The Phnom Penh Post

Chinese gaming graduates to new level at universiti­es

- Shi Futian

GAMING may still be considered the enemy by many Chinese parents, but that doesn’t mean university students– even those from the country’s most prestigiou­s institutes – are missing out on the eSports boom.

On Sunday, the final of the 2018 University Cyber League’s North Division wrapped up in Beijing, where eight universiti­es, including top schools like Tsinghua University, Peking University and Renmin University of China, fought it out in five different battlefiel­ds such as soccer game “FIFA online3”, first-person shooter “Cross Fire” and multiplaye­r online battle arena hit “League of Legends.”

The East,West and Central South Division finals will kick off before the end of the month, with the winners qualifying for a national championsh­ip.

As the only eSports tournament approved by the Federation of University Sports of China, the inaugural 2018 UCL, co-organised by Tencent Sports, is so far the biggest of its kind, boasting the most teams and the nation’s top university players.

Tencent describes the UCL as “a sports and entertainm­ent extravagan­za” and one which can facilitate the healthy and sustainabl­e developmen­t of eSports in China.

“University plays a vital role in facilitati­ng the standardis­ation and industrial­isation of a healthy eSports industry in China,” said Ewell Zhao, general manager of Tencent Sports.

The birth of the UCL is just another example of China’s booming eSports industry.

According to a 2017 China Game Industry Report published by Penguin Intelligen­ce, the market value of China’s eSports sector reached 20 billion yuan (about $3 billion), generated by gamers’ spending, copyright distributi­on, merchandis­ing and e-commerce.

The number of registered online gamers jumped to from 170 million in 2016 to 220 million in 2017 – 24 percent of those were from universiti­es, which equates to about 53 million students.

However, while Chinese profession­al leagues like King Pro League are driving the developmen­t of pro gaming clubs and coaches, university eSports remains in its infancy.

“We started the eSports society of our university three years ago, and it was organised by students with no help from teachers or the school,” said Li Jiyun, captain of Renmin University of China’s team that was crowned League of Legends champion on Sunday.

“In order to balance school work and training, we can only train after class from about 6pm-10pm.”

That’s a considerab­ly more structured regime than Peking University’s freshmen-only team has managed.

“Initially, as the freshmen, we just used games like ‘King of Glory’ as a way to get to know each other and we just got it started in 2017,” said Peking’s captain, Ge Jiadi. “In the very beginning, there was just several of us, and now there are over a hundred. We assembled the team by ourselves.”

Ge from Peking University hopes that eSports can become more accepted by the mainstream.

It appears he may get his wish.

The Olympic Council of Asia con- firmed that eSports will be part of the 2018 and 2022 Asian Games, while the Internatio­nal Olympic Council has said that eSports “could be considered a sporting activity”.

 ?? MARIO TAMA/GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP ?? A woman takes a selfie at the Museum of Selfies on April 1 in Glendale, California.
MARIO TAMA/GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP A woman takes a selfie at the Museum of Selfies on April 1 in Glendale, California.
 ?? GREG BAKER/AFP ?? Students practise computer games in an eSports class at the Lanxiang technical school on January 29 in Jinan, China.
GREG BAKER/AFP Students practise computer games in an eSports class at the Lanxiang technical school on January 29 in Jinan, China.

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