The Borneo Post

E-sport popularity mushrooms but money lags behind

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LISBON: It is a paradox pitting popularity against relative pittances -- e-sports have exploded into the global consciousn­ess but the big money has not yet appeared pitchside, or screenside.

Participat­ion has soared as virtual games gain traction, with a worldwide fan audience now estimated at 280 million, approachin­g that for the NFL.

Such a leap in growth has helped fuel talk that competitiv­e electronic sports, or profession­al gaming, could even soon become an Olympic ‘discipline’.

But even if the League of Legends final drew a huge audience to the ‘Bird’s Nest’ National Stadium in Beijing earlier this month the sector has yet to mature economical­ly and needs to secure more funding in order to secure a longer term foothold in the sporting world, analysts say.

And the question of how to open the revenue stream sluice gate is complex.

“This year, e-sport should earn a little over 850 million euros (US$ 990 million) and studies show that come 2021 we’ll reach turnover of some three billion euros,” says Laurent Michaud, director of studies at Idate, a leading European think tank on the digital economy.

“But that’s set against a global video games market worth more than 65 billion euros.” How to ramp up low monetisati­on is exercising minds given that an e-sport fan brings only three euros to the table annually on average, according to a recent study by Nielsen Sports.

Soccer generates typically some ten times more.

One reason for the disparity between the virtual and the nonvirtual sporting universes is the difficulty of engaging with e-fans via traditiona­l broadcasti­ng outlets.

“Our football stadiums are still sold out -- but clubs shouldn’t feel too safe because the crowds are not so young.

Traditiona­l sports don’t have to be afraid of e-sports, TVs should,” says Tim Reichert, chief gaming officer at German top-flight football club Schalke 04.

“We’re still at the point we have to educate broadcaste­rs and outside sponsors on how to interact with this complicate­d audience, because they don’t watch TV and they all have ad blockers,” Reichert told AFP at the Web Summit in Lisbon, a kind of “Davos for geeks” where virtual gaming featured high on the agenda.

Many e- sport fans are used to receiving their visual fare for free via platforms such as YouTube, rather than switching on the TV set. Traditiona­l media are still taking baby e-steps after coming late to the genre.

“We’ve had a partnershi­p with BBC 3 which is a really good space to explore it, and with some success,” says Barbara Slater, who heads the BBC’s sports coverage.

“We’ve covered an e- gaming event live. I just think we’ll step forward cautiously but there is no question the interest and the amount time and engagement that e-sports is achieving with our audience.”

An additional obstacle is dubious image a substantia­l swathe of society has of video gaming and e-sport in particular.

“People are afraid of what they don’t understand. There is still a generation that doesn’t know anything about video games. Twenty ago that was a majority, now it’s 5050 and in the future there will be less people that don’t understand it,” says Ralf Reichert, founder of Electronic Sports League ( ESL), the oldest and largest-scale organiser of e-sport competitio­ns.

“The simple changing of generation will remove the fear” of making the e-leap, says Reichert.

The generation­al shift is moving in e-sport’s favour, says Andy Dinh, a former star gamer now heading his own team.

In his view, “today’s fans take their children to watch an e-sport competitio­n e-sport as some take theirs to watch the baseball.

These are the upcoming generation­s of fans.”

That will increasing­ly bend the ear of sponsors and broadcaste­rs when it comes to showing and investing in competitio­ns which are set increasing­ly to become unmissable attraction­s on the e-circuit.

 ??  ?? Players compete in an e-sports event at the Lyon Palais des Sports, Lyon, France. It is a paradox pitting popularity against relative pittances -- e-sports have exploded into the global consciousn­ess but the big money has not yet appeared pitchside, or...
Players compete in an e-sports event at the Lyon Palais des Sports, Lyon, France. It is a paradox pitting popularity against relative pittances -- e-sports have exploded into the global consciousn­ess but the big money has not yet appeared pitchside, or...

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