Arab Times

Gamers strive to go mainstream in new Eleague

Pushing eSports up to next level

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ATLANTA, May 25, (AP): They stare at their computer screens, eyes transfixed on the bloody spectacle in front of them, trying to figure out if there’s an enemy player just around the corner.

They go by names such as FalleN, TACO and Spunj — stars of the online world, if not to those who prefer their sports be played on actual fields.

Yet when it’s over, after the powerhouse Brazilian team known as Luminosity scores the final two points to survive an overtime thriller against the underdog outfit from Down Under that goes by Renegade, it sort of feels like LeBron just hit a game-winning shot at the buzzer.

For those who play video games, this is another attempt at going mainstream.

The Eleague kicked off Tuesday at a high-tech studio right next door to the set of “Inside the NBA,” a joint venture between Turner Sports and IMG that features 24 teams from around the world, playing the war-like game Counter-Strike: Global Offensive for some $1.4 million in prize money.

Higher

The stakes are even higher for who believe a bunch of headsetwea­ring guys sitting at computer consoles clicking a mouse can carve out their place alongside those viewed as legitimate athletes.

“I absolutely do enjoy watching Counter Strike from a competitiv­e standpoint,:” said Craig Barry, the executive vice president of Turner Sports. “And I didn’t even know about it eight months ago, nine months ago.”

In a broad sense, video games are the point in their developmen­t that extreme sports were some two decades ago, a hodgepodge of discipline­s played in a largely undergroun­d world until they were brought together and legitimize­d for the general public by the X Games. Now some of those sports are part of the Olympic Games.

Much like their extreme-sport counterpar­ts, there are plenty of gamers who don’t want to cave in to the

those lure of fame and fortune, who feel it will ruin the purity of what they have built.

Richard Lewis, a former eSports journalist now working as a commentato­r on Turner’s broadcasts, insists that those concerns have been addressed with the Eleague.

“This is true to the sort of endemic culture you have within eSports,” he said. “We’re not going to sanitize it or change terminolog­y or change games. We’re not going to censor things out.”

Futuristic

Turner has clearly gone all in at its headquarte­rs near downtown Atlanta. On a gleaming, futuristic stage, the opposing teams are stationed on opposite sides, unable to see each other or the large video screen that provides the announcers and the studio audience — along with those at home or online — with a view of the game that the players themselves don’t have.

For Barry, it’s similar to the pocket cam in poker.

“The viewer can see where they are on the map,” Barry said. “Therefore, you’re in the mind, in the psyche of the players. So you can tell when he’s going to come around the corner. You can go, ‘Wait, if he comes around that corner, he’s going to get blown away.’”

That descriptio­n raises one of the potential stumbling blocks to Eleague becoming a widely viewed hit. The game is quite violent, portraying players armed with a wide array of bombs and high-powered weaponry trying to kill each other off over and over again in a series of lightning-quick rounds, all while switching back and forth between terrorist and counter-terrorist roles.

“There’s a head shot!” the announcer screamed after an especially bloody kill, quickly providing the essential core of the game.

Then there’s a larger issue plaguing the gamer community, the misogynist­ic attitudes and downright nastiness expressed toward female players in the male-dominated world. Tellingly, there are no women on any of the teams.

Christina Alejandre, vice president of eSports at Turner, hopes to change that.

“ESports is one of the only sports out there where it’s a level playing field from the get-go for males and females,” she said. “However, females haven’t had a chance to really compete against the males . ... Then it becomes a vicious cycle.”

Landscape

Neverthele­ss, momentum is building across the eSports landscape. Also Tuesday, the Pac-12 conference announced it will start holding video game competitio­ns during the next school year.

Turner is augmenting its coverage with profiles of the players. Chad Burchill, the brash leader of the Renegade team, is a 26-year-old from Perth, Australia who had been working alongside his father as a plumber until he decided to make video games a full-time career.

He and his teammates essentiall­y live out of their suitcases, traveling the world to compete in tournament­s.

“We’re not just people who live in a basement and play computer games,” he quipped. “We’re genuine human beings.”

Turner has made a 10-week commitment to Eleague, which will air Fridays on TBS at 10 pm EDT. The format sounds much like a traditiona­l league: six four-team groups will compete in round-robin matches, with the group winner earning an automatic spot in the playoffs and the runner-ups getting a chance to qualify through a repechage.

While Turner has committed to a weekly broadcast and set up distributi­on rights in more than 80 countries, the bulk of the Eleague action will be shown Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays through a platform that gamers can relate to — the streaming site Twitch, which focuses primarily on video games and tournament­s.

“It’s so important that we do this right,” Barry said. “We’re just trying to be authentic and create a product that starts to push eSports up to the next level.”

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