Esports may be the only game in (quarantined) town | Inquirer Sports

Esports may be the only game in (quarantined) town

/ 05:10 AM August 02, 2020

Eighteen-year-old John Ralph Baga coughed up P300 for a slot on a team of five players ready to shoot it out in Call of Duty mobile, a first-person shooter video game.

There are many types of game modes in this popular esports title, but the mission is basically the same: Annihilate enemy forces, then move on to the next mission.

The last team standing gets the P25,000 cash prize offered by a local organizer. By livestreaming the action, the organizer generates revenue from sponsors and through “stars” thrown in by online viewers.

Article continues after this advertisement

“But you have to be really really good to get that kind of viewers,” Baga said.

FEATURED STORIES

Growing empire

Baga and his band of virtual gunslingers offer a microcosm of the growing empire of esports. And while it’s all but “game over’’ for many leisure and commercial activities during the coronavirus pandemic, esports in various forms has thrived among the idled and quarantined.

In Southeast Asia alone, it generated game revenues of around $4.4 billion in 2019, according to the National Esports Federation of the Philippines (NESFP).

Article continues after this advertisement

“Asia leads the world in consumption of both esports content and overall gaming content, including livestreaming, according to a new forecast from warc.com,” NESFP president Ramon “Tats” Suzara said.

Article continues after this advertisement

In the Philippines, there are 43 million gamers who spent $572 million on game purchases last year, according to Suzara. In the first quarter of 2020, global revenues hit $159.3 billion, reflecting a 9.3-percent increase from the same period the previous year, according to Newzoo, a group providing market insights on esports.

Article continues after this advertisement

By the end of this year, Newzoo projects an 11.7-percent increase in audience to about 495 million.

LEVEL UP It’s practically ‘’game over’’ for many commercial and leisure activities amid the coronavirus pandemic, but the opposite is true for esports and its growing community of enthusiasts, like this avid gamer in a photo taken in Makati City in November 2019. —EDWIN BACASMAS

Community

That audience is comprised mostly of the 18 to 24 age group, Suzara said.

Article continues after this advertisement

Initially called “eGames” and enjoyed only on hand-held devices or fun arcades back in the 1980s, esports has evolved into a megabuck industry and has grown a community that includes not just the players but also game developers, publishers, streamers and sponsors, and an avid viewing public.

Competitions around the world are held on a regular basis, with the prize money amounting to millions of dollars. The 2019 Dota 2 (Defense of the Ancients) tournament, for example, reportedly generated a pool prize of $34.33 million.

In the Philippines, it is estimated that 63 percent of the country’s online population watch video gaming content, akin to spectators enjoying a live sporting event complete with commentators and live chat.

Each esport title has spawned its own cast of local heroes and heroines, masterful players who command hordes of followers willing to pay just to watch them in action. Actor Alden Richards, for example, streams his Mobile Legends heroics, cashing in on his popularity as much as his game skills.

Indoor entertainment

And as community quarantines leave individuals or entire families with limited ways to kill time, personal computers (PCs) and gaming consoles are there to fill the rising demand for indoor entertainment.

“The platforms are accessible and [they require] zero contact,” said Suzara. “It’s almost like it’s designed for the pandemic.”

Of the online population in the Philippines, 74 percent play esports on mobile devices, 65 percent on PCs and 45 percent on game consoles, he added.

The gaming subculture further earned legitimacy and the sheen of professionalism during the country’s hosting of the Southeast Asian Games last year, when esports was introduced as a medal event in the regional meet.

Filipinos then captured three of the six gold medals up for grabs, dominating Dota 2 and Starcraft II on PC, as well as Mobile Legends: Bang Bang.

Appeal to UAAP

The International Olympic Committee has considered including esports in the 2024 Paris Olympic Games and the 2022 Hangzhou Asian Games.

Suzara’s organization has also made a presentation before officials of the University Athletic Association of the Philippines (UAAP) to make esports part of the college curriculum.

“One of the major objectives is to run the sport, just like any other sport; that is, to operate on the principles of the Olympic movement,” said Suzara. “We would like to develop teams of athletes who would qualify for higher levels of competition or to ladderize each event that will enable teams to advance.”

Your subscription could not be saved. Please try again.
Your subscription has been successful.

Subscribe to our daily newsletter

By providing an email address. I agree to the Terms of Use and acknowledge that I have read the Privacy Policy.

Down the road, esports just might even offer a way for the country to win its first Olympic gold. But in the meantime, it provides a rapidly growing source of thrill—and even livelihood—for millions of Filipinos.

TAGS: UAAP

Your subscription could not be saved. Please try again.
Your subscription has been successful.

Subscribe to our newsletter!

By providing an email address. I agree to the Terms of Use and acknowledge that I have read the Privacy Policy.

© Copyright 1997-2024 INQUIRER.net | All Rights Reserved

This is an information message

We use cookies to enhance your experience. By continuing, you agree to our use of cookies. Learn more here.