In pandemic times, all the gaming world’s a (concert) stage
With concerts on hold to halt the spread of coronavirus, the gaming world is increasingly catering to music lovers, with artists becoming animated performers in virtual realms to the trippy delight of millions.
The trend has gained momentum in recent weeks after the ultra-popular Fortnite morphed rapper Travis Scott into a massive psychedelic spaceman performing in a celestial dreamscape, as a record-setting 12.3 million players entered his 10-minute set in the game.
According to the platform that’s spurred an international gaming craze since launching in 2017, over 27.7 million unique players participated in Scott’s show across its premiere and four encore presentations.
And in early May, Fortnite launched an enormous virtual party featuring DJs including deadmau5 and Steve Aoki, celebrating its milestone of 350 million registered players.
The pandemic didn’t prompt transforming artists into avatars — DJ Marshmello had a massive Fortnite concert in 2019 — but that much of the globe’s population has been urged or forced to stay home because of Covid-19 has certainly spotlighted it.
Acknowledging the unfortunate circumstances coronavirus has wrought more broadly, Adam Arrigo — the CEO
of Wave, an entertainment technology company that has put on concerts from DJ Jean-Michel Jarre and now is teaming with artists including R&B singer John Legend — said the virtual show business “has exploded” due to quarantine measures.
“It’s kind of given us a chance to show people really what the value, both creatively and economically, of virtual concerts is,” said Arrigo, who co-founded Wave in 2016.
Virtual concerts in Fortnite or on other gaming platforms, as well as streaming outlets like YouTube live or Twitch, are a different, much more
elaborate animal than the concerts many stars have launched recently on Instagram or Facebook live apps.
A musician himself, Arrigo said the virtual experience intends to take viewers “where I can be any avatar I want, or the performer can take me on a journey — just like I feel when I go to a physical show”.
But he said Wave is not aiming to replicate an in-person concert but is instead working to leverage tech to “create a new experience” heavy on “visual spectacle” and virtual interaction.
“You’re not beholden to the laws of physics or gravity, so you can just do anything,” the 36-year-old said. These types of shows see performers transformed into an avatar that uses computer vision and motion capture technology to mimic the artist’s live movements in real-time — “when they smile, their avatar smiles”, explained Arrigo.
It also offers artists a way to reach fans who might avoid concerts even in non-pandemic times for a variety of reasons, including ticket cost, travel time or introversion, he said.
Dmitri Williams, a communications and technology scholar at the University of Southern California, said beyond improving accessibility, virtual concerts offer a win-win situation for both artists and gaming platforms.
Artists can draw in potential fans who might not normally flock to a show, and game publishers “get to associate with something fun and credible”, he said.
But could a virtual show, even one rife with mind-blowing effects and online social interaction at a lower price point, ever replace a flesh-andblood performance?
Probably not, says Arrigo — adding that was never the goal anyway.
“There are things that happen in a live concert that you can just never experience in a virtual one,” he said. “The feeling of, like, physical connection with another human being.”
Virtual reality, he predicts, “is always going to be something that exists alongside actual life”.