Wild Beef wrote: Tue Jul 07, 2020 12:55 am
I love competitive e-sports. Very easy to get hooked if you enjoy those kind of games already (I love strategy games like Starcraft 2). It’s fascinating to see the combination of skill and strategy at the top.
I realise this makes me an epic geek but I don’t really care.
There was a good thread on this lost to the mists of time. Whether e-sports are "sports" is kinda irrelevant to me, but they are absolutely fascinating. Things in e-sports favour:
A genuinely level playing field. Everyone has access to exactly the same things the pros have bar super expensive hardware that doesn't matter
A changing "meta" - i.e. the tactics and strategy that permeate e-sports. Teams will adapt and evolve much faster than in regular sports.
Huge amateur player bases thanks to there being no athletic boundaries
While it probably excludes the very poor (no access to consoles/PC) it is quite egalitarian otherwise, no matter race or creed (gender's still a problem)
Varying levels of complexity to suit whatever the viewer/player prefers
"In-game" tie-ins with competitions so amateur players feel a closer connection to the pro scene and can receive digital rewards
Very few "terrible" matches - we've all seen bad rugby matches, but a bad esports game is much rarer (this is hugely subjective and probably deserves a longer explanation, but no-one cares so I won't)
Very personality based making it easy to root for individual players or teams regardless of your attachment to the game
For MOBAs like DOTA2, the whole pick/ban draft phase is an entire level of strategy and counter-strategy that main sports just don't have
It's far from perfect, though. Leaving aside the fact that plenty of people just don't like video games:
Many e-sports are almost incomprehensible to new viewers/players, making cricket look like chequers
Many e-sports commentary teams ape the USian "ESPN" style of having a bunch of blokes in suits yell stats or try their hardest to sound deep; the few that have a more relaxed style are far easier to watch/listen to IMO, but they're outliers
The scenes can be pretty toxic, much less welcoming than "real" sports to new players, and established names can be genuine arseholes
Players switch teams constantly and there's no real identity to teams beyond the sponsors names
Drug use is pretty rife and the scenes are almost entirely unregulated and at the mercy of big money corporations
The rapid pace of changes to the "meta" via game updates and patches and new releases makes it really hard to keep up with a scene if you're not a regular - football is football with minor tweaks maybe every decade, DOTA2 changes massively year on year
There's no real local attachment to teams, they're all international mercenaries without even a city to nominally tie them to (so even worse than pro football) and almost no international setup
Games are fairly transient due to the need to keep making more money with new games so there's no real sense of history in many of these genres
They'll never replace sports but they have their place. There's been occasions where I'd much rather watch a DOTA series than another Worcs v Newcastle slugfest...