Is Videogaming becoming a spectator sport for the masses?

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Mills
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Is Videogaming becoming a spectator sport for the masses?

Post by Mills »

Found this about how videogaming is fast becoming a spectator sport for audiences.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-28923671

Slightly off topic, a little link at HOG 'HeartOfGaming'
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-28202061
Last edited by Mills on Mon Aug 25, 2014 12:23 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Is Videogaming becoming a spectator sport for the masses

Post by Udderdude »

Old media discovers Twitch, actual news at 11 .. :lol:
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Re: Is Videogaming becoming a spectator sport for the masses

Post by Mills »

Yeah. Who would have thought in this day and age, that you and I could become a global digital superstar for just being a little bit more skillful than everyone else on a videogame.
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Re: Is Videogaming becoming a spectator sport for the masses

Post by Plasmo »

The whole topic is off topic since it's not about shmups.

Shmups are as unpopular as it could get. Media doesn't care at all because the masses don't care.
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Re: Is Videogaming becoming a spectator sport for the masses

Post by Obiwanshinobi »

When the cabs could be found out in the wild, it very much was a spectator sport for the masses (the sole reason why arcade games are cut out to be spectacular). Nowadays YouTube is where it's at.
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Re: Is Videogaming becoming a spectator sport for the masses

Post by Mills »

Plasmo wrote:The whole topic is off topic since it's not about shmups.

Shmups are as unpopular as it could get. Media doesn't care at all because the masses don't care.
Your missing the point of the topic which is about status of videogaming in which shumps is a part of. The topic is about events like this and STUNFEST 2014 in which people and players come together to interact.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-23047460
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Re: Is Videogaming becoming a spectator sport for the masses

Post by Obiwanshinobi »

It's not like they wouldn't gather together to interact back in the day, whether it was in an arcade or office.
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Re: Is Videogaming becoming a spectator sport for the masses

Post by Udderdude »

Mills wrote:just being a little bit more skillful
Understatement of the century .. those pro players treat the game like a job. 6-8 hours a day, every day. They live off that shit. Their job is literally to beat everyone else at their game. D:

It's like comparing Starcraft 2 diamond league players versus top level players that go all the way to the quarterfinals.
Last edited by Udderdude on Mon Aug 25, 2014 12:54 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Is Videogaming becoming a spectator sport for the masses

Post by Ghegs »

Moved to Off Topic.
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Re: Is Videogaming becoming a spectator sport for the masses

Post by Smraedis »

I like how in the video article, that these tournaments and the huge prize monies are funded from advertisers but the reporter wouldn't provide the name of the football ground that it is held in, because of it currently being named after a company...
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Re: Is Videogaming becoming a spectator sport for the masses

Post by SuperGrafx »

I do see the appeal of spectating games that I have no desire to play through.
Also, lately I'll pull up random Youtube videos of games that I could never finish as a youth. Always interesting to see the solution to a particularly tough part that stumped me in some games.
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Re: Is Videogaming becoming a spectator sport for the masses

Post by ZacharyB »

When I was young, around 7-10, I would go to the local arcade just to watch, because I was reluctant to spend the money needed to play the games all the way through. The kind of person I was, I didn't care about skill; only the experience of being in the game mattered. I handled that vicariously. (I often wondered why skilled guys would die, impatiently punch down the continue counter, and then put in another quarter. "But you just lost all your progress!" I thought.)

I suppose things haven't changed much... people might want to watch games they don't want to buy, just for the experience. Like watching a movie. Especially since we're no longer dealing with quarter-inch-wide pixels and bleeping sound effects.
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Re: Is Videogaming becoming a spectator sport for the masses

Post by Formless God »

Udderdude wrote:Understatement of the century .. those pro players treat the game like a job. 6-8 hours a day, every day. They live off that shit. Their job is literally to beat everyone else at their game. D:
Isn't this basically the same as competitive sport?
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Re: Is Videogaming becoming a spectator sport for the masses

Post by trap15 »

Yeah, pretty much. Too bad esports are so stupid and have such a toxic culture.
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Re: Is Videogaming becoming a spectator sport for the masses

Post by cools »

Zero interest in competitive or even skill/score play gaming streamed.

However, I have a large soft spot for cooperative silliness in Minecraft, even though the game itself I find uninteresting to play. So I watch all of the Yogscast Minecraft series regularly.
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Re: Is Videogaming becoming a spectator sport for the masses

Post by Squire Grooktook »

trap15 wrote:Yeah, pretty much. Too bad esports are so stupid and have such a toxic culture.
I'm not too intimately familiar with it, as I rarely care enough to pay attention to whatever drama might arise from time to time, but is the "toxic culture" surrounding fighters/rts/etc. really that extreme?
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Re: Is Videogaming becoming a spectator sport for the masses

Post by drauch »

Dunno about RTS, but fighting games are almost entirely bros. Watching EVO is like watching NCAA.
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Re: Is Videogaming becoming a spectator sport for the masses

Post by Mills »

Smraedis wrote:I like how in the video article, that these tournaments and the huge prize monies are funded from advertisers but the reporter wouldn't provide the name of the football ground that it is held in, because of it currently being named after a company...
Coventry football stadium.
The way I see it is that the shumps community, needs to look at the BIG PICTURE and take the opportunity of events like this to keep the industry alive and in view of the public domain, regardless if viewing public are fans are not.
Videogaming/gambling trade show events need to take the opportunity of hosting events instead of just showcasing their games for business.
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Re: Is Videogaming becoming a spectator sport for the masses

Post by drauch »

What "BIG PICTURE" are you talking about? What are we supposed to do, go rent out a stadium and do score attacks? I think you're missing the appeal of most professional gaming, and that's 1v1 competition. Nobody gives a shit about watching two dudes duke it out to Twinkle Star Sprites or Game Paradise. These are way different games that are primarily boring to viewers and inaccessible to others.
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Re: Is Videogaming becoming a spectator sport for the masses

Post by Mills »

drauch wrote:What "BIG PICTURE" are you talking about? What are we supposed to do, go rent out a stadium and do score attacks? I think you're missing the appeal of most professional gaming, and that's 1v1 competition. Nobody gives a shit about watching two dudes duke it out to Twinkle Star Sprites or Game Paradise. These are way different games that are primarily boring to viewers and inaccessible to others.
"Nobody gives a shit" is that your view of numbers of people turned up or tuned in to watch what went down at Stunfest 2014.
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Re: Is Videogaming becoming a spectator sport for the masses

Post by dunpeal2064 »

I wonder if the 10k+ people that watch Cosmo stream Ocarina virtually every time he plays realize that they don't give a shit, since its not a 1v1 competition.

LoL isn't 1v1 and has a pretty large spectator base too.
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Re: Is Videogaming becoming a spectator sport for the masses

Post by Squire Grooktook »

drauch wrote: These are way different games that are primarily boring to viewers and inaccessible to others.
I would have to disagree here, shmup replays are often quite thrilling due to their seeming chaoticness (even if in actuality, the player has everything routed out and planned to a t), and I've heard a very large number of non shmup players note or comment that they find replays of shmups very enjoyable to watch., even if they don't enjoy actually playing them.

Perhaps the only disadvantages to them as a spectator sport, is that repeat viewings of the same game would likely wain in appeal for a casual fan due to the initial hype of seeing the hypnotic patterns and boss gimmicks for the first time wearing off. The same could be said of many speed run channels however, which seem to boast a surprising amount of consistent viewership.
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Re: Is Videogaming becoming a spectator sport for the masses

Post by Blinge »

Its probably because speedruns are taking a game people are already familliar with and might have played/enjoyed, and showing it be played/destroyed in an entirely different way. That's the entry into watching speed runners for a lot of viewers, i'd wager.
A newb getting into shmups still has that entrance barrier
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Re: Is Videogaming becoming a spectator sport for the masses

Post by dunpeal2064 »

Indeed, that is a fair point. I was just saying the appeal isn't limited to 1v1 fighters.

I would wager that, if people did get into speedrunning via that exposure, that shmups may closely follow. You start watching a speedrun because you are familiar with the game, but you get into it because you like routing, weighing risk vs reward, doing run after run trying to hit every trick back to back

... its basically just imposing standard shmup rules into regular games. I could see there being some cross interest.
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Re: Is Videogaming becoming a spectator sport for the masses

Post by Moniker »

Recently got into speedrunning, or at least watching it. Awesome Games Done Quick is pretty entertaining. I recommend folks give it a look. Started out coz I think I might wanna start getting good at Super Metroid or Metroid Zero Mission, but all of it's pretty great.

Apparently they raise hundreds of thousands of dollars for charity twice a year from marathon streaming. Kind of amazing that that's even possible, given the niche nature of the community.
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Re: Is Videogaming becoming a spectator sport for the masses

Post by drauch »

Wasn't implying it was just fighters, but the obviously more popular spectator "sport" of gaming revolves around RTS, fighters and FPS.

I don't know what Stunfest is. Don't care. Too ignorant to look it up.

You goobers are acting like I think shmups are objectively boring to everyone. Guess what forum I'm in? Who the fuck is Cosmo and why do people care? When you're talking about the masses, yes, people are going to watch shit like Ocarina of Time and Metal Gear solid and Mario. Some of the most popular and mainstream games of all time, just like Batsugun!.

Sorry, the casual Youtube/internet community obsessed with Zelda isn't a compelling argument to why people would be interested in watching shmups. I guess we could get PewDiePie to play them. LoL large spectator base.
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Re: Is Videogaming becoming a spectator sport for the masses

Post by Raytrace »

drauch wrote:Wasn't implying it was just fighters, but the obviously more popular spectator "sport" of gaming revolves around RTS,

I have to say I really don't understand why people would watch RTS's - then again I don't play them so...
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Re: Is Videogaming becoming a spectator sport for the masses

Post by DEL »

To address the thread title, videogaming IS becoming more and more of a spectator sport. I was surprised to see the 300 plus crowd at Stunfest hollering and generally getting very excited by large-screen 2D shoot'em up runs :shock: , especially knowing that 90% of that crowd were general videogame enthusiasts and not shmup players. So it was heartening.

The 1 on 1 fighting scene is waaay larger though and the whole thing is niche, so I'm not expecting much National Media coverage of videogame events.
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Re: Is Videogaming becoming a spectator sport for the masses

Post by Squire Grooktook »

drauch wrote:Sorry, the casual Youtube/internet community obsessed with Zelda isn't a compelling argument to why people would be interested in watching shmups.
What about the casual internet youtube community obsessed with 2huuuuuu

I think shmups could easily rival speed running. While the games aren't as well known, they make up for it with flash and chaos, and some of them have excellent presentation. They are also a fair bit more approachable than speed running due to their more simplistic and more immediately intuitive playstyles.
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Instead I am stuck in the America's where women rule with an iron crotch, and a man could get arrested for sitting behind a computer too long.
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Re: Is Videogaming becoming a spectator sport for the masses

Post by drauch »

Well, I think the internet is obsessed with Touhou for the wrong reasons, plus it was sort of a meme thing, unfortunately. I won't open up this can of worms again.

That's the thing, though: I love speed running, and I love watching strategy videos and 1ccs and all that good stuff as well. From an outside perspective, though, I just don't see shmups as a welcome form of entertainment for the masses. Take a platformer, a genre everyone is very familiar with from their childhood and do some crazy things, and people are going to be impressed, especially when you look at rather infamous Konami and Capcom titles deemed "impossible" by scrubby standards. We all know shmups are crazy in depth and take loads of practice to learn enemy placement and chaining and all those goodies, but it's just not something I can see the public get into and appreciate on that level. Pick up Mario and just plug away, and you don't have to explain much. Put on a shmup with confusing scoring mechanics and a million bullets on the screen (with no lolis) and it's going to turn people off.

I dunno, I'm right with you and could sing praise all day, but I'd say the average casual gamer or YouTube dude is just going to groan, "ohh, another shooting game..."
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