PRINCE Harry and Meghan Markle looked loved up as they beamed beside each other at the opening ceremony of the Invictus Games.
The Duke and Duchess cheered and applauded from the stands as they watched the 2025 Invictus Games in Vancouver and Whistler, Canada, officially begin tonight.
![The Duke and Duchess of Sussex applaud at the 2025 Invictus Games opening ceremony.](https://www.thesun.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/NINTCHDBPICT000970330953.jpg?strip=all&w=960)
The Duke and Duchess smiled together as they watched the opening ceremony[/caption]
Meghan beamed beside her husband in the stands[/caption]
The mum-of-two waved blue pom-poms in support[/caption]
Meghan, 43, was spotted waving blue pom-poms as a show of support.
She donned a simple black dress, concealed beneath a sophisticated cream jacket.
The mum-of-two grinned from ear-to-ear as she sat beside her hubby, taking pictures on her phone.
Harry appeared equally joyful as he stepped out in a suave suit with navy tie.
The couple even looked emotional at time as the seventh edition of the games began.
A parade of nations with Germany, who hosted the 2023 event in Dusseldorf, leading in front kicked off the evening.
Vancouver’s team were welcomed into BC Place with an almighty cheer from the 54,500 seater arena.
Giant inflatables of a whale and dolphin floated above the military veterans to represent the city’s Vancouver connection to the Pacific Ocean.
Meghan had been posting heartwarming behind the scene footage on her Instagram stories this evening as the Duke and Duchess met with the athletes.
The mum-of-two beamed as she was filmed taking photographs with the Ladies USA team.
Meanwhile, Harry performed a playful dance while participants waited lined up for more pictures.
Coldplay’s Chris Martin, Nelly Furtado and Katy Perry are all set to perform at the opening ceremony tonight.
The incredible event, which spans nine days, will see Invictus athletes compete at sitting volleyball, wheelchair basketball, and rugby, swimming, indoor rowing as well as some newly introduced sports.
These include Alpine and Nordic skiing, snowboarding, biathlon, skeleton and wheelchair curling.
This comes after the Duke and Duchess of Sussex gave speeches as they opened the Invictus Games ceremony in Vancouver, Canada, last night.
Meghan, 43, gave Harry, 40, a passionate kiss on stage after introducing her husband in an impromptu, but lengthy, address.
The mum-of-two hailed the Duke for his parenting skills with Archie, five and Llibet, three, while calling everyone involved with Invictus “family”.
![Prince Harry and Meghan Markle at the Invictus Games.](https://www.thesun.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/prince-harry-duke-sussex-meghan-970326640.jpg?strip=all&w=960)
The royal couple chatting to each other[/caption]
The pair looked emotional at points as they watched on[/caption]
Meghan grinning from ear to ear while taking snaps[/caption]
The couple famously appeared in public together for the first time at the Toronto Invictus Games in 2017, pictured hand-in-hand at a wheelchair tennis event.
In 2023, Meghan and Harry cheered on athletes among the crowds at the Invictus Games in Dusseldorf, Germany.
The Duke and Duchess of Sussex were sitting side-by-side clapping and also reacting to the game tensely as they watched the wheelchair basketball with Australia supporters.
While Meghan is understood to have several projects on the horizon, her family remains her top priority and she is determined to continue to stand together with Harry to support the causes they care about.
The couple visited Colombia for a four-day tour last August, with the trip focusing on tackling cyber-bullying and online digital violence as well as promoting women’s leadership.
They also embarked on a three-day visit to Nigeria earlier in 2024 at the invitation of the West African nation’s chief of defence staff.
British veterans and serving personnel who were injured during service departed for Canada earlier this week for the games.
The 62 competitors – all veterans and serving personnel who sustained life-changing injuries and illnesses while serving in the UK Armed Forces – left the country from Birmingham Airport on Thursday.
The games aim to “inspire recovery, support rehabilitation and generate a wider understanding and respect for those who have served their country”, the Royal British Legion said.
The games have previously been held in London in 2014, in Orlando in 2016, Toronto in 2017, Sydney in 2018, The Hague in 2022 and Dusseldorf in 2023.