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Documentary about Professional Gaming

Simon Bysshe writes "My name is Simon Bysshe, I'm 22 & am currently studying film at the Bournemouth Arts Institute in the UK. For the last 3 months I've been working on a unique new freely downloadable film about the advent of professional gaming [there's also a BitTorrent mirror via GameTab]. The main purpose of the documentary 'Modern Day Gamer 2' is to ask whether we will ever see gaming become a mainstream spectator sport. The film features the UK based Four Kings Wolfenstein team as they compete at the Quakecon gaming event in Dallas Texas. The film also features interviews with John Romero, Sujoy Roy (iGamesUK), Paul 'Locki' Wedgwood (Splash Damage) & many other industry/gaming figures. This is the sequel to my original documentary which focused on the growth of gaming as a sociable hobby & received over 50,000 downloads worldwide. Running time: 17minutes 47seconds. Filesize : 157MB. Format: WMV."

9 of 256 comments (clear)

  1. Format question ... by El+Cubano · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Running time: 17minutes 47seconds. Filesize : 157MB. Format: WMV.

    How about a non-MS or non-proprietary format? Seriously, I am not trying to troll. As much as people gripe about how bad and inferior all MS formats are, I sure do see lots of WMA and WMV all over the place.

  2. Re:I doubt that professional gaming... by Beardydog · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Chess is a spectator sport, and there are enormous Scrabble competitions. Gaming will never be the kind of thing that sells out a stadium, but I can imagine a weekly show cropping up on one of the "educational" channels dedicated to gaming. It would have to be edited pretty well,and do a lot of behind-the-scenes, but I would probably enjoy wat ching it.

  3. Re:watching games might not be so popular. by dnaumov · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "The reason specatator sports are so popular is that it takes a lot of years of effort and strenous training to be competetive at professional level."
    ...SNIP...
    "That is not the case with gaming."

    You have GOT to be fucking kidding me. Try entering a high-profile competition in QuakeWorld, StarCraft or Quake 3 without having YEARS of experience in first-person shooters. You'll be running back to your mamma within minutes.

  4. The Real Reason for Spectators by globalar · · Score: 4, Insightful

    These kinds of articles (or documentaries, as the case may be) really beg the question "Why do people watch other people in activities?"

    Now we have all been conditioned to answer because its entertaining to watch highly skilled professionals compete for the love of the game (stay with me), or something like that. But really, I would venture to guess that it has a lot to do with identity and community.

    For example, if you watch sports, don't you sometimes or maybe even regularly mention events in the sports world to others who are interested (or maybe even not)? Do you ever consider yourself a fan, and attach it to your identity (like at a party you might say "yeah, I'm a such-and-such fan" or "I'm a big fan of sports X and Y")?

    Likewise, how often do you watch events with other people? How often do you go with other people or meet them at an event? And don't you talk about it with certain groups of people? I am not a sports person, so please forgive me if you are a lone spectator. I am sure there are some.

    This all revolves around what really drives masses to be spectators. I would venture to guess that their identity and the community (which are in some ways tied together for a lot people, maybe everyone) make them spectators. I would even go further to say that without these aspects, mass market spectator sports would not be quite so mass market. Sorry, I didn't watch the video - just some thoughts from a non-spectator.

  5. Re:watching games might not be so popular. by NevermindPhreak · · Score: 4, Insightful
    i think spectator sports are popular because they play the game so well, not because of what they went through to get there. i really could care less if the teams in one sport trained ahrder than the teams in another sport, i just really care about which sport plays hardest.

    people do watch counter-strike matches, but since most gamers know about computers well enough, we do in-game spectating as opposed to watching it on lower-res TVs. if there were a group that did *good* commentary, along with setting up good camera angles and having a bit longer wait time between rounds (for replays and such), then it might be more interesting in that way. gaming as a "sport" (like bowling or billards as a sport) is still in its beginning, so give it some time to see where it really goes.

  6. Re:watching games might not be so popular. by ePIsOdEOnline · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "professional gamers" is an oxymoron,

    This is exactly what they said to all of the state boarders and BMXers, and now look at the massive following that has become as a spectator sport. Kind of interesting though, gaming seems to be the chosen method of alternate entertainment by the professionals (Tony Hawk, et al) in that industry.

  7. Well, there's an easy way to fix that. by Inoshiro · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Grab mplayer and install it. Run mencode to transcode the WMV file to a different format.

    Once that's done, head on over to the BitTorrent website and grab the software. Run a tracker and leave a seed open.

    Then post it to Slashdot in a message where you can say, "look at me -- 20 minutes of work and a little CPU time, and I made an open format version of a movie that everyone can enjoy -- plus the video's encoded smaller because of the better codec!"

    This will probably net you some great karma, in addition to making your initial format question moot. It's all a matter of effort and motivation :)

    --
    --
    Internet Explorer (n): Another bug -- that is, a feature that can't be turned off -- in Windows.
  8. asinine reasoning by honold · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "Why the hell would I watch people play something I could be doing myself?"

    do you listen to music? you could play instruments too.

    watch movies? you could make your own with a digital camera's trivial film mode.

    ever notice that people involved in sports tend to be avid fans of professional sports? ever notice budding musicians tend to listen to other, more accomplished musicians?

    it's because they can't do what the pros can, at least not yet. they're able to command massive salaries because the audience is watching, and the audience wouldn't waste their time to watch bush leaguers.

  9. Re:watching games might not be so popular. by nathanh · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Skate Boarders and BMXers still depend on actual physical talents and overall physical health outside of hand-eye coordination.

    Yes, but professional atheletes are not necessarily fit.

    I know it's asking for karma burn, but "professional" gamers aren't worth shit in the end. They aren't special. Actual ATHLETES are.

    Darts. Bowls. Archery. Billiards. Skeet Shooting.

    Not only are they spectator sports, they get international coverage. Some of them are even Olympic events. You do not need to be fit to be an athelete. Hand-eye coordination is good enough.

    Professional gaming is not an oxymoron.