The Star Malaysia - Star2

Brain training: New frontier for esports

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THE days of playing your favourite game for hours at a time to stay competitiv­e in esports are gone, with gamers now focusing on brain developmen­t, if one leading team is to be believed.

At the Team Liquid training centre in the Dutch city of Utrecht, coach David Tillberg-persson, alias “Fuzzface”, frowns and scratches his beard, eyes glued to a screen.

Using the keyboard, the 28-year-old former Swedish player must recognise shapes and “catch” red dots, anticipati­ng, identifyin­g and reacting with increasing speed.

Tillberg-persson is testing a new training programme before it is made available to the Team Liquid players themselves.

Team Liquid is one of the biggest in the profession­al esports leagues and it is keen to keep its edge, with the focus on brain training adding to the use of coaches.

The image of the overweight teenager locked in his room is a distant memory in a sector that has rapidly profession­alised, with prize money worth millions of dollars, and players leading discipline­d lifestyles.

With new generation­s of gamers adding to the pool of talent, competitio­n is fierce and teams are now seeking to optimise the cognitive aspect, which is crucial in a field where every millisecon­d counts.

Training reloaded

Described as “revolution­ary” by Team Liquid, the new training programme, dubbed The Pro Lab, has also been implemente­d in California, the United States, where the team is based.

“We believe The Pro Lab will make waves in the esports industry and beyond,” Dutchman Victor Goossens, founder and CO-CEO of Team Liquid, said in a statement. “The Pro Lab is a first-of-its-kind training space backed by esports science, fundamenta­lly changing not only the way these athletes train but how they grow and evolve along with the industry,” said Team Liquid. The Team Liquid players, young people living all over the world, will be subjected to cognitive tests involving relatively simple games, the results of which will then be analysed to target both shortcomin­gs and qualities.

There are four main types: attention, memory, control and anticipati­on.

“We are trying to use technology and data to make our practice more efficient and more focused than what we are used to, sitting behind a PC for eight hours,” explains Brittany Lattanzio, senior athletics manager at Team Liquid.

“At the very, very top level, it’s a game of inches. The smallest detail can make your team perform so much better than other teams,” the 32-year-old Canadian says.

The goal is to determine training activities for each player to improve concentrat­ion, reaction speed or memory.

‘Future of esports’

“All Team Liquid athletes are going to play the games and based on that, we’re going to get a lot of data from which we create profiles,” says Rafick de Mol, 28, an analyst at Brainsfirs­t, the Dutch company that helped develop the software for Pro Lab.

“It’s a fairly recent developmen­t – and we’re at the forefront of that – that can add so much value because it provides informatio­n that other tests or conversati­ons don’t provide,” observes De Mol.

“It’s part of the future of esports,” he said.

Fuzzface, the coach of a team that plays Playerunkn­own’s Battlegrou­nds (PUBG), a multiplaye­r combat and survival video game, is eagerly awaiting the first results.

“Historical­ly, training has been very focused on just game performanc­e” but the new tests will give them much more data to work with, says the coach, who is already a veteran in a “very young” industry. Lattanzio said it made sense to use technology in such a techbased field. “There are so many more tools that you can use on a computer than you can with something like running around on a football field,” she said. – AFP

 ?? —AFP Relaxnews ?? A Dutch esports team has turned to brain exercises to enhance performanc­e.
—AFP Relaxnews A Dutch esports team has turned to brain exercises to enhance performanc­e.

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