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2017: Kuala Lumpur: Rimau: a Malayan tiger. [3] 2019: Clark: Pami: a sponge ball figure. [4] 2021: Hanoi: Sao La: a saola. [5] [6] 2023: Phnom Penh: Borey and Rumduol: two rabbits wearing traditional Khmer attire. [7] 2025: Bangkok–Chonburi–Songkhla: Mawin: a Waree Kunchorn, a mythical fish-tailed elephant that lived in the Himavanta. [8] [9]
This marks the first time that host cities were selected through a new bidding and election process for the SEA Games. The 2025 SEA Games will be the seventh time Thailand has hosted the event, with Bangkok having previously hosted in 1959, 1967, 1975, and 1985. It will also be the first time Chonburi and Songkhla have served as the main host ...
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The Southeast Asian Games, commonly known as SEA Games is a biennial multi-sport event involving participants from the current 11 countries of Southeast Asia.The games are under the regulation of the Southeast Asian Games Federation with supervision by the International Olympic Committee and the Olympic Council of Asia.
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The 2017 Southeast Asian Games was organised across several states in Malaysia. [17] [18] All the existing venues in Bukit Jalil National Sports Complex were upgraded while a new velodrome, costing MYR 80 million was built in Nilai, Negeri Sembilan to host track cycling events and was completed on late March 2017 and opened on 26 May 2017.
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The official mascot for the 2025 ASEAN Para Games, designed by Nopadon Anantthavorn, was chosen through a nationwide contest. The mascot, named Nong Jai Kraeng ( Thai : น้องใจแกร่ง , RTGS : Nong Chaikraeng , pronounced [nóːŋ tɕāj.krɛ̂ːŋ] ), is a Korat cat , a domestic breed originating from Nakhon Ratchasima.