The Frontlines of Korean Gaming Culture
Jim Rossignol, a writer for PC Gamer UK, has returned from South Korea with a look at gaming culture in a vibrant and interesting pro-gaming society. From the article: "Seoul, South Korea. To a fanfare of Asian nu-metal and the sound of a thousand screaming fans, a young Korean man enters a dazzling arena. Like an American wrestler at the heart of a glitter-glazed Royal Rumble, he strides down a ramp towards the stage. Adorned in what appears to be a space suit and a large white cape, he heads out to meet his opponent on the stadium's ziggurat focus. Amid a blaze of flashbulbs and indoor fireworks he climbs the steps, and is exulted by the thronging crowd ... the man on the stage is on Korean television almost every day. He is about to sit down and play what is close to becoming Korea's national sport: Starcraft."
Is that really Tim Edwards' work? I thought it was Jim Rossignol, what with it being reproduced on his blog, where he introduces it as "the text from my account of a trip to South Korea in April 2005", and all.
"I Know You Are But What Am I?"
It was actually me that wrote that.
Anyone know a link to a video of Lee Yunyeol playing? I'd love to see what kind of pace he plays at, but a few searches just turned up articles on starcraft and such
Only old people in Korea use the Zerg rush!
This is how you do video games on TV. You follow leagues, you make stars, and you get advertisers to start parting with money to promote events. You want to make money on TV with gaming, this is the way to do it.
I can't decide if it is more or less exciting than watching golf...
Anymore than watching sweaty men put a leather ball through a hole. Seriously, I can't see what is exciting about that either. If they did what the Aztecs did and kill the looser and use his head for the next match than maybe it would be a bit more interesting.
"I am the king of the Romans, and am superior to rules of grammar!"
-Sigismund, Holy Roman Emperor (1368-1437)
I stumbled upon a filming of one of the shows at the COEX mall one day. It was before they actually started filming. The studio was filled with 150+ teenage kids (maybe a few 20-somethings as well), both male and female. I hung around for about 20 minutes waiting for the show to start but I got bored and left.