Should eSports be considered sport at all? Newsflash: No one actually cares

By Patrick Effeney / Editor

The debate has raged, and will continue to for some time, about whether those who sit on comfy chairs and tap furiously on a keyboard for up to an hour at a time can be considered athletes.

The fact is that no one in the eSports industry really cares about that, and is only interested in growing the already immense audience.

And the growth is worth emphasising, as that is eSports’ main game. Audience, audience, audience. All of these articles on ESPN and attempted broadcast on Fox Sports are trying to tell us something: people are watching this whether you think it’s a sport or not.

In a digital world, everything is becoming increasingly measurable, and people in the industry are starting to love looking at figures for viewership as well as attendance.

Twitch.tv, the main platform for eSports broadcasting, now has a monthly audience of over 100 million users, and reaches half of the millennial males in the US (if you believe their stats). They also so over a million users in Australia.

For whatever reasons, and whether you agree with them or not, the digital world is moving in a few directions. It’s going mobile. It’s going live. It’s going video.

eSports is all of those things that those in the know are predicting will be big, already. It’s available on mobile or desktop or tablet, whenever you like. And when you live in a time (in Australia at least) where your mobile internet is faster than your home wifi, you can watch HD eSports broadcasts at any time, and you know exactly where to go.

Traditional sports in Australia has not yet built out that capability. There’s confusion in our part of the world over live streaming; whether it’s an inferior product, whether it’s worth the resources, whether you can reach the scale of audience that you can on traditional television.

They simply haven’t made the call whether to dive in the ocean.

You can. eSports already has. The trail has already been blazed.

What eSports has done well is improve the product. Continually, unerringly, and for the sole purpose of advancing the industry. The commercialisation of eSports is nowhere close to the level of ‘traditional’ broadcast media, or even close to ‘traditional’ digital media. But it’s getting there, and it’s taking an absolutely giant and engaged audience with it.

But getting the money isn’t the hard bit – demonstrating value in the digital market is about people voting with their feet. Enough people means enough money.

eSports has already captured the minds of people. Platforms like Patreon, among others, have sprung up due to the liberalisation of content production. The biggest streamers and events make hundreds of thousands in donations and ad revenue. The money is coming.

And whether you believe it or not, the people taking part in eSports are competitors, and very very good at what they do. They fit a hell of a lot of definitions of athletes, even if they don’t fit a number of others.

But while we’re worrying about that, content creators, hosts and players in the eSports scene are just wondering how they can make it bigger. It’s not a debate, because they’re not arguing back. They don’t care about definitions, only making the scene more successful.

The Crowd Says:

2016-08-08T09:50:41+00:00

jonty smith

Roar Guru


It isn't the gamers that should be awarded here, I think the creators of the video games deserve more credit if (and a very, very big if) anyone

2016-07-29T04:45:39+00:00

Sam Walker

Roar Guru


I don't play any E-sports myself despite playing a fair few video games, but i have to say it is actually fascinating to watch, i never expected to get into it until i saw a game on Fox sports (Think it was COD or something) and i loved it. Sure these guys are not running or tackling someone in real life but the commitment, energy, stamina and passion is similar to some other main stream sports. Being one of the fastest growing sporting events in the world E Sports is only going to get bigger in a few years. I have debated with myself about doing an article on something like Fifa or NBA 2k on here but never been sure of whether it fits into a target category at all.

AUTHOR

2016-07-29T01:37:24+00:00

Patrick Effeney

Editor


Excellent...

2016-07-28T06:20:04+00:00

Cugel

Roar Rookie


However, the respawn mechanisms differ slightly

2016-07-28T05:08:20+00:00

P Air

Guest


eSports - sitting in a comfy chair using exceptional eye / hand co-ordination. Motor Racing - sitting in a comfy chair using exceptional eye / hand co-ordination.

AUTHOR

2016-07-28T01:43:44+00:00

Patrick Effeney

Editor


Fair points, but there' undoubtedly more of a physical component to competing in these activities than there is in cooking...

AUTHOR

2016-07-28T01:42:44+00:00

Patrick Effeney

Editor


Absolutely - they're more proficient at that physical skill than I will be at anything in my life. I think it deserves a chunk of respect.

AUTHOR

2016-07-28T01:41:56+00:00

Patrick Effeney

Editor


Completely agree. There is an attitude of exclusion. I think that's why eSports folks are fed up with the discussion and have opted out. I'm trying to get some people who want to write about Dota2 Marshall if you want to stick your hand up.

2016-07-28T00:54:13+00:00

Marshall

Guest


'Sport' is such an arbitrary construct anyway. The inference something is superior because it's considered a 'sport' is questionable. There's an element of toxic masculinity to this that it's 'soft' or 'nerdy' or 'wussy' to play computer games as apposed to doing what a real man does and play sports. I do both - there's no need to really deride either, it's just what people enjoy. Would love to see some Dota2 coverage Patrick this is my poison of choice!

2016-07-27T21:48:31+00:00

Ben

Guest


Chess. Esports competitors have freakish dexterity and coordination and the concentration required must be immense. The competitions are not contests of luck, the winners out think and/or are simply physically quicker than their opponents.

2016-07-27T21:37:38+00:00

Chui

Guest


Darts, snooker, .......... The list of 'sports' is long and arguable.

2016-07-27T18:12:46+00:00

melbourneterrace

Guest


"The fact is that no one in the eSports industry really cares about that, and is only interested in growing the already immense audience." Same can be said about Masterchef. Gaming (and cooking) isn't a sport, no matter how competitive, entertaining commercialised or accessible it is. Sport has athletic component that requires physical exertion. When Gaming can reach the stage where it has extensive VR components that facilitate a much larger physical component, we can revisit the discussion.

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