The PDC World Darts Championship final will see Luke Littler and Michael van Gerwen go head to head to be crowned champion of the world.
Littler is bidding for his first title after losing to Luke Humphries last year, while Van Gerwen is aiming for a fourth title to end a six-year drought, having won his last title in 2019.
Find out all you need to know about the PDC's showpiece event below.
The final will be contested over a maximum of 13 sets, with the first to seven sets being crowned world champion.
The final has the potential to be a marathon match, even if it doesn't go the distance. Luke Littler's 6-1 win over Bunting lasted nearly an hour and a half, and when accounting for breaks, if the final goes the distance, we could be looking at the better part of three hours.
The last final to go to a deciding set was in 2016 between Phil Taylor and Gary Anderson and lasted around two-and-half hours.
As with the rest of the tournament, the World Darts Championship final will be set play, with three legs required to win a set. Players will take it in turns to throw first after each leg and after each set.
The first round, which features qualifiers and unseeded players, is played over five sets, with the same for the second round. The third and fourth rounds are played over seven sets, with the quarter-finals the best of nine. The semi-finals are then the best of 11 sets, with the final contested over 13.
The PDC World Darts Championship final has been the best of 13 sets ever since 2000, with prior finals the first to six.
Since moving to the best-of-13 format, there have been four finals that have gone the distance, with Raymond van Barneveld memorably beating Phil Taylor in a sudden-death leg in 2007.
Following the split in darts and the creation of the PDC, the first PDC World Darts Championship, held at Circus Tavern, saw Dennis Priestley beat Phil Taylor 6-1 in 1994. Priestley won his first world title three years prior, while Taylor was already a two-time BDO champion, and would win world titles in eight straight years from 1995 to 2002, eventually being stopped by John Part in the 2006 final, going down 7-6.
Taylor won three consecutive titles from there before meeting four-time BDO world champion Raymond van Barneveld in 2007, with Barney winning via a sudden-death leg.
John Part won a second PDC title in 2008, beating Kirk Shepherd in the final, marking the first time in PDC history that Taylor hadn't made the final.
Taylor won two more in 2009 and 2010 before fellow Stoke-on-Trent arrowsmith Adrian Lewis took back-to-back titles in 2010 and 2011, hitting a nine-darter in the former against Gary Anderson.
Taylor returned to win a record-extending 16th and final world title the following year, beating Michael van Gerwen, who reigned supreme 12 months later against Peter Wright.
Anderson then won back-to-back titles in 2015 and 2016, with Van Gerwen adding a second title the year after before Rob Cross made history, winning the world title on debut in 2018.
Van Gerwen recorded his third title in 2019 before Wright finally got his hands on the trophy in 2020. Gerwyn Price beat Anderson in 2021 to win a first world crown before Wright won a second world title, beating Michael Smith.
Smith, who'd already lost in two finals, beat Van Gerwen in 2023, playing his part in what is widely recognised as the greatest leg of darts ever, hitting a nine-darter, before Luke Humphries beat Luke Littler in 2024.