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For Years, China Felt Awkward About Dominating the Globe in E-Sports

But it’s getting over that.
August 26, 2016

If you are an elite video game player these days, the very best of the best, you could win millions of dollars at a single tournament. Or you could find yourself on the roster of an English Premier League soccer team. Such is the state of the world of e-sports, which has risen from obscurity to become not only a nerdy source of entertainment, but a huge business. In China, it’s even becoming a source of national pride.

A scene from The International in 2014.

It wasn’t always this way. Chinese teams have for years regularly competed in the very highest echelons of e-sports, including a tournament in Seattle known as The International, which this year boasted a total purse of over $20 million. And they have been dominant, claiming three of the last five championships in a strategy game called DOTA 2 (for Defense of the Ancients 2). But as a piece in Foreign Policy points out, Chinese culture has until very recently frowned on video games:

Parents, who want children either spending time with family or studying to advance in China’s punishingly competitive school system, have sent kids to internet addiction treatment camps to endure military-style physical training while deprived of access to cellphones and other electronic devices. At one of the most notorious camps, the psychiatrist Yang Yongxin reportedly used electroshock therapy as a major treatment method and prescribed psychotropic medicine to his young charges. Although the Chinese government later banned treatment camps from using electrotherapy, many former campers say they were emotionally scarred for life.

Things appear to be changing rapidly. When the team Wings Gaming polished off the North American team DC in a best-of-five showdown, even non-gamers in China took to Weibo to congratulate them and declare their excitement at the victory.

That said, reactions have been a far cry from what one might expect in the West, where people are often encouraged to forgo traditional education in pursuit of their dreams. Wings’ team captain, 18-year-old Zhang Yiping, thanked fans on Weibo. And then someone commented—to a guy who had just split over $9 million in winnings with his teammates—that there’s nothing better than retiring from gaming to go back to school.

(Read more: Foreign Policy, Polygon, BBC)

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