I wanted to post this a while back and it’s a long thread that most of you will have no interest in, but it’s the future and I smoke bowls reviewing games Plus it’s something I spend a lot of time helping my son. I hope all the links work.
I watched about 10 minutes of the Olympics and found them boring, out of touch and all about commercialism. Esports right now is the biggest competitive sport in the world. Just as an example, more money is involved in gaming than football, baseball and hockey combined. How sitting on a sled or jumping down a hill is anything compared to the intensity and skills involved in tournament gaming. Most of you know and many have played World of Warcraft and other games of that type. Competitive gaming has been going on for years and the money now in the billions. Games like Starcraft and League of Legends have led the way for DOTA the newest and most competitive five-player game played.
Though a world sport with the biggest tournament being in the US (The Internationals), we are catching up to the world with our teams. This year our best “Team Liquid” took sixth place.
My son is on their skirmish team and being “looked at” by both a European and Korean team to be picked up. Making a pro team is much like any pro sport team. Major sponsors, training and living houses provided and all expenses paid to travel the world for tournaments. I played at the tournament level until about five years ago, when like most sports you get to old. My team did finish fourth in the RTS game Napoleon, and was personally ranked 14th. But that was the days before the money hit *sigh*.
I now coach my son, reviewing games and developing strategies for character drafting, item builds and shot calling (he plays quarterback). You play year round with millions in prize money. The big difference, you have to compete against a world of players not just in your country. Streams of tournament games are broadcasting live almost 24 hours a day. All with commentators and replays just like any sporting event. With all games stored and watched anytime. Just like any sport, players are traded to different teams. This usually takes place in the spring and my hopes are for him to be picked up this spring. Imagine being paid to tour the world gaming and making big money. The competitive life span of a gamer is around 4-6 years. It’s that grueling of a sport, and retired players move on to coaching positions and commentators. Being a technology sport, the broadcasting and game coverage is far better than our traditional sports. Millions watch games every day.
Two online friends of mine, Purge and Blitz formed a US team “Zephyr” and moved to Korea to compete in their countries league. This is one of the major leagues; China right now has the most tournaments where sponsors put millions into their teams. They went right for the top tournament and after 2 weeks of daily play took first place and $80k. They run multiple tournaments at a time and the next day started in the Korean nationals, this has an $8k final win but every game won is a thousand dollars. They’ll play 5-8 games a day for the next month. Here are the replays of their 3-0 best of five win to take this championship. “Bulba” who joins the commentary is a member of “Team Liquid”.
Just to try to explain a little. The first and important phase is drafting your characters plus you can ban characters for the game. There are 107 different characters to pick from all with different strengths and weaknesses against different characters. You try to pick the best combination and theirs five different positions. Then you play a game and you have to destroy the opponent’s base. If you listen, you’ll start to understand it.
Game 1 - http://www.twitch.tv/joindotared/c/3724581
Game 2- http://www.twitch.tv/joindotared/c/3724891
Game 3 - http://www.twitch.tv/joindotared/c/3725012
Though a world sport and the biggest tournament being in the US, we are catching up with our teams. This year our best “Team Liquid” took sixth place. My son is on their skirmish team and being “looked at” by both a European and Korean team to be picked up. Making a pro team is much like any team. Major sponsors, training and living house provided and all expenses paid to travel the world for tournaments. You play year round with millions in prize money. The big difference, you have to compete against a world of players not just in your country.
This is the final day of the five day of competition in Seattle, WA with the prize pool of 2.6 million with first place 1.4 million.
Pre-game color commentary and gameplay footage and analysis like any football game. This is for day 5, the finals.
http://www.twitch.tv/dota2ti/c/2734011
Here are links to the most intense grand finale that went the full five games for a 3-2 victory for “Alliance” (Russian area) and “Navi” (Swedish) teams. I know almost all of you have no interest in this at all, but it’s here now, and though we’re mostly old and don’t care, this is the future of sports.
Game 1 – http://www.twitch.tv/dota2ti/c/2735516
Game 2 – http://www.twitch.tv/dota2ti/c/2735888
Game 3 – http://www.twitch.tv/dota2ti/c/2736124
Game 4 – http://www.twitch.tv/dota2ti/c/2736290
Game 5 - http://www.twitch.tv/dota2ti/c/2736487
Its hours of play, and hard to grasp the complexity but this is what your grandkids and great grandkids will be talking about.
Craig
I watched about 10 minutes of the Olympics and found them boring, out of touch and all about commercialism. Esports right now is the biggest competitive sport in the world. Just as an example, more money is involved in gaming than football, baseball and hockey combined. How sitting on a sled or jumping down a hill is anything compared to the intensity and skills involved in tournament gaming. Most of you know and many have played World of Warcraft and other games of that type. Competitive gaming has been going on for years and the money now in the billions. Games like Starcraft and League of Legends have led the way for DOTA the newest and most competitive five-player game played.
Though a world sport with the biggest tournament being in the US (The Internationals), we are catching up to the world with our teams. This year our best “Team Liquid” took sixth place.
My son is on their skirmish team and being “looked at” by both a European and Korean team to be picked up. Making a pro team is much like any pro sport team. Major sponsors, training and living houses provided and all expenses paid to travel the world for tournaments. I played at the tournament level until about five years ago, when like most sports you get to old. My team did finish fourth in the RTS game Napoleon, and was personally ranked 14th. But that was the days before the money hit *sigh*.
I now coach my son, reviewing games and developing strategies for character drafting, item builds and shot calling (he plays quarterback). You play year round with millions in prize money. The big difference, you have to compete against a world of players not just in your country. Streams of tournament games are broadcasting live almost 24 hours a day. All with commentators and replays just like any sporting event. With all games stored and watched anytime. Just like any sport, players are traded to different teams. This usually takes place in the spring and my hopes are for him to be picked up this spring. Imagine being paid to tour the world gaming and making big money. The competitive life span of a gamer is around 4-6 years. It’s that grueling of a sport, and retired players move on to coaching positions and commentators. Being a technology sport, the broadcasting and game coverage is far better than our traditional sports. Millions watch games every day.
Two online friends of mine, Purge and Blitz formed a US team “Zephyr” and moved to Korea to compete in their countries league. This is one of the major leagues; China right now has the most tournaments where sponsors put millions into their teams. They went right for the top tournament and after 2 weeks of daily play took first place and $80k. They run multiple tournaments at a time and the next day started in the Korean nationals, this has an $8k final win but every game won is a thousand dollars. They’ll play 5-8 games a day for the next month. Here are the replays of their 3-0 best of five win to take this championship. “Bulba” who joins the commentary is a member of “Team Liquid”.
Just to try to explain a little. The first and important phase is drafting your characters plus you can ban characters for the game. There are 107 different characters to pick from all with different strengths and weaknesses against different characters. You try to pick the best combination and theirs five different positions. Then you play a game and you have to destroy the opponent’s base. If you listen, you’ll start to understand it.
Game 1 - http://www.twitch.tv/joindotared/c/3724581
Game 2- http://www.twitch.tv/joindotared/c/3724891
Game 3 - http://www.twitch.tv/joindotared/c/3725012
Though a world sport and the biggest tournament being in the US, we are catching up with our teams. This year our best “Team Liquid” took sixth place. My son is on their skirmish team and being “looked at” by both a European and Korean team to be picked up. Making a pro team is much like any team. Major sponsors, training and living house provided and all expenses paid to travel the world for tournaments. You play year round with millions in prize money. The big difference, you have to compete against a world of players not just in your country.
This is the final day of the five day of competition in Seattle, WA with the prize pool of 2.6 million with first place 1.4 million.
Pre-game color commentary and gameplay footage and analysis like any football game. This is for day 5, the finals.
http://www.twitch.tv/dota2ti/c/2734011
Here are links to the most intense grand finale that went the full five games for a 3-2 victory for “Alliance” (Russian area) and “Navi” (Swedish) teams. I know almost all of you have no interest in this at all, but it’s here now, and though we’re mostly old and don’t care, this is the future of sports.
Game 1 – http://www.twitch.tv/dota2ti/c/2735516
Game 2 – http://www.twitch.tv/dota2ti/c/2735888
Game 3 – http://www.twitch.tv/dota2ti/c/2736124
Game 4 – http://www.twitch.tv/dota2ti/c/2736290
Game 5 - http://www.twitch.tv/dota2ti/c/2736487
Its hours of play, and hard to grasp the complexity but this is what your grandkids and great grandkids will be talking about.
Craig