New Straits Times

Gym and nutritioni­sts are vital parts of South Korea’s eSports realm

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SEOUL: A Nike-sponsored gym, support staff including nutritioni­sts and English language classes are all part of the set-up at T1, one of the world’s top eSports organisati­ons, where around 70 gamers are looking to emulate its highest-profile member, League of Legends giant Faker.

Explosive growth has turned competitiv­e video gaming into an increasing­ly profession­al sport, with a youthful, ever-growing fan base that appeals to sponsors and advertiser­s.

Players — mostly in their 20s or even teenagers — can attract a global following to rival stars in traditiona­l sports, with the best making millions of dollars in salaries and prize money.

South Korea is a leading power in eSports and in a brand new, 10-storey building in Seoul’s expensive Gangnam district, dozens of T1’s profession­al and budding gamers train, following a routine similar to mainstream sports.

“We have a gym, a cafeteria, chefs... everything that these young players need to perform their best,” said John Kim, the organisati­on’s chief operating officer.

The routine is intense: around 10 hours a day with coaches and trainers, strategisi­ng and polishing their skills for the next match.

Promotiona­l photos show the team in uniform, half of them in glasses and most with identical pudding-basin haircuts.

It is a far cry from when Choi Ellim, who was promoted in 2019 to a spot alongside star player Lee ‘Faker’ Sang-hyeok on T1’s top roster, played video games at home for fun.

“When I was playing games as a hobby, I could eat when I was hungry and sleep when I was sleepy but now we are on a set schedule,” he said.

They are also required to fulfil monthly minimum hours interactin­g with their millennial and Generation Z fans through social media and streaming platforms such as Twitch and YouTube.

It has proved a successful model: T1 are three-times League of Legends world champions, and according to esportsear­nings.com are the World No 1 for overall prize money, with around US$7.1 million (RM29.3 million).

T1 was founded by South Korean telecommun­ications giant SK Telecom in 2004, which combined it two years ago in an internatio­nal joint venture with Comcast Spectacor — a subsidiary of the US entertainm­ent giant Comcast, which also owns the Philadelph­ia Flyers ice hockey team.

Last month SK Telecom sold off its profession­al South Korean baseball team, the Incheon-based Wyverns, for US$122 million, saying it would increase investment in “futuristic sports.”

The eSports audience is one of the fastest-growing in profession­al sports: in a 2018 report, investment bank Goldman Sachs said it was already larger than that of Major League Baseball.

More than 100 million fans tuned into the 2019 League of Legends World Championsh­ips online.

“We believe eSports are as much of a sport as any other, and one that at the highest levels requires intense training and focus,” the Goldman Sachs report said.

The industry is expected to generate revenues of more than US$1 billion this year, up around 15 per cent from 2020, according to figures from games and eSports data company Newzoo. Around 60 per cent will come from sponsors.

“eSports audiences average much younger than traditiona­l sports, which tends to be an attractive segment,” Remer Rietkerk, Newzoo’s head of Esports, told AFP.

Nike, BMW and Red Bull are among T1’s sponsors and last year’s League of Legends World Championsh­ips were backed by prestigiou­s brands such as Louis Vuitton and Mercedes-Benz.

eSports will debut as a medal event at next year’s Asian Games in China, although efforts to become an Olympic sport suffered a setback last year when the IOC refused to recognise a world governing body.

Commercial ownership of the games is another hurdle, as is the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee’s stance it would not endorse games that simulate violence or killing.

COO Kim told AFP that eSports were as competitiv­e as traditiona­l sports, likening Faker to Michael Jordan or Tiger Woods for his longevity and dubbing him the “greatest of all time.”

“He just had this relentless­ness and he’s still a top player to this day. All his peers that he began with, they are all retired or have moved on.”

According to esportsear­nings.com Faker has made more than US$1.2 million in prize money, and reports say he is paid millions of dollars in base salary.

Kim attributed the star’s enduring success to his “deep competitiv­e nature” and “good mental emotional intelligen­ce.”

“League of Legends, there’s about 100 million monthly active players and to be a pro you have to be at the top of that. The elite of the elite,” he said.

“And to join T1 you have to be even higher than that.”

 ?? AFP PIC ?? Gamers training at the T1 building in Seoul.
AFP PIC Gamers training at the T1 building in Seoul.

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