Video gamers win millions of dollars in Seattle championship
SEATTLE (Reuters) -
Teams of video gamers playing characters ranging from wizards to
monsters exchanged virtual punches, fireballs and lightning strikes over
the past six days, battling at the main event of the Dota 2
International 2015 tournament in Seattle.
And by the end of
Saturday's finals, five players, including a 16-year-old, became more
than a million dollars richer.
Now in its fifth
year and playing to a sold-out crowd in the 17,000-seat Key Arena, the
International has grown every year in size, popularity and possible
winnings for players. The tournament launched in 2011 with a
then-groundbreaking grand prize of $1 million and now offers an $18
million prize pool.
Fans, handfuls of
whom roamed the arena dressed as their favorite in-game heroes, roared
as the team "Evil Geniuses" secured the championship, wiping out their
enemies with an earth-shaking smash and a devastating blast of frost.
Video games have
long been a moneymaker for the tech sector, forecast to generate some
$111 billion in revenue this year by consultants Gartner Inc. But over
the past several years, playing them has turned into a full-time job for
a select few top-tier players, as interest and prize pools have
ballooned.
According to Valve, the publisher of Dota 2, about 11.5
million users log on monthly to play the game, in which two teams try
to destroy each other's bases in an online arena.
Players and teams came to the United States from China,
South Korea, Ukraine, Russia and elsewhere to compete for a share of
the prize pool - with roughly $6.6 million going to the winning
five-player squad.
Though while the tournament was international in scope,
the home team Evil Geniuses drew the most support, with fans chanting
"U-S-A" and "E-G" with each spectacular play.
Syed Sumail Hassan, 16, who moved from Pakistan to
Illinois chasing his dreams of being a professional gamer and is most
known for playing a powerful electricity-based champion for the team,
said after winning the tournament: "It just meant everything to me."
Tickets for this year's event sold out and hundreds
have registered to attend so-called "Pubstomp" viewing parties at bars
and internet cafes in cities from Los Angeles to Sandy Springs, Georgia.
Hundreds of thousands of fans have tuned in daily this
week to watch streams of the event on sites such as Twitch.TV, while
thousands more have packed into the arena to cheer on their favorite
players live.
Ben Mussett, 24, drove two days from his native Ohio in
a car packed with friends. He said he found watching video games, which
he and other young fans refer to as "eSports," more appealing than
traditional spectator sports like basketball and football.
"Traditional sports are kind of boring," Mussett said, "eSports are the future."
His pal, 24-year-old Becca Eagen, agreed: "I've never watched or enjoyed sports the way I've enjoyed this."
Courtesy: Yahoo