The Guardian (USA)

US teenager becomes first Fortnite World Cup champion, winning $3m

- Jay Castello

Last night, a US teenager who goes by the name Bugha – real name Kyle Giersdorf – became the Fortnite World Cup Champion. The 16-year-old beat 99 other players in the brightly coloured Battle Royale game, running, building and fighting his way to a $3m (£2.4m) victory.

The competitio­n began months ago, with waves of qualifiers being selected in weekly online play-ins. A total of 40 million people attempted to qualify for the World Cup, the first esports event of its kind for the mega-hit Fortnite, one of the world’s most popular video games. The 100 who made their way to New York this weekend represente­d 30 different countries.

Once there, they faced off in six rounds of the game’s last-man standing battles, scoring points for eliminatin­g others or staying alive for as long as possible. A pro player for the esports organisati­on Sentinels, which fields players in Hearthston­e and Apex Legends tournament­s as well as Fortnite, Bugha pulled ahead in the very first round, racking up nine eliminatio­ns and surviving all the other players.

Though his performanc­es in future rounds were less attention-grabbing, his consistenc­y meant that he stayed in first place throughout. In the sixth and final round he stayed alive until the top 10, eventually falling, but already smiling because he knew no one could catch up to his points lead. He ended up with almost double the score of the second-place competitor.

The American competitor described how he was feeling in a postmatch interview. “I’m just so happy. Everything I’ve done, the grind, it’s all paid off.” His family was in the stadium to watch and congratula­te him. So, too, were approximat­ely 16,000 other attendees, with millions more tuning in online.

Because each Fortnite match starts out with 100 players, they can be difficult to follow as precisely as more straightfo­rward competitiv­e games. Matches usually begin slowly as players drop on to their favourite spots on the map and gather materials, guns, and stranger additional items like a hamster wheel for quickly travelling around or a shadow bomb that makes you temporaril­y invisible.

After a short time, a “storm” appears on the map, forcing players to move into a more condensed area. As the arena becomes smaller and smaller, the action ramps up, beginning with scraps between two people or small groups, and ending with an all-out brawl with dozens of competitor­s packed into a tiny space. When only two players remain, a tense 1:1 battle determines who will get the all-important victory royale.

Many viewers of the Fortnite World Cup had favourite players that they supported throughout the tournament. The most popular competitor at the World Cup was likely Turner Ellis Tenney, better known as Tfue, who regularly broadcasts his matches to a dedicated community. Playing Fortnite is already his career, both as a competitiv­e player in tournament­s and as a streamer on Twitch, entertaini­ng his fans on a daily basis.

But many of the 100 competitor­s were ordinary teenagers, who practise on their home computers or consoles.

Sixteen-year-old Bugha represents the average age of a competitor, while others, including fifth-place finalist Thiago “King” Lapp from Argentina, were as young as 13. They were competing for a slice of the World Cup’s $30m (£24m) prize pool, currently the biggest in esports history – and the same amount awarded to teams in the recent women’s football World Cup.

One 15-year-old British player, Jaden Ashman, took home over £1m by placing second with his partner in the duos version of the competitio­n on Saturday. He told the BBC that he would probably save half of it and put “quite a lot of it into a house and my family”.

His mother admitted that she had been “quite against his gaming”. But with Ashman, King, Bugha, and others taking home life-changing amounts of money, and every competitor in the final 100 earning at least $50,000, it’s clear that profession­al gaming can be an incredibly lucrative career for those few who are lucky, talented, and hardworkin­g enough to make it.

 ?? Photograph: Johannes Eisele/AFP/Getty Images ?? Kyle ‘Bugha’ Giersdorf celebrates winning the final of the Solo competitio­n at the 2019 Fortnite World Cup in New York.
Photograph: Johannes Eisele/AFP/Getty Images Kyle ‘Bugha’ Giersdorf celebrates winning the final of the Solo competitio­n at the 2019 Fortnite World Cup in New York.
 ?? Photograph: Jason Szenes/EPA ?? The final of the 2019 Fortnite World Cup took place at Arthur Ashe stadium at Flushing Meadows in Queens, New York.
Photograph: Jason Szenes/EPA The final of the 2019 Fortnite World Cup took place at Arthur Ashe stadium at Flushing Meadows in Queens, New York.

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