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StarCraft II Gamer Receives US Pro-Athlete Visa

dotarray writes "The world's first professional StarCraft II gamer has been granted a five-year pro athlete visa for the United States, making Kim 'viOLet' Dong Hwan the first of his kind. viOLet was one of the first gamers to apply for the P-1A visa when they were introduced in July. The new paperwork doesn't mean that he can live permanently in the U.S., but it does mean he'll be treated like other (more traditional) athletes, able to easily enter the country temporarily to participate in tournaments."

72 of 114 comments (clear)

  1. Ackbar says by Joce640k · · Score: 2, Funny

    It's a trap!

    --
    No sig today...
    1. Re:Ackbar says by cyborg_zx · · Score: 1

      This is a fully operational Nydus Worm.

    2. Re:Ackbar says by jellomizer · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Ah Ackbar, the true hero to end the empire.
      Unlike Luke, who abandon his post and joined with the enemy.
      Or Solo and Lieha who, just barely achieved their mission by turning a cloak and dagger mission to a full frontal assault, killing many civilians.

      Ackbar, caught the trap quickly and professionally organized his troops to hold the line until he had the tactical advantage.

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
  2. Are other 'sports' treated similarly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Genuinely curious. Does this sort of thing apply to chess, poker, and other "less-traditional sports"?

    1. Re:Are other 'sports' treated similarly? by aiadot · · Score: 3, Informative

      According to my local Japanese US embassy, there is no mention about what type of gaming/sport is allowed. They just say that it must have a certain degree of international recognition and the event must also be distinguished. Furthermore the whole reason this new visa was created was because Riot Games, the creators of League of Legends, the biggest MOBA PC game, lobbied for it, so I think it's safe to say that getting a visa for electronic gaming is easier than getting one for traditional table gaming tournaments.

    2. Re:Are other 'sports' treated similarly? by Buzer · · Score: 1

      At least some sports (like pro wrestling) actually wan to avoid getting defined as sports in legal sense as it can bring bunch of problems (like Title IX). There are some legal thoughts available athttp://dpgatlaw.com/2013/07/23/inviting-regulation-the-sportsification-of-video-games/.

    3. Re:Are other 'sports' treated similarly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Arrogant ignorance spews from your frothing orifice. The most entertaining games involve an element of chance which can be mitigated by applying a strategy. I welcome your futile rebuttal.

    4. Re:Are other 'sports' treated similarly? by Dodgy+G33za · · Score: 1

      What makes a game a sport though?

      My take on it is physical rather than mental exertion. So in my mind dominos, chess, poker and starcraft (1 or 2) are all games. Doesn't make them any less watchable or admirable though.

    5. Re:Are other 'sports' treated similarly? by Dodgy+G33za · · Score: 1

      Oh, and wrestlers are neither. They fall into the entertainment industry category. At least the WWF do. Those sumo dudes, well they need a category all of their own...

  3. Top kek by dosius · · Score: 1

    This needs the giant foot icon.

    --
    What you hear in the ear, preach from the rooftop Matthew 10.27b
    1. Re:Top kek by SpzToid · · Score: 1

      After I RTFA, it seems a Jägerbomb icon might be more desirable and appropriate. I haven't realized it before, but Slashdot really needs a Jägerbomb icon!

      --
      You can't be ahead of the curve, if you're stuck in a loop.
  4. Re: Doritoes and Wheaties by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    LOL EVERYONE WHO PLAYS VIDEO GAMES IS FAT LOL AND EATS DO RIDE LOL

    The guy looks to be in damn good shape, better shape than most Americans. He gets paid to smash letters on a keyboard just like a huge employment sector already has been for decades. Just because it can be more enjoyable means it needs a stigma attached to it?

    Perhaps the envy will wear off of you one day.

  5. Re:Doritoes and Wheaties by KingOfBLASH · · Score: 3, Insightful

    So, is Doritoes going to start putting professional gamers on their bags like Wheaties does with ball players on theor cereal? Are we goning to be seeing fat kids with Cokes and Doritoes yelling, "I'm in training! I have t eat this way!"

    Ummm...Fat?

    https://www.google.nl/search?q=Kim+'viOLet'+Dong+Hwan&espv=216&es_sm=119&tbm=isch&tbo=u&source=univ

  6. Re:Doritoes and Wheaties by stoolpigeon · · Score: 4, Informative

    something like this?

    --
    It's hard to believe that's how Micronians are made. Why don't we see it right now by having you both kiss one another?
  7. Angry Birds by ketomax · · Score: 1

    Can a professional Angry Birds player (plays every afternoon with his colleagues) apply for a P-1A Visa?

    1. Re:Angry Birds by Thanshin · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Your definition of "professional" doesn't match everyone else's.

    2. Re:Angry Birds by jones_supa · · Score: 1

      Hah! Although, if you take vanilla Angry Birds and manage to get full 3 stars in all levels, you are quite tough guy.

    3. Re:Angry Birds by ketomax · · Score: 1

      That was a definitive joke

  8. P1 = Jet Li, Gary Kasparov, David Beckham Visa by retroworks · · Score: 4, Informative

    Because many competitive tournament visitors are atheletes, the State Department website designer chose to follow the vernacular to call it an "athletic visa". The US immigration code from the Immigration and Nationization Act of 1965 refers to "alien athletes, artists, and entertainers, and their spouses and children." The Starcraft gamer was issued a "P1" visa according to TFA which applies to "individual or team athletes, or members of an entertainment group (P-1B) that are internationally recognized. A maximum of 25,000 P visas are issued annually."[wikipedia] The whole article plays on a reader-friendly title for a government a web page. .

    In other words, P1 is the same for Gary Kasparov or Jet Li. It's designed to keep USA employers from issuing "track and field" competitions to pick grapes, without impeding Hollywood or Olympic events.

    --
    Gently reply
    1. Re:P1 = Jet Li, Gary Kasparov, David Beckham Visa by Alioth · · Score: 1

      I thought there was already an O (I think) visa for people who are outstanding in their field (i.e. musicians, bands, entertainers etc).

      It does seem odd to call it an "athletic visa" when this P visa is also for entertainment groups (presumably, musicians will now be getting this kind of visa).

      Generally I wouldn't call a Starcraft pro an athlete, nor would I call Starcraft a sport (I wouldn't call chess a sport. I wouldn't even call golf a sport - it's a pleasant past-time, but not a sport). Don't mistake this for me devaluing gaming tournaments - I enjoy them, I watch pro-league SC2, I've even participated in a few Starcraft tournaments and I play too much SC2 for my own good. But even playing in top level SC tournaments does not make you an athlete nor does it make SC2 a sport.

    2. Re:P1 = Jet Li, Gary Kasparov, David Beckham Visa by fredprado · · Score: 1

      If you are simple minded, life is indeed simple, my friend.

    3. Re:P1 = Jet Li, Gary Kasparov, David Beckham Visa by Alioth · · Score: 1

      Where I draw the line is:

      * Does it involve strenuous physical activity?
      * Does it entail some level of risk greater than just every day activity?
      * Does it involve competition?

      If it does, it's a sport in my book. If not, it might be entertaining, it might be fun, but it's a pasttime. Starcraft 2 fails on the first two counts. Golf fails on the first two counts in my book. Snooker fails in the first two counts. I think of all these things as perhaps being entertaining and highly competitive, but not really a sport much less athletic. Motor racing does require all three, as does football, rugby, cricket, tennis, arm-wrestling etc. so I consider them sports. Motor racing for me falls into the set of sports but falls outside of the set of athletics (although you need to be in good shape to be a competitive motor racer in many categories, and it does involve strenuous physical activity).

    4. Re:P1 = Jet Li, Gary Kasparov, David Beckham Visa by Smauler · · Score: 1

      What about shooting? That's at the Olympics, but does not require strenuous physical activity.

      Also, it's difficult to argue sports like tennis are high risk activities.

    5. Re:P1 = Jet Li, Gary Kasparov, David Beckham Visa by fluffythdestroy · · Score: 1

      Sports is not only about physical prowess. It can be about the mind as well. Chess and bridge is qualifies as sports. In my book it makes sense since it takes an enormous amount of skill to become a master at these "sports". Starcraft goes in the same category since it involves lots of strategy...just like chess

      --
      PC Gaming enthousiast that gives comments, opinions and reviews on Games. I'm just having fun with games while doing let
    6. Re:P1 = Jet Li, Gary Kasparov, David Beckham Visa by SkimTony · · Score: 1

      Risk doesn't need to be TBI from e.g. American Football; there are plenty of non-contact sports. Tennis, track and field, etc. all have a higher risk of injury (muscle strain, etc.) than normal daily activities like walking to the mailbox. I'm not saying I subscribe to Alioth's definition, but the "risk" aspect is certainly there for sports that require exertion.

    7. Re:P1 = Jet Li, Gary Kasparov, David Beckham Visa by Smauler · · Score: 1

      If you claim strenuous physical activity is inherently risky, then the risk statement is pointless, because it is already covered by the strenuous activity statement.

      Also, I would argue that not doing strenuous physical activity at all is more risky than doing it.

  9. Re: Doritoes and Wheaties by KingOfBLASH · · Score: 2

    Your argument is specious. While lack of physical activity may contribute to obesity, there is nothing to say all people who are not physically active are obese. Indeed, he may very well be going to the gym 3 hours a day. We have no way of knowing from him being a professional video game player

  10. Re:Outlier: video games DO contribute to obesity. by rioki · · Score: 3, Insightful

    And yes most video game players ARE overweight. It's one of the MAJOR causes of obesity in our US society.

    Citation or it did not happen. I accept that a large amount of obese people play video games and watch television, they also drive a car. News Flash: Driving a car instead of biking to work may make you fat: most drivers ARE overweight.

  11. Re:They let commies in? by rioki · · Score: 2

    I am pretty sure that he is from SOUTH Korea.

  12. Re:Outlier: video games DO contribute to obesity. by chilvence · · Score: 1

    Um.... the one does not preclude the existence of the other you know.

    And if it helps, the number one cause of obesity in the US is Cars. Because you know, you write off that age old human exercise known as walking to where you are going. I know it may be controversial, but you don't actually have to dress up in spandex in order to stay fit, take it from someone who is rational.

  13. and the rest of immigration? by nimbius · · Score: 1

    My personal opinion is that gaming can in fact be a sport, Much as foreign chess players can secure this type of visa when playing in america, im sure pundits will laud this as a spurious visa ($criticism=Obama->new($issue)). Yet taking a moment to play Starcraft II on its normal setting one arrives at a determined sense of exactly how challenging this game can be. A real opponent competing in a tournament can, and does, easily outmatch the AI for the game even on its most brutal setting. Anything more than normal is enough to send the commenter to therapy.

    Being an american though, I cant help but draw a contrast between the E3 visa and profesisonal sports visas in the context of traditionalist argument. the E3 applies to skilled labour, yet if you were to give one to a roofing contractor who spends 12 hours a day shingling a home or 9 hours fitting pipe in a rural texas ranch home it would draw the same criticism. is for this type of criticism the e3 prohibits "seasonal" labour like homebuilding. Although the class 3 visa is extended to foreign profesisonals it in no way reflects the tenacity and challenge faced by labour in a decidedly lower social and capital class. it also neglects to inform the reader that most 'seasonal' labor is in fact performed in regions with no discernable season such as new mexico, texas, or arizona. Much like the Starcraft gamer has his sports caste, so does the immigrant laborer have his employment caste.

    --
    Good people go to bed earlier.
  14. Re:Outlier: video games DO contribute to obesity. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Video games and television are linked to obesity. As in, such activities are some of the factors involved, not all. Bottom line: If you eat too much and don't exercise enough, you're probably going to get fat.

    Facebook and Slashdot are nowhere near what personal human interaction can off and as a result it's making more hostile and anti-social.

    Face-to-face human interaction is filled with lies and facades. People say what they're truly thinking and do what truly interests them when they're mostly anonymous, and hold back in public for fear of retribution.

  15. Re: Doritoes and Wheaties by Sockatume · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If you read up on these guys, the amount of discipline they demonstrate is amazing: daily 8- or 10-hour training sessions just to keep their reaction times high enough, never mind developing new strategy or approaches to the game. With that kind of mindset I'd be unsurprised if they were all fitness obsessives.

    --
    No kidding!!! What do you say at this point?
  16. To get to the core of the issue... by Sockatume · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Diving a car is a risk factor for obesity; professional race drivers are not obese.

    --
    No kidding!!! What do you say at this point?
    1. Re:To get to the core of the issue... by cyborg_zx · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Being *American* is a risk factor for obesity.

    2. Re:To get to the core of the issue... by Sockatume · · Score: 1

      Hold on, diving a car? That's a risk factor for something else entirely.

      --
      No kidding!!! What do you say at this point?
  17. Re:South Korean Visa Waiver by edjs · · Score: 1

    The visa waiver may not apply if one is participating in a tournament that gives out prizes or otherwise remunerates the participants.

  18. Good news by Roseainsworth · · Score: 1

    Well its a great news for all the athletes as they need to get training about fitness and other activities with this it will help them out for better performance. As some sports are related to states and not other countries. The best part of this thing is traveling around the state meet new players get better advices.

  19. A company can actually ban someone from a sport by tepples · · Score: 2

    Video games like Tetris and StarCraft are proprietary. This means one entity has the state-backed power to prevent any particular person from playing a sport. It's not like being "banned from baseball" where a player can join another league, as the game's publisher has the power to shut a league down by asserting the publisher's exclusive right to perform the game publicly. These companies also have veto power over implementations of a "sport". It's as if The Tennis Company could sue a city for putting up an unlicensed tennis court in a public park. So I don't see how a proprietary activity deserves international recognition in the same way as, say, something free like Chess or Go.

    1. Re:A company can actually ban someone from a sport by nachtkap · · Score: 1

      Or something free like beach volleyball, where a Brazilian pro player was (at least partially) baned for being outspoken about something. Sadly I can't find a source.
      But I agree that 'Sport' isn't the right label here. It should be labeled as a 'competition' just like every other 'sport'. After all we watch a competition between professionals (people that devoted way more time to a activity, then we could be bothered to, and there got really good at it) based on set rules. IMO we only call professional sports 'sport' because we most likely play/played that sport.

    2. Re:A company can actually ban someone from a sport by aiadot · · Score: 1

      You bring a pretty interesting point. While I respect your point of view, on the other hand we have to remember that the entities behind e-sports are for profit companies and if they do anything that pisses off the community they'll end up losing users to rival games and lose money. Furthermore, while traditional games and sports are public domain, the entities that organize the events are not very different from your standard corporation. Anyone that can potentially do or say something that can potentially go against their or their partner's interests can be put out of the game. This is an outdated, far from perfect example http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1968_Olympics_Black_Power_salute but I think it illustrates my point.

    3. Re:A company can actually ban someone from a sport by tepples · · Score: 1

      In a free sport, someone who no longer dopes isn't legally barred from starting his own league unless, perhaps, he actually gets put in prison.

    4. Re:A company can actually ban someone from a sport by SleazyRidr · · Score: 1

      You can get banned from competing, but you can still play on your own, or set up another league. Lance Armstrong is still allowed to ride a bicycle, but a player barred from Starcraft by Blizzard would never be allowed to play.

  20. Wrestling for real by tepples · · Score: 1

    World Wildlife Fund? Panda wrestling? Get the F out.

    But seriously, would you consider MMA a sport? It's essentially professional wrestling without all the fakeness.

  21. H1B Visas and now this? by Vitriol+Angst · · Score: 1, Funny

    Can't this country produce quality game players of it's own?

    Who would have thought America would have fallen so far that our couch potatoes are getting replaced by imports.

    --
    >>"ad space available -- low rates!!!"
    1. Re:H1B Visas and now this? by nachtkap · · Score: 1

      I don't think the US works like you think it does. Its success has been based on varying degrees of home grown talent and imported talent.

      While the top earners in e-sports, apart from Fatal1ty, aren't from the US, 7 out of the top 20 are employed by a US organization (EG/[A]). The picture gets more favorable for the US the further down one goes in the top 100. As far as SC2:HotS goes the US has the famdom scene locked. I would guesstimate that ~80% of successful players are either Korean or play for a US based team (EG or TL). In DotA2 things are a bit more spread out (between China, CIS and the US), but the US is still in a favorable spot.
      [EG: Evil Geniuses; [A]: Alliance; TL: Team Liquid; CIS: former USSR]
      Source: http://www.esportsearnings.com/players

    2. Re:H1B Visas and now this? by Entropius · · Score: 1

      There are no top-tier American Starcraft players that I'm aware of; the current North American champion is a Canadian girl.

      We do have good League of Legends teams.

  22. Not the first time by BisuDagger · · Score: 2

    League of Legends was actually the first game to have a pro issued a sports visa. To quote a friend "They're recognised as athletes for visa purposes because they come into the country and compete and then leave again so as far as immigration is concerned that's the one that fits them best. Unfortunately the vast majority of posters are too stupid to understand that and the topic turns to shit." source http://www.teamliquid.net/forum/viewmessage.php?topic_id=421180

  23. I think some people do it under the table for othe by Joe_Dragon · · Score: 1

    I think some people do it under the table for other sports this person did it the legal way.

    I know some other people who do stuff international and they really don't get visas for it.

  24. Not so Fast by puddingebola · · Score: 3, Funny

    He just tested positive for Red Bul,l taurine, Monster Energy drink, and NoDoz. Banned.

  25. Well how can we have a world championship matchs by Joe_Dragon · · Score: 1

    with only people in the usa being able to play.

  26. didn't Bobby Fischer get jail time for playing a by Joe_Dragon · · Score: 2

    After he went to Russia to play a match?

  27. Re: Doritoes and Wheaties by jellomizer · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Well if you are going to be a professional gamer, being fat may be at a disadvantage. When you need your arms to twitch and type and move a pointer at split second speed, you can't have your arms bogged down by an extra Kilogram of fat.

    Now for the average gamer. You could be 300kg and still play the game decently. However if you are professionally and need to beat times by split seconds then you better be in better shape, as well if you are going to be playing all the time, you need some endurance.

    Now gammers if they are so involved in the game that they are not eating, I bet they can stay fairly thin.

    --
    If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
  28. Sweet! by Greyfox · · Score: 2

    Now he just needs to whore himself out to Red Bull and he'll be set for life! It's the American dream!

    --

    I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

  29. Re:South Korean Visa Waiver by nachtkap · · Score: 1

    He is playing for a US based team (Evil Geniuses). The do have a team house at/near SF where he has stayed for a limited amount of time. E-sports tournaments are also often part of another venue (Trade shows and Comic Con) and his team might want him there because of their sponsors. Of which there are many.

  30. Monster by nachtkap · · Score: 1

    Monster should be more his thing if you ask him. He has taken Red Bull money though for a 5th-8th place. http://wiki.teamliquid.net/starcraft2/Red_Bull_Battlegrounds:_Austin

  31. Re: Doritoes and Wheaties by pr0fessor · · Score: 1

    I'm skinny and until recently I never exercised , how much I eat has been a running joke and source of amazement at work. It makes my wife and a lot of other people annoyed that I can sit at the computer all day and eat whatever with out worrying about my weight.

    I have two brothers that are the same way they eat whatever don't exercise and are skinny

    I exercise to build muscle because my back was hurting in the morning when I woke up not to maintain my weight. My wife thinks one day I'll start gaining weight, but that usually happens to a guy in his 30s which are in the review mirror for me.

  32. Re:Outlier: video games DO contribute to obesity. by SerpentMage · · Score: 1

    Actually, let me give you a stat.http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-24998497

    Kids today are slower than their parents. Let me give you another thought, when did video games become popular? Interestingly the heyday of tv did not cause kids to become slower or fatter. Driving a car? Well that has been a grand American tradition since the 50's. There is only one thing left... Video games! I am not putting all of the blame on it, but it is too much of a coincidence. And please don't start quoting Correlation does not imply causation, kids are not moving around enough today largely due video games!

    Now about older people being fat? Actually yeah that is how it always has been. Look at this stat: http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/statistics_explained/index.php/Overweight_and_obesity_-_BMI_statistics

    See the interesting trend? As you get older you get fatter. Now here is the problem, young kids are fat, and they are only going to get fatter as they get older.

    --

    "You can't make a race horse of a pig"
    "No," said Samuel, "but you can make very fast pig"
  33. Re: Doritoes and Wheaties by Mabhatter · · Score: 1

    What are we gonna do? Use these athletes as drone battalion commanders or something? Like that would ever work out... Somebody would probably lock them up and make them work for evil governments.

    Lets ban SC2 from Arab countries pronto!!!

  34. Switching to a different sport by tepples · · Score: 1

    if they do anything that pisses off the community they'll end up losing users to rival games and lose money

    What (legal) alternative was there when The Tetris Company made the infinite spin feature of Tetris Worlds official despite reviewers' claims that "it actually breaks Tetris"? That's as if basketball players had to switch to netball or team handball, or if American football players had to switch to rugby. Not all skills transfer.

    Furthermore, while traditional games and sports are public domain, the entities that organize the events are not very different from your standard corporation. Anyone that can potentially do or say something that can potentially go against their or their partner's interests can be put out of the game.

    Black players kicked out of Major League Baseball started parallel Negro League. Had the National League and American League been able to assert actual exclusive rights over baseball, there might not have been a Negro league or any other independent professional baseball promotions. Heck, there might not have even been an American League.

  35. Re:Outlier: video games DO contribute to obesity. by KramberryKoncerto · · Score: 1

    And please don't start quoting Correlation does not imply causation

    Some people use it to say nay to strong statistical results backed by solid scientific investigation to causality, but the quote is exactly for you kind of folk who look at statistics, come up with their own theories and believe in them willy-nilly without ever thinking about the responsibility to go through the process of formal validation. Perhaps there's more junk food or even nutrition level in general. Perhaps parents don't have as much time to bring kids outside or guide them to play sports. Perhaps more people live in cities, where there's simply less space to run around; I live in a place where you need to queue overnight just to book an indoor basketball court, all year long. Perhaps the reproductive disadvantages of genes related to obesity have been alleviated by modern technology and some change in societal values, so obese offsprings have become more common. Perhaps there's a kind of commonly used product, not even food, that specifically induces some kind of hormonal disorder which leads to obesity. I can give you lots of possible explanations and none of them are any worse than yours.

    You also have to know that the demographic that sits in all day, every day, to play video games is quite small compared to the entire population. Many kids play games, but it takes a certain amount of obsession to be indulged, that's why gaming nerds are always a minority. Either way in many cases I doubt videogames genuinely displaced exercise; given your data you can't say they'd otherwise have done more sports, a very significant portion could have still watched TVs or read a book or something. Moreover, it's not so easy for a teenager to become obese just because of lack of exercise; adolescent metabolism is high so it takes a middle-aged some regular aerobic exercise to match, and kids don't have that many years to build up their weight; there are often causes that played bigger roles, such as uncontrolled eating and stress.

  36. so by HuiChen · · Score: 1

    bring your ivy league degree, your masters thesis, your rich parents, your friends in high places, your new BMW, your fourth house in the bahamas, your heavily-diversified portfolio, and see how much they don't matter in SC2

  37. Re:South Korean Visa Waiver by sabri · · Score: 1

    His name implies he is a national from South Korea. South Korean nationals are part of the visa waiver program and can stay in the US for up to 90 days without a visa. Why waste this visa on him?

    According to this information from the Social Security Office, holders of a P-visa are eligible to receive an SSN. This means that he can actually pay taxes on his US income, should he win any major prizes.

    Another reason could be that a previous visa request (such as J or F) was denied, making him ineligible for the VWP.

    --
    I'm not a complete idiot... Some parts are missing.
  38. Re: Doritoes and Wheaties by poopdeville · · Score: 1

    Sports contribute in the same way movies, music, games, and comedy do. They provide entertainment.

    --
    After all, I am strangely colored.
  39. Dvisions of Competitive Endeavors by eepok · · Score: 1

    We all know that playing Starcraft shouldn't be considered a sport... but who puts forth a rubric for judging what's what? I do, that's who!

    **Sport** (Rugby, Tennis, etc.)
    --Competitive (against an opponent)
    --Directly oppositional (opponent attempts to prevent one's success)
    --Non-subjective scoring (ball through a hoop, player passes line, etc. Disagreeing with the referee doesn't imply subjectivity)
    --Requires excellent physical condition to achieve excellence in the sport

    **Race** (NASCAR, Horse Racing, Marathon)
    --Competitive
    --Oppositional (opponent performs at the same time and may or may not actively attempt to prevent one's success)
    --Non-subjective timing
    --May or may not be a test of human strength/speed. Could be a test of human control over another being or machine (auto racing).

    **Competition** (Gymnastics, Dance)
    --Competitive
    --Can have subjective scoring

    **Game** (Board and video games, Golf, etc)
    --Competitive
    --No particular physical requirements to achieve success
    --No subjective scoring

    **Endeavor** (Ex. Setting records, Mountain climbing without time limits)
    --Not necessarily competitive
    --Goals may vary (points, time, etc.)

  40. Brain activity by fluffythdestroy · · Score: 1

    This article tells about playing games and the relation to to the brain's capacity. I saw a documentary about younger people (25 year old if I remember right) that their brain showed more activity (more active neuropathways) then an older person (30 or something similar).

    I just can't find the other documentary

    --
    PC Gaming enthousiast that gives comments, opinions and reviews on Games. I'm just having fun with games while doing let
  41. physical control by HuiChen · · Score: 1

    do you think a pianist requires physical control? do you think an expert pianist has more physical control than an amateur?

  42. ...hm by HuiChen · · Score: 1

    lot of people even say the koreans are dominating sc2 because of their superior physical control - in the business, we call it "mechanics"

  43. Re:didn't Bobby Fischer get jail time for playing by puddingebola · · Score: 1

    No, he was wanted by the State Department for going to Yugoslavia during the war in the 1990's when all travel by US citizens was banned. He played a rematch of his famous match with Boris Spassky. He sought asylum in Japan, then was granted full citizenship in Iceland, and was still wanted at the time of his death in 2008.

  44. Re: Doritoes and Wheaties by drsquare · · Score: 1

    The review mirror? What exactly is that?

  45. Re:Well how can we have a world championship match by OzoneLad · · Score: 1

    with only people in the usa being able to play.

    That's what the rest of us were wondering about the World Series in baseball before Montreal and Toronto got teams.

  46. Re: Doritoes and Wheaties by pr0fessor · · Score: 1

    stupid spell check.....

    *rear view mirror*

    I apologize for any incontinence this may have caused you.