Indramayu, Semarang, Salatiga, Manado, Yogyakarta, Cilacap, Banjarmasin, Palangkaraya, Padang, Medan, Cilegon, Bali.

RKK Season 6 — 20 Cities

Medan, Pekanbaru, Kupang, Kudus, Solo, Magelang, Banda Aceh, Sukabumi, Jember, Pontianak, Madiun, Palu, Lamongan, Makassar, Samarinda, Tasikmalaya, Serang, Cianjur, Malang, Lombok.

RKK Season 7 — 16 Cities

Yogyakarta, Blitar, Ternate, Cirebon, Pekalongan, Tarakan, Kendari, Bengkulu, Palembang, Lampung, Sidoarjo, Malang, Purwokerto, Tegal, Makassar, Bogor.

More Than Expansion

Looking at the full list, RKK is not just expanding for the sake of adding more dots on the map.

It is building a pattern of connection.

Some cities have become familiar names in the journey. Cities like Yogyakarta, Bandung, Semarang, Surabaya, Medan, Palembang, Malang, Pontianak, Tasikmalaya, Makassar, Padang, Lampung, Banjarmasin, Cirebon, and Purwokerto have appeared across multiple seasons.

That tells us something important.

These are not random stops. These are communities that continue to show life, energy, and loyalty. RRQ returns not only because the cities are strategic, but because the Kingdom there keeps proving that the passion is real.

At the same time, RKK also continues to reach new places.

Season 7 brought RRQ to cities like Blitar, Ternate, Tarakan, Kendari, Bengkulu, and Sidoarjo — places that are not always considered “default” destinations for major esports events.

And that is exactly why they matter.

Because if esports only goes to the easiest places, it will never truly understand Indonesia.

RRQ knows that the Kingdom is not built only in Jakarta malls, Java venues, or big-city arenas. The Kingdom also lives in Sulawesi, Kalimantan, Sumatra, Bali, Nusa Tenggara, Maluku, and many other corners of the country.

Sometimes, the fans who live farthest from the spotlight are the ones who carry the loudest love.

Andika Marta, Head of Community and Event at RRQ, once shared why RKK continued to grow:

“The reason RKK has continued to this day is because there are still so many cities, communities, and fans we need to visit. This is our way of showing appreciation through the best programs and experiences we can offer, because they have always supported, loved, and stayed loyal to Team RRQ.”
— Andika Marta, Head of Community and Event at RRQ

He also shared one of the most emotional parts of the journey: meeting fans and volunteers whose sincerity cannot be easily described.

“The most memorable part? Meeting and working together with the fans and volunteers to bring this event to life with the RRQ Kingdom in every city. Their sincerity and dedication are impossible to fully describe with words. I was amazed and deeply moved seeing RRQ Kingdom members come to RKK after taking extraordinary journeys, from 12-hour motorcycle rides, crossing through forests in Kalimantan, traveling between islands from Sulawesi, and many more.”
— Andika Marta, Head of Community and Event at RRQ

Then, in classic RKK fashion, he closed it with a joke that probably only event people can truly feel in their bones:

“But what was equally memorable? Swollen feet, a destroyed back, and acid reflux acting up. Hahaha…”

That is the beauty of RKK.

It is emotional, but also very human.
It is inspiring, but also tiring.
It is full of love, but also full of logistics, long roads, sore bodies, and the occasional event-day chaos that somehow becomes a memory worth keeping.

The Kingdom Is Everywhere

RKK has become one of the clearest reminders that RRQ’s strength has never come only from trophies, players, or big matches.

It also comes from people.

From fans who have followed RRQ since the Point Blank era.
From fans who have supported RRQ since the first MLBB division.
From fans who cross cities, provinces, forests, and islands just to gather with other members of the Kingdom.

That kind of loyalty cannot be bought.
It has to be earned.

And RKK is one of RRQ’s ways of honoring it.

Across 112 city stops and 61 cities, RKK has shown that esports in Indonesia should not be limited by geography. It should not belong only to the capital. It should not only be celebrated where the spotlight is already bright.

Because passion is everywhere.

In Semarang.
In Manado.
In Palu.
In Ternate.
In Tarakan.
In Kupang.
In Banda Aceh.
In Lombok.
In Kendari.
In Bengkulu.
In every city where the Kingdom has shown up, shouted, smiled, and stayed loyal.

RKK began as a program.

But today, it feels more like a promise.

A promise that RRQ will continue to come closer.
A promise that the Kingdom will never be seen as just numbers on a screen.
A promise that wherever the fans are, their passion matters.

Because RRQ is not only built on stage.

RRQ is also built on the road, city by city, story by story, with the Kingdom walking beside it.

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