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Microsoft XBox (Games) Games

Microsoft Makes Push To Get Back Into E-Sports 111

An anonymous reader writes: In October, Microsoft will publish Halo 5: Guardians, the first game in the series to be developed exclusively for the Xbox One. Microsoft is taking the opportunity to make a big play to become part of the e-sports market. They've announced a Halo competition with $1 million in prizes. As e-sports become more mainstream, and as game streaming has turned into a billion-dollar business, more and more development studios are seeing it as part of their marketing strategy. "When Halo fell out of favor among e-sports players, other games began to take off, often ones that were created with high-level competition in mind and that came from developers that invested heavily in events for professionals. Riot Games has turned League of Legends, its multiplayer online battle arena, into the most watched e-sport in the world, with 40,000 attendees at its finals in Korea last year." Microsoft wants back into that segment, and they're willing to spend big to do so.
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Microsoft Makes Push To Get Back Into E-Sports

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    Someone has to make this comment, and it might as well be me. I hate the name "E-sports." Can we just call it what it is, competitive video games? I mean, I get it, you want to sound all grown up and mature but ultimately you're playing video games "professionally." They're not sports. They're video games.

    No one calls competitive Scrabble "board sports" or tries to pretend it's anything other than what it is, adults competing at a board game. There's nothing wrong with being competitive at silly things. I m

    • Sports are games meant for entertainment of both player and spectator, just the same as video games.

      • by vux984 ( 928602 )

        Sports are games meant for entertainment of both player and spectator, just the same as video games.

        The fact that its a game, is competitive, and people are watching for entertainment doesn't make it a sport.

        We're not singling out video games here:

        Wheel of Fortune, Jeopardy, Win Ben Stein's Money, and aren't sport's either. You don't hear them complaining.

        Likewise Iron the tatoo artists on Ink Masters, and whatever you want to call the contestants on Ace of Cakes aren't playing sports. Nor is the guy on youtube doing crossword puzzles. Nor is your 8 year old spelling bee champion. But they too usually h

        • So how do you define a sport then? A strenuous physical activity? Well then Golf and Skeet Shooting need not apply, yet people call those sports. What about a physical activity that involves unpredictability, making precise movements in response to quick decisions? That sounds kind of like...using a mouse to play League of Legends...

          • by vux984 ( 928602 )

            So how do you define a sport then?

            I define it, generally, as a athletic competition with a physical challenge.

            Golf, skeet shooting, bowling,... all qualify as sports. The athletic fitness may be less stringent, but the ability to place a ball, or a bullet, or a bowling ball 'just so' are still very much a physical challenge. But yeah in the 'hierachy of sport' bowling is on the bottom rung for athletics.

            What about a physical activity that involves unpredictability, making precise movements in response to quick decisions? That sounds kind of like...using a mouse to play League of Legends...

            Jeopardy has all that too.No advance notice what the question is going to be. Quick decisions. And a even buzzer you have to race to physi

            • Jeopardy has all that too.No advance notice what the question is going to be. Quick decisions. And a even buzzer you have to race to physically push. Its still not a sport either.

              How about this: When Stephen Hawking can play League of Legends, we'll stop calling it an e-sport.

              • by Mal-2 ( 675116 )

                Didn't you know the mighty Stephen Hawking is a fucking Quake Master?

              • by vux984 ( 928602 )

                When Stephen Hawking can play League of Legends, we'll stop calling it an e-sport.

                Really that's going to be your line in the sand? Its a sport as long as it requires at least some minimum level of motor control?

                I mean, Steven Hawking can't hold a cup of milk steady. So I guess that's a sport now too?

                • Really that's going to be your line in the sand? Its a sport as long as it requires at least some minimum level of motor control?

                  Skeet shooting, curling, and bowling all need less motor control than a game like League of Legends. Sure, curling and bowling need strength, but not fine motor control.

    • /sarcasm We already have a term:

      E-penis

      Or we could just call them, shock, digital games because that's all they are.

      Why is the medium (for professional competition) even relevant again??

    • Made this comment myself. Wish I had mod points.

    • They're not sports. They're video games.

      If Chess qualifies as a sport recognised by the International Olympic Committee, then I don't see why video games can't be a sport.

      • If Chess qualifies as a sport recognised by the International Olympic Committee, then I don't see why video games can't be a sport.

        Unlike the governing body of an e-sport (its publisher), the governing body of Chess (FIDE) has no legal authority to prevent any of these:

        • Televising a Chess match, unlike e-sports which are subject to public performance rights under copyright
        • Manufacturing equipment to play Chess, unlike e-sports which are subject to reproduction rights under copyright
        • Mods of Chess [wikipedia.org], such as Chess960 [wikipedia.org] and nonstandard pieces [wikipedia.org], unlike e-sports which are subject to derivative work rights under copyright
  • by ArmoredDragon ( 3450605 ) on Tuesday August 04, 2015 @04:26PM (#50251929)

    I'm trying to think of what games people play competitively on consoles, and none come to mind. Keyboard and mouse flat out destroys controllers when it comes to competitive play. Sure you'll have the occasional console player swear how much better they do with a controller, but the fact is they'll get trashed if they try to compete against a legit keyboard/mouse user.

    • All hail the pc master race !!
    • I'm trying to think of what games people play competitively on consoles, and none come to mind. Keyboard and mouse flat out destroys controllers when it comes to competitive play.

      That's OK, because 2015 (or perhaps 2016) is the year of the keyboard and mouse on consoles [forbes.com]. (Sony is also licensing a kb/mouse peripheral [slashgear.com], AFAIK this is a licensing first. Yes, I know that there were mice for prior platforms; I have them for SNES, PS, and DC. (That's all of them, right?)

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Well, fighting games for one.

      EVO was only a few weeks ago

    • I'm trying to think of what games people play competitively on consoles, and none come to mind.

      Smash Brothers has a serious scene, there's even a documentary [youtube.com].
      Marvel vs Capcom has some intense following.
      Streetfighter has had a scene for a while, maybe the oldest, check out this video [youtube.com]. To pull of that defense, he had to hit many button presses in a row with millisecond precision.

      Frankly, if Microsoft consistently commits millions of dollars in prize money over several years, a competitive scene will grow up around it. I don't think many people will want to watch it, for reasons you mention, but i

    • by ADRA ( 37398 )

      Nah, e-sports is essentially worthless on consoles because even with a AAA cross platform console game (if it exists), pros using either console can't play with one another because of the fuck wits in Sony/Microsoft decided that content couldn't be shared outside of their content ecosystem, which includes online matchmaking / competitions.

    • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

      I'm trying to think of what games people play competitively on consoles, and none come to mind. Keyboard and mouse flat out destroys controllers when it comes to competitive play. Sure you'll have the occasional console player swear how much better they do with a controller, but the fact is they'll get trashed if they try to compete against a legit keyboard/mouse user.

      Actually, Halo's been pretty big at the online competition arena - there's at least a couple of tournaments a year for it. (MLG, anyone?). It

  • ... The push began vigorously and quite succesfully with CEO of Microsoft, Satya Nadella, referring to CEOs of Apple and Google, Tim Cook and Larry Page, as "fkn scroobs" and suggesting they should "git on his fkn lvl"...

  • by GoodNewsJimDotCom ( 2244874 ) on Tuesday August 04, 2015 @05:29PM (#50252387)
    DOTA 2 once had a 10$ million tournament. Are you telling me one of the richest corporations on the planet couldn't even pony up that much?
    Professional sports teams pay single players 10$ million salary just to compete. Add up all the players in a league and you're looking in the billions.

    Halo has a small skill curve/ceiling compared to something like Starcraft or League of Legends. In Halo, the difference between getting killed or scoring a kill isn't much. So if someone wanted to go pro with Halo, they'd have to take a lot of risk with them instead of being a lock to win. When skill ceilings are low, there's more random luck involved in who wins. I believe even the best Halo player isn't that much better than the top 100 world wide. So for someone to dedicate a thousand+ hours of practice to become the best Halo 5 player means they're willing to take the risk of not winning in your piddly 1 million dollar tournament. It sounds like a whole lot of investment for a big gamble. Now say you made a 5-10 million dollar tournament, and promised to do this for 4 years straight, then it sounds like something almost worth pursuing. But 1 meelion *finger to lip* is a joke. All it does is attract little kids who can't do math think they're going to be the next pro gamer. If they have an on site tournament like MLG, the travel expenses and hotels of everyone participating is more expensive than the prize pool.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      Once had? Right now the 2015 world championship is being streamed, and it has an 18$ million prize pool.

      http://www.twitch.tv/dota2ti

      Enjoy.

    • by ADRA ( 37398 )

      To be fair, the vast majority of the money raised (continues to be raised) is given by the DOTA community at large.

  • I used to play competitive Halo 2, Halo 3, and Halo Reach. I grew up playing Halo 1 and Halo 2 as my main game after learning about FPS in Goldeneye and Perfect Dark. Halo's competitive community started at MLG who was forced to drop the game after/during Halo Reach since that game was bad. There is a lot of depth in the arena style skirmishes on maps like Sanctuary, Midship, and Warlock, but the game and franchise is otherwise completely beholden to aging casual gamers. The competitive community is not dea

  • If you count the Twitch bots to boost stream numbers.
  • $1 million prize money is NOT spending big, it is dunking their toe in the water. that would not even be close to 1% of halo's marketing budget
  • Five mentions of Microsoft and five mentions of Windows on the main page, yea we get it, Microsoft is still relevant ...
  • sports games? When I saw the headline, my first thought was, "When did MS make sports games? I thought they left that to EA."

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