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Decline e'Sports' now challenging mainstream sports

Andhaira

Arcane
Joined
Nov 25, 2007
Messages
1,868,990
League of Legends is growing. Traditional sports better watch out.

(CNN)With its millions of viewers, lucrative titles and sell-out competitions, it should come as no surprise that the world of esports is beginning to challenge some of Europe's most established sports.

While the industry is still relatively young, its continued growth shows no sign of slowing with sponsors keen to capitalize on the emerging market.

League of Legends remains one of the industry's most successful titles and, according to new data from sports industry analysts Nielsen, it's a huge hit with younger audiences in Europe.

A recent study found that the League of Legends European Champion (LEC) has a higher Average Minute Audience (AMA) than sports such as tennis, basketball and rugby union for those aged between 16 and 29.
AMA calculates the average number of people who were watching a specific game or event at any given point in time.

The study compared the AMA of European viewers during last year's broadcasts of rugby union's Heineken Champions Cup, a tennis grand slam, the UEFA Champions League and the LEC.

"The LEC has been growing double digits for the last six semesters. Year on year," Alban Dechelotte, head of business development EU at Riot, the game's publisher, told CNN Sport.

"It's kind of amazing and a challenge to see what is next for us -- how do we keep growing and keep bringing more value to fans?"

Bright future
The data also determined that the average age of an LEC fan is just 23 years old -- 19 years younger than the average age of soccer fans -- showing the lifelong potential of its supporter base.

Viewers of the game also tend to be from a specific demographic; namely young, single men at either high school or college.
For Dechelotte, this indicates not only a bright future for the game but an opportunity to diversify and broaden its audience.
He says the industry already has more parents involved and believes people's passion for esports will eventually be passed down naturally between generations.

"It's happening," he said. "We show that parents can be proud of their children for playing esports.

"Our dream is to have, one day, on the fridge, parents putting a [medal] for something that the kid did on League of Legends, the same way they do for judo."

While the LEC continues to grow within the ever-expanding esports industry, sponsors are flocking to the game.
Dechelotte has identified three different generations of brands to have been involved with the LEC since it began, showing the evolution and increasing acceptability of the industry.

Initially, only tech organizations were keen for players to be using their equipment. Then came brands, including food companies, that wanted to target viewers of live events. And, most recently, brands such as Louis Vuitton have wanted to collaborate with the industry.

"We are very well positioned in terms of audiences, in terms of vision, in terms of the way we do things and that makes us a bit different," Dechelotte said, adding the Covid-19 pandemic had seen an increase of viewers while regular sports were in lockdown.

Schalke FC

Such promising potential has encouraged traditional soccer organizations to develop an esports branch, such as German club Schalke.

Tim Reichert is now the club's chief gaming officer and has been behind its successful development into the LEC.
Reichert had played professional football in Germany but made a transition to esports after retirement, following his brother into the industry.

As an avid gamer throughout his life, Reichert began to see the potential a title, such as League of Legends, had and still has.

"I realized this will be a thing for sport organizations at one point. It was quite obvious for me to see that the atmosphere, the people, the crowd and also the viewership will be at some point interesting," he told CNN Sport.

"I was quite convinced that this will be the case in at least a very few esport titles and I think I was right."

"The target group [for LEC] is perfect, the viewership is great, the publisher is strong and it's also not like these bloody sports, which are very complicated in sport organizations due to ethics problems."

'We have a huge impact'
Despite Schalke initially coming to him for help, Reichert faced challenges to convince people an esports branch would be positive for the wider organization.

He admits the last four years have been a roller-coaster but says the branch can now be seen as a separate asset from the traditional football side.

"This is something you cannot even pay with a marketing budget," he said, speaking of the impact an esports branch can have.

"We have a huge impact on the Schalke FC brand, even if it's not football. People buying our jerseys. It's not a real revenue for the size of the club, but it's a start.

"People start loving the esports brand and then also maybe the football brand and if you're a Schalke fan, most of the time, your kids will also be a Schalke fan so they will be most likely a fan of the esports organization at some point.

"There are so many add-ons to just the business we are creating. It's actually very surprising that we are the only one who is doing it on this size."

While many in esports say the pandemic has helped accelerate the industry -- with more people viewing digital content -- Reichert says such growth would have happened naturally.

And like almost all organizations, he laments the financial impact Covid-19 has had.

"There won't be a year in the next 20 or 30 years, where we have a decrease in viewership for esports. There is no doubt for me," he said.

"Coronavirus helped for the future a little bit, but not that much. There was also a downside. A lot of the companies, especially big companies, are struggling with coronavirus.

"Media spending, marketing spending just decreased and this also hits the esports market. So it's not like everything was great with coronavirus. Not at all."

https://edition.cnn.com/2020/08/19/sport/league-of-legends-esports-growth-spt-intl-cmd/index.html

Imagine, when you are on your deathbeds, or at least 60+, social dymanics are completely changed. Women starting from highschool now lust over eSport champions, and the jocks are now treated the same way nerds & geeks were treated in our youth.

Glamour models, fitness models, supermodels, movie stars...all clamoring to get with or marry the League of Legend 'linebacker'

It would be the biggest fuck you before death finally comes.
 

J_C

One Bit Studio
Patron
Developer
Joined
Dec 28, 2010
Messages
16,947
Location
Pannonia
Project: Eternity Wasteland 2 Shadorwun: Hong Kong Divinity: Original Sin 2 Steve gets a Kidney but I don't even get a tag. Pathfinder: Wrath
People watch sport for their entire life, but nobody watches esports after they grow out of gaming. Esports is shit. Hell, I'm a gamer and I find esports terribly boring.

I really don't get why people find it exciting. Look, when people watch sport, they see the athletes sweating, battling it out, it's flesh and bone. The human factor makes it exciting. But what do you do when you watch esports? You watch gameplay. You don't see the players, and even if they show them, they are just teenagers sitting in front of a computer. There is no human factor in there, at least you don't see it. So, esports is shit.
 
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Unwanted

Kalin

Unwanted
Dumbfuck Zionist Agent
Joined
Sep 29, 2010
Messages
1,868,264
Location
Al Scandiya
Yeah well you're a dumbfuck weeb loser who can't ever approach the skill of cognito elite bugmen mastering esports ok
 

smaug

Secular Koranism with Israeli Characteristics
Patron
Dumbfuck
Joined
Feb 20, 2019
Messages
6,530
Location
Texas
Insert Title Here
Esports and Sports are both fucking boring, I hope they both fail.

Watching some chink play games isn't appealing neither is watching niggers run around with a ball.
 

Biscotti

Arbiter
Patron
Joined
Nov 24, 2015
Messages
562
Location
Belgium
I just don't get the appeal of watching someone play a game instead of playing it myself.

I exclusively watch competitive fighting games and arena shooters so I can't speak for anything else, but I watch it for the excitement of watching two people at a level I'll never achieve duking it out.
Also, why come up with your own tech when you can just copy what you see top players do?
 

TheSoul

Scholar
Joined
Jun 15, 2018
Messages
155
Esports are always going to be a novelty sport at best. Fat and/or Asian nerds do not make normal people want to buy their products.
 

Morpheus Kitami

Liturgist
Joined
May 14, 2020
Messages
2,536
Aren't there supposed to be more nerds now or something? And now that I think of it, even the jocks are into the anime shooters like Overwatch and League of Legends. I wonder if those two events are related.
 
Joined
Mar 3, 2010
Messages
8,876
Location
Italy
it'll never happen. most videogames, especially those who claim to be sports ("whoever needs to claim he's king, is not king"), are utter shit to look at. while you can be awed by messi dodging 40 opponents or michael jordan slamdunking from his own half, korea soyboys setting macros will always look uninteresting at best, retarded at worst.
 

Generic-Giant-Spider

Guest
I will never consider malnourished dorks on par with athletes or even relatable.
 

Grimlorn

Arcane
Joined
Jun 1, 2011
Messages
10,248
I remember seeing some sort of esports event on TV, I think it was ESPN, while at the gym. It was bizarre.
 

Butter

Arcane
Patron
Joined
Oct 1, 2018
Messages
7,686
Lot of dummies in this thread not seeing the big picture. There are no niggers kneeling and spewing BLM bullshit before League of Legends matches. They aren't even smart enough to play the game. That alone makes it better than just about every traditional sport.
 

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