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Pro video gaming earns TV coverage
Baseball and poker aren’t the only games with nationally televised World Series coverage, now that a newcomer has broken into network TV. The CBS Sports Spectacular during New Year’s weekend included a one-hour special called “They Got Game: The Stars of the World Series of Video Games.” It focused on five rising stars of the professional video gaming circuit who competed for up to $50,000 in prize money at a mid-December championship in Manhattan that was the first of its kind. Saturday’s show followed 20 hours of TV programming on MTV, College Sports Television (CSTV) and other cable outlets. A half-hour feature, “Inside the World Series of Video Games,” can be seen at www.games.mtv.com. U.S. stars of the sport, as insiders call it, include a 25-year-old Johnathan Wendel and Shannon Ridge, a minister’s daughter who is now a Halo run-and-gunner. An 8-year-old phenomenon, Victor De Leon of New York, calls himself Lil Poison and earns money from tournaments, sponsorships and endorsements. His website proclaims him as the “world’s youngest professional gamer.” Faceoffs on Counter-Strike 1.6, Halo 2,Quake 4, Project Gotham Racing 3, Ghost Recon Advanced Warfighter and Warcraft III: Frozen Throne took place this year in England, Sweden, China and U.S. cities. Ninety-five gamers who “fragged” (demolished) opponents were flown to New York from around the world for a three-day showdown on Intel PC and Xbox games. Full coverage of the finals will air as a five-week series on CSTV, a CBS company, starting Jan. 21. Champs and runners-up play exhibition matches next week on two stages at the annual International Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas.
Front Page Talking Points is written by
Felix Grabowski and Alan Stamm for NIEonline.com, Copyright 2013
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