5th Summer Olympics

The Games of the V Olympiad (French: Jeux de la Ve Olympiade) were an international multi-sport event held in Outineau, Kelssek. This was the second time the country hosted the Olympics but the first time hosting the summer edition of the Games. The official language of the Outineau Olympics was French, and consequently marching order in the parade of nations was according to the delegation's French name. The cauldron was lit by Pierre Lacousteau, captain of Kelssek's gold medal winning men's water polo team at the 2nd Summer Olympics in Querzaki.

There were 22 new Olympic records set during the Olympics, including a remarkable three-way tie with the existing record by three swimmers in the semi-finals of the women's 100m backstroke. Yet none of the three, Paula Biederlieu (Delaclava), Samantha Benson (Quintessence of Dust) and Natália Franco (Cafundéu), managed to make it onto the podium in the final as Jessica Langton (Kelssek) won the gold medal instead. Some highlights of the Games included Matthew Daniltsin of Delaclava's win in the men's 100 metre sprint, Kelssek swimmer Philippe Destry cementing his status as an Olympic star by winning 2 gold, 1 silver and 1 bronze for a total of four medals. The gold medal victory for Kelssek's men's water polo team was one of the most-watched television events in the host nation's history and sparked spontaneous street celebrations in several cities.

Outineau was the first city to be awarded the Olympic Games under the newly-ratified Olympic Charter. Netball and rugby sevens were held as demonstration events.

Host selection
With the Olympic Charter having been recently ratified by the participant nations of the Olympics, the new host bidding and selection process was used for the first time. In any event, Outineau did not face any competing bids and easily overcame the option to re-open the bidding process.

Participating NOCs
Liventia was officially represented by the Combined Team. However, due to unhappiness that the Combined Team was dominated by Ad'ihan, national sports federations in Liventia also backed 165 athletes who entered as a separate delegation, the Independent Athletes of Liventia (IAL). The Liventian Olympic Association (LOA) granted the independent delegation authorization to use the national anthem of Liventia at medal ceremonies. Subsequently, the LOA claimed medals won by the independent athletes as won by Liventia, but officially only those won by the Combined Team are counted as such in Olympic Council records and the Independent Athletes of Liventia are considered an entirely separate entity.

Summary
Day 1 Day 2 Day 3 Day 4 Day 5 Day 6 Day 7 Day 8 Day 9 Day 10 Day 11 Day 12 Day 13 Day 14 Day 15 Day 16 Day 17 Day 18 Day 19 Day 20 Day 21 Day 22 Day 23 Day 24
 * Quintessence of Dust got off to great start with three gold medals and one silver, which included Momoko Koumura's victory in the women's judo 48kg and Lei Hia's gold in the men's 10m air pistol. *I Yu-juŋ (Capitalizt SLANI) set a new Olympic record in the course of winning the women's 10m air rifle.
 * Quintessence of Dust's defending Olympic women's team archery champions were eliminated in the quarterfinals.
 * Akbarabad officials dove straight into controversy by accusing Momoko Koumura of doping simply because she is also a competent baseball player.
 * The Independent Athletes from Liventia showed early signs of outperforming the official Liventian delegation as Issac Andy won gold in men's weightlifting 56kg and they picked up a third bronze medal in judo.
 * The Quodite women's field hockey team was struck a blow when captain Rebecca Rodriguez suffered a tournament-ending injury in their first match, a 5-2 win against Kosovoe. Genevieve Lemaitre (Kelssek) won gold in judo women's 52kg over Karoliina Huuskonen (QOD)
 * Ariddia was shocked by the failure of its gymnastics "Golden Girls" to qualify for the women's team all-around. Only Maysa Alshamrani progressed to the finals.
 * Leehan Xia won Cosumar's first-ever Olympic medal with the gold in the men's 100m breaststroke.
 * Salim Akbar (Akbarabad) won the men's 10m air rifle event with an Olympic record score of 701.9
 * Quintessence of Dust won the men's team archery gold over Jalanat. In an all-Akbaradad women's individual foil final, fencers Rumana Parveen and Mehnaz Alam won gold and silver respectively.
 * After the shock of its women's team failing to make the final, Ariddia's gymnasts won the gold in the men's team all-around, while Cafundéu won the women's event.
 * Weightlifter Victor Ugarte (Sargossa), who won silver in Aeropag, took the gold this time by lifting 5kg more in the men's 62kg.
 * Sorthern judoka Luisina Martínez Enrique threw Jiang Li Tsui (Quintessence of Dust) with a yama arashi in the final of the women's judo 57kg for Sorthern Northland's first gold medal of the Games.
 * Akbarabad beat the hosts Kelssek to the swimming gold in the men's 4x100m freestyle relay, but this didn't stop the delegation's officials alleging corruption in judo without any evidence.
 * Kelssek won two golds in judo with Sean Mac Gárbhain in the men's 81kg and Karen Dubinsky winning the women's 63kg.
 * In swimming Jessica Langton (Kelssek) added gold in the women's 100m backstroke to her record. *Roger Schmidt (Cafundéu) set an Olympic record en route to gold in the men's 200m freestyle.
 * Star cyclist Rarrns Pawstrong (Bears Armed) surprised fans when he announced his retirement after winning silver in the men's time trial.
 * Philippe Destry (Kelssek) won gold in the men's 200m butterfly. Marcel Olawe (Ariddia) won the country's second gymnastics gold medal on the men's parallel bars.
 * Bergnovinaia's Ferris West and Julia Nedder won the women's synchronized 3m springboard.
 * Cafundéu won the equestrian eventing team event thanks to a flawless jumping performance by Marcos Paulo Bamerindus and Vladmir Sottil.
 * Sorthern Northland broke its drought in cycling with Lucy Brewer's gold medal in the women's time trial.
 * Manuel Moyá (Sargossa) abjectly failed to defend his gold medal from Aeropag when he finished 32nd in the heats of the men's 200m breaststroke.
 * Jonathan Chertin (Kelssek) became the latest swimmer to break an Olympic record, winning gold in the men's 200m breastroke.
 * Jenna Hollenback (Virabia) won the women's skeet in a shoot-off against Elza Õkva (Somewhereistonia).
 * Klaudie Loewe was the first Quodite athlete to defend a gold medal in women's 50m rifle prone.
 * After Sangasan Sebiya/Yohanai Sebiya (Jalanat) won the women's 10m synchronized event in diving, Bergnovinaia was the latest delegation to have sore losers complain about judging.
 * Somewhereistonia swept three gold medals in the canoeing events, winning in the men's C-2, women's C-2, and women's K-1.
 * Vinsent Ivere (Vekaiyu) and Ali Hossain (Akbarabad) tied for the win in the men's 100m freestyle.
 * Lisa Greenwood (Kelssek) won the women's 200m butterfly, surging towards the end to overcome a poor start. In the same event, Li Ming Hsiao's bronze made her the first Quintessential-Chinese woman to win an Olympic medal.
 * Marina Zacchini (Cafundéu) won the women's 100m freestyle gold after Cafundelese medal favourite Natália Franco failed to make the final.
 * Jia Li Lo (Quintessence of Dust) beat Roxanne Ovenicheva (Krytenia) to win the women's singles in badminton.
 * Ariddia added two bronze medals from women's gymnastics from Li Sha in the floor exercise and Maysa Alshamrani in the vault.
 * No one was hurt after a mattress fire in the Akbarabad section of the Olympic Village. Sorthern Northland's women's field hockey team denied furious allegations that they started the fire and insisted they had been drinking heavily with Cafundéu's volleyball team.
 * Sveva Pék followed her gold in Aeropag with the silver medal in the women's 10,000m.
 * Sailors Jiang Li Mai and Li Hua (Quintessence of Dust) maintained their lead in the women's skiff. After Mai's remarks about being close to finding a secret treasure trove in a press conference, some felt they were taking the pirate schtick too far and the cannons mounted to their boat were probably not on.
 * Matthew Deniltsin (Delaclava) won the men's 100m sprint with a time of 9.84 seconds.
 * Zara Johnson (The Babbage Islands) surpassed expectations becoming Olympic champion in the women's uneven bars.
 * Kelssek's silver in the men's 4x100m medley relay gave Philippe Destry a record 16th Olympic medal, making him the most successful Olympian in history.
 * Sanadrianese runner Femke van der Vaart won gold in the women's 10,000m to give the micronation only its second-ever Olympic gold medal.
 * Cyclist Daniel Cancellara (Delaclava) won his second gold medal in the men's points race to add to his gold in the men's Keirin.
 * In gymnastics, Jesse Howard (Unified Beretania) won two gold medals on the same day in the men's horizontal bar and parallel bars. Staci Whitman (Bergnovinaia) took the gold in the women's balance beam.
 * Tennis doubles stars Louis Knoff and Howard Knoff (Bergnovinaia) were knocked out in the semi-final.
 * Brent Fowles and Michel-Jean Papineau gave Kelssek a one-two in the men's 1500m freestyle.
 * Natasha Burmykina (Jesselton) won the tennis women's singles final in straight sets over Nicole Williams (Bergnovinaia). Bergnovinaia also picked up a bronze with the Knoff brothers in men's doubles.
 * Kyle Reper sparked celebrations in athletics-mad Ferkas with the gold in men's steeplechase.
 * Frederic Renard (Quintessence of Dust) announced his retirement after a four-set win over Rocco Davis (Delaclava) in the final of the tennis men's singles.
 * The piratical endeavours of Jiang Li Mai and Liu Hua Lei (Quintessence of Dust) ended in silver following the medal race in the women's skiff. Eva Gagarin and Heiti Vahing (Somewhereistonia) took the gold medal by one point.
 * Sarafine Garotte (Kelssek) beat Maya Stanley (Quintessence of Dust ) in the gold medal race of the women's cycling individual pursuit.
 * Kelssek's women's water polo team was upset in the round of 16, losing 8-6 to Toiletdonia.
 * After a three-way tie led to a jump-off in the equestrian team jumping event, The Babbage Islands, Sargossa, and Cafundéu were awarded gold, silver, and bronze respectively. At this point, it was the only equestrian event that Cafundéu did not win the gold in.
 * Carpathia and Ruthenia picked up two gold medals in athletics with Gian Busto winning the men's long jump and Bernadett Nascimbene winning the women's 1500m.
 * In cycling, Quintessence of Dust wins the men's team pursuit over Krytenia, while Sorthern Northland beats Kelssek for bronze.
 * Ashlyn Parnel (Sorthern Northland) wins the women's trampoline, while Landau Institute takes a one-two in the men's trampoline with Dr. Luiz Augusto Flamengo and Dr. João Carlos Mattar.
 * A close race in the men's cycling Madison saw Krytenia's Luke Reyes and Ian Lynton pip Varrdar Bad-News and Skarron Bad-News (Bears Armed) for the gold.
 * Grace Johnson's first place in the women's dinghy gives the Independent Athletes of Liventia a gold in sailing.
 * Don Wild (The Babbage Islands) put together two flawless rides on his horse Sky Pilot to win the gold medal in individual show jumping.
 * Liventia's medal favorites in men's field hockey (competing as part of the Combined Team) were knocked out in the quarterfinals with a 1-0 loss to Quintessence of Dust.
 * Taylor Frederick (Taeshan) won the men's BMX.
 * Disappointment with its performances at the athletics track left Ferkas questioning its training programs.
 * In a remarkable achievement visually-impaired sprinter Priscilla Sissoko (Ariddia) finished fifth in the women's 200m, behind gold medallist Samantha Reddy (Krytenia).
 * Bernard Ulster-Sherman gave Ferkas medal hopes a further blow when the long-distance star required medical attention during the semifinals of the men's 5000m and was unable to complete the race.
 * Claire Scholl (Zwangzug) was very happy with her bronze in the women's cycling points race.
 * Farhad Hossain's gold in the men's freestyle 96kg was the 20th wrestling medal won by Akbarabad.
 * Carpathia and Ruthenia beat Sorthern Northland 3-2 and Delaclava won 2-0 against Iglesian Archipelago in the men's football semifinals.
 * Hosts Kelssek enjoyed a medal rush taking a total of seven medals from flatwater canoeing, two medals in taekwondo, and bronze in the triple jump.
 * Hope Rand (Bergnovinaia) was taken off on a stretcher after falling during the women's 4x100m relay final, reportedly because she had forgotten to tie her shoes.
 * Delaclava defeated Cafundéu in the final of men's volleyball in straight sets by a score of 25-18, 25-21, 25-19.
 * Pierre Desjarlais (Kelssek) won gold in diving at the men's 10m platform.
 * Marcus Vinícius Farias and Rodrigo Garcia (Cafundéu) took gold in men's beach volleyball over Bergnovinaia's Joshua Fuller and Don Richardson.
 * François Terreau added another Ariddian gymnastics gold in the men's individual rhythmic.
 * A five-set epic gold medal match in women's volleyball saw Seven Castles beat the odds and Cafundéu to win the Olympic title.
 * Osarius won 3-2 against Vekaiyu for the gold in women's football. Delaclava routed Carpathia and Ruthenia 5-0 in the men's gold medal match.
 * Quintessence of Dust won the demonstration event in men's rugby sevens while Delaclava won in the women's competition.
 * Ingrid Putanesca (Bergnovinaia) set an Olympic record in the women's high jump, but many of the delegation were partying with the volleyball team instead.
 * Street celebrations broke out as Kelssek won the highly-anticipated men's water polo final 12-6 against Quintessence of Dust.
 * Hope Rand's death as her condition worsened despite days in the intensive care unit cast a pall over the final day of competition, with her family invited to give a eulogy during the closing ceremony.

Venues
Hosting the Olympics had been a long-nurtured ambition among a large segment of the city's political and business leaders, and the construction of the Stade des Jeux Olympiques in 1976, despite being immediately meant to serve the needs of professional rugby, included an athletics track and relevant facilities in its design long before an Olympic bid was actually submitted. The stadium required extensive modernization work but the dreams were finally fulfilled as it was formally renamed Stade Olympique d'Outineau upon completion of the works two weeks before the opening ceremony. New constructions included the Athletes Village and the addition of an inclined tower to the stadium complex which held the cauldron for the Olympic flame and provided international broadcasters with studios equipped with spectacular city views. The swimming complex on Île-Saint-Hélène was expanded with a spectator stand for the hosting of water polo events, and the rowing facility was newly-constructed.

Parc Maisonneuve
 * Stade Olympique d'Outineau - opening and closing ceremonies, athletics
 * Piscine Olympique - swimming, diving, water polo (knockout rounds), synchronised swimming
 * Vélodrome Olympique - cycling
 * Aréna Olympique - boxing, basketball, badminton
 * Centre de la radiodiffusion internationale (international broadcast centre)
 * Olympic Village

Île Saint-Hélène
 * Centre Saint-Hélène - water polo, beach volleyball
 * Marina d'Île Saint-Hélène - sailing
 * Complexe sportif nautique d'Outineau - canoeing, rowing

Downtown area
 * Stade Outineau - football
 * Centre Belle - basketball (semi-finals and final), gymnastics
 * Stade Moen - tennis

Université d'Outineau
 * Aréna Félix-Letourneau - handball, volleyball, judo, taekwondo
 * Stade Communaté - football
 * Pavillon d'éducation physique - field hockey, wrestling
 * Centre de tir à l'arc de Université d'Outineau - archery

Desjardins University
 * Percival Stadium - field hockey, football
 * Memorial Sports Complex - table tennis, basketball, weightlifting, wrestling

Greater Outineau
 * Centre de tir Olympique (Laval) - shooting
 * Centre équestre Olympique (Broumont) - equestrian
 * Complexe sportif Dollard-des-Oiseaux - water polo (preliminaries)
 * Palais des sports de Longueuil (Langevin) - handball, volleyball