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Meet Korea's Gaming Rockstars

PC Gamer has up a short piece looking at some of the big names in Korean gaming. The piece describes an event, and discusses the training regimen these console contestants go through. "I visited the A-team house, which is in a residential street in northern Seoul. Fourteen pro gamers live here, together with their team coach. It's half frat house, half sweatshop. Upstairs are the dorms. The team's top two players, Ma Jae Yoon (handle sAviOr) and Seo Ji Hoon (handle XellOs) share a room that's not much bigger than two single beds. The others are crammed into bunks in two other rooms. Ma, aged 21, is currently South Korea's number one Starcraft player and, according to Sean Oh, a millionaire. You wouldn't be able to glean this from looking at his bedroom."

10 of 64 comments (clear)

  1. Just Doing Their Time by Slider451 · · Score: 4, Funny

    1. Serve on a fishing ship, in the military or... as a professional gamer.
    2. Endure austere conditions, long hours, harsh discipline.
    3. There is no step 3
    4. Profit!

    --
    Nostalgia isn't what it used to be.
  2. Re:Millionare eh? by Goldberg's+Pants · · Score: 3, Interesting

    according to Sean Oh, a millionaire. You wouldn't be able to glean this from looking at his bedroom."

    Most millionaires aren't flashy bastards though. I once had a boss who was a multi-millonaire. He looked like a hobo. In fact the only thing that gave away how rich he was was if you were allowed into his attic where he collected and framed $50 bills. Seriously, he collects and frames them. He has THOUSANDS of them.

  3. Re:Millionare eh? by everphilski · · Score: 3, Insightful

    You can make lots of money, but unless you are saving it, its hard to become a millionaire. For those of us who are just regular joes with 9-5 jobs, it isn't impossible to be a millionaire, you just need to lower your cost of living. It's kind of surprising how some former sports stars that were making millions a year have lost their money due to bad management and just spending it, where someone even just making 5 figures can still anticipate being worth several million before retirement.

  4. Howlin' Mad by Dogtanian · · Score: 4, Funny

    I visited the A-team house, which is in a residential street in northern Seoul. Are those guys *still* on the run from the U.S. government? I'd have thought getting B.A. Barracus onto a plane for South Korea would be a major PITA... and you just blew their cover again!
    --
    "Slashdot - News and Chat Sites Deviant". (Click "homepage" link above for details).
  5. Re:hmm by godscent · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I expect that it is the same as watching other people play sports. I don't get it either, but it seems to be fairly popular.

  6. Back in 98-99 I was one of the top 5 gamers in SC by CrazyJim1 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I got invitationals from South Korea, but I just thought it was spam. I'm kicking myself now. But at least Starcraft 2 will come out soon. SK has lots of gaming centers and this used to make for refined strategy over creative strategy. And one thing that Starcraft has is psychology. If you know exactly what your opponent is going to do, they have no chance. I think SC2 will have more advanced players from the get go than SC 1 did because SC1 was one of the first competitive online games with a ladder system. I was able to kick ass in Wacraft 3 as #1 1v1,2v2 and 3v3. So I think I'll be able to do well in SC2.

    The only reason I quit Starcraft was because of the map hack. People stopped playing on Battlenet, but I had no where else to train so I was screwed. I hope they punish map hackers in Starcraft 2. There are a lot of ways to do it. One way would be a report map hacker button: and when someone gets to the top 10 of reported maphackers, people at Blizzard could review a replay. Another way is to open up a ton(1,000,000) of memory addresses that allow map vision, and none are legit. If someone changes one of these values, they'll be reported to Blizzard and their CDkey banned. Anyway there are lots of ways of doing it. I look forward to Starcraft 2 as being my game of choice.

  7. Hurry and meet them... by riskeetee · · Score: 5, Funny

    Before they die of exhaustion from a marathon gaming session!

  8. Re:Back in 98-99 I was one of the top 5 gamers in by Sparr0 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    "limited server side resources" is crap. GOOD crap, in the sense that battle.net is free and Blizzard hasn't had to spend more than pocket change to keep SC and Diablo running all these years, but crap from the POV of cheating. Apply the FPS server model, dedicate a beefy machine to every 30-60 players, and you can do all sorts of wondrous things. The client doesnt have to be dumb, it just shouldnt be sent things it doesnt need to know. As to latency, for the game to be competitive you need minimal lag anyways, and how far is a unit going to move in 1/10th of a second? Sure, you have to send a *LITTLE* more data than the client needs, such as positions of units and projectiles that are [lag time]*[movement speed] distance into the fog, and that would be visible to a map hacker, but it would be orders of magnitude less trouble than now. EverQuest had to solve the same problem when people were sniffing the data stream to find NPC positions miles away, they just stopped sending that data, problem solved.

  9. Re:For those of us that love Korean girls by jma05 · · Score: 3, Funny

    Unfortunately for you, video game playing geeks are actually cool there.

    "They shriek and cheer when the two teams walk on stage. In South Korea, pro gaming has attained the status of rock and roll."

  10. backwards by penguinbroker · · Score: 4, Funny

    ftfa..

    Korea's #1 Starcraft Player: I would like to have a good car and a fancy girlfriend.


    um.... isn't it supposed to be the other way around?