Bangkok Post

With Halo 5, Microsoft seeks to lure e-sports players back

- NICK WINGFIELD

Ateam of hundreds was recently putting its final touches on a video game expected to be one of the biggest sellers of the Christmas season.

The game, Halo 5: Guardians, will depict interstell­ar combat in new levels of graphical realism and offer new twists in multiplaye­r capabiliti­es. It will be the latest game in the Halo series, one of the biggest in the industry, with more than US$3.5 billion (125 billion baht) in global sales, almost the global box office take of the Fast & Furious movie series.

But Microsoft, the company that makes the game, cannot afford to coast on warm feelings alone for the Halo series as other big game franchises like Call Of Duty have overshadow­ed it. So the team making the game, as well as Microsoft’s marketing machine, is focusing on the booming world of competitiv­e video games — in particular, making sure that it appeals to elite gamers.

The world of e-sports, as the competitiv­e video game world is known, was long an afterthoug­ht for game makers. That is quickly changing, though, as e-sports events fill giant arenas and millions of people watch live video of competitio­ns online.

Now, for Microsoft and other game makers, e-sports is considered a crucial leg to the multimilli­on-dollar marketing push — a way to extend a game’s reach to a highly dedicated group of gamers. As part of that push, Microsoft announced that its Halo competitio­n would give away a total of $1 million in prize money, the most ever for the game.

“The bottom line is all game developers everywhere are looking for ways to turn their games into e-sports titles,” said Rahul Sood, a former Microsoft executive who is now chief executive of Unikrn, a start-up that runs a site for betting on e-sports.

In part, the interest from the companies is the result of the money pouring into e-sports. Revenue from tickets to e-sports events, corporate sponsorshi­ps and other sources are expected to increase by 30% to more than $250 million this year, according to Newzoo, a market research firm that analyses the industry.

Fans of e-sports are also some of the most dedicated gamers. Newzoo estimates more than 113 million e-sports fans worldwide. Many of them are the most committed and loyal gamers anywhere, playing the games, watching them online and paying for all sorts of extras to enhance their experience. For them, e-sports competitor­s are celebritie­s of the highest order.

“The pros who play e-sports are famous,” said Bonnie Ross, head of 343 Industries, the Microsoft game studio here in the Seattle suburbs that develops Halo. “They’re icons who people who look up to. These are people that fans aspire to be.”

That leaves a big moneymakin­g opportunit­y for game makers — an opportunit­y that is particular­ly acute for Microsoft, which not only makes Halo but the video game console that the game is played on.

The console, the Xbox One, is trailing in sales behind Sony’s PlayStatio­n 4. All games in the Halo series have been available only on the Xbox, and the game has been a leading driver of sales for earlier Xbox consoles. Halo 5, which goes on sale on Oct 27, is the first new version of the game created for the Xbox One, and Microsoft executives are hoping that history can repeat itself.

“It is the singular, defining franchise of Xbox,” said Dennis Fong, a former profession­al game player who is now chief executive of Raptr, a social network for gamers. “The more people engaged with the Halo brand, the better it is for Xbox and Microsoft.”

Last year, the company introduced its own tournament, the Halo Championsh­ip Series, where teams blast each other away for cash prizes. A Halo tournament that ended last month had total prize money of $150,000. Microsoft hopes the $1 million in prize money and better organisati­on will lure more high-level competitor­s into Halo contests.

It was not that long ago, though, that Microsoft did not pay much attention to e-sports. In the mid-2000s, Halo became an organic hit with the fledgling scene of competitiv­e gamers who played for prize money. It was an impeccably designed shooter, with one of the best multiplaye­r experience­s in games, which became an essential ingredient in games.

Major League Gaming, an early e-sports business that brought more profession­alism and organisati­on to game tournament­s, made Halo the pillar of its competitio­ns.

But then interest in Halo among profession­al gamers and spectators began to slip. In 2012, Major League Gaming dropped Halo from its tournament­s, teaming up instead with Activision to feature Call Of Duty, a combat shooter that was attracting more attention.

“We pulled back our investment on Halo,” said Sundance DiGiovanni, chief executive of Major League Gaming. “Audience numbers were going into decline. The community wasn’t as engaged.”

“E-sports at time just wasn’t a priority for the studio,” said Che Chou, franchise media director at 343.

It didn’t help the game’s standing among profession­al gamers that a new version of Halo that came out in 2012, Halo 4, frustrated many of them. It was the first original game in the series developed by Microsoft’s 343. (Bungie Studios, the creator of the Halo franchise, spun out of Microsoft in 2007, leaving Microsoft with ownership of the franchise.)

In gamer parlance, Halo 4 was “poorly balanced”. At the start of a match, the game sometimes assigned players weapons and other equipment that were far more powerful than those given to other players — a jetpack, say, that allowed them to snipe at rivals from above. That kind of randomness can appeal to casual players but it is abhorred by profession­als, who want competitiv­e bouts decided based purely on playing skills.

“They were not happy about those elements at all,” DiGiovanni said. “It was very hard to play the game.”

When Halo fell out of favour among e-sports players, other games began to take off, often ones that were created with high-level competitio­n in mind and that came from developers that invested heavily in events for profession­als. Riot Games has turned League Of Legends, its multiplaye­r online battle arena, into the most watched e-sport in the world, with 40,000 attendees at its finals in South Korea last year.

For the last few years, Activision has offered a prize pool of $1 million to its own championsh­ip for Call Of Duty. A championsh­ip series for Valve’s battle game Dota 2, occurring in a Seattle sports arena this week, has a prize pool of more than $18 million, the biggest in e-sports.

To make sure the game appeals to competitiv­e gamers with high skill levels, 343 has put together an eight-person team of profession­al players who test Halo 5 every day. Frank O’Connor, franchise developmen­t director for Halo, said the game would have the balance in game play that once made Halo so popular with e-sports competitor­s.

Profession­al Halo players said Microsoft’s new support for e-sports, including clearer rules and better prize money, will help the competitiv­e Halo scene grow.

“For us players, it makes life that much easier,” said Michael Chaves, a profession­al Halo player who, like his peers, is better known by his online gamer name, Flamesword. “Microsoft is listening.”

 ??  ?? Frank O’Connor, left, director of 343 Studios Franchise
Developmen­t, and Studio Head Bonnie Ross at the studios in Kirkland,
Washington.
Frank O’Connor, left, director of 343 Studios Franchise Developmen­t, and Studio Head Bonnie Ross at the studios in Kirkland, Washington.

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