Thursday, November 18, 2010

Successful Gamers Play Video Game Tournaments

Tales of great success flow from the video game tournaments world. Computer "geeks" duped us all when they took their living room gaming consoles on the road and came back home with fat bank accounts. In the past these computer experts have been quite young - too young to buy alcohol themselves - but the industry has grown up, along with its "nerds". What once seemed a fad has now become a multiple million dollar industry with more than 65 percent of all households participating in the games, as referenced by the Entertainment Software Association.

Video games considered to be Real Time Strategy, First Person Shooter games, and Racing games, are call Electronic Sports. Initially played individually or in pairs at home on a gaming console, these games can now be played online with other people in neighboring communities, or in other countries. Tournaments have been organized and played online by Massively Multiple player Online Role Playing Games Massively Multiple-player Online Role Playing Games and can be played for cash. World of War-craft Global Arena, one of the most popular games, brought a sizable first prize of ,000 in 2010. Not a bad payout for participating in a game you can play from your basement.

For many years, expert gamers sharpened their talents any place that would welcome them - from campus living quarters to dank basements. When finally large companies realized the immeasurable prospect for promoting their merchandise to this rapidly growing sect, video gaming launched from basement to sky tower in an instant.

Massively Multiple-player Online Role Playing Games utilize Avatars, or personalized characters, to allow the game player to move through the gaming environment interacting with other players and the virtual ecosystem itself. The object is for the gamer to control his or her Avatar as it combats various monsters, assassins, and terrorists, usually with the theme of good vs. Evil. The Avatar usually must also collect hidden objects for experience and points throughout the game. Contrary to popular belief, you don't have to be an "expert" to play in these tournaments - there is room for all to enjoy the fun of online gaming.

It is sometimes questioned by non-gamers whether or not the money played for online is genuine. It absolutely is real. Players add money into a trust fund using either their bank card, an e-check, or Pay Pal. This form of real-money play is legal because video games depend on skill rather than chance. Some expert gamers have earned beefy nest eggs by quitting their regular jobs and playing video game tournaments full time. In a growth industry earning over million in sales in 2008, there seems to be an abundance of opportunities for gamers with snake-like reflexes and speedy fingers.

Another area in which there is growing demand is Video Game Testers. Because video game popularity is at an all time high, video game companies are under a lot of pressure to thrust new games out to the public in record times. This means they do not have enough time to thoroughly test them. This is where Video Game Testers come in. Gaming Geeks volunteer to play and test the newest games before they are released to the general public and report to the publisher any glitches in the games. They get to play new games before anybody else, and the publishers get their games tested - it's a win-win situation.

Because video game tournaments are vastly popular, they have been evaluated as Electronic Sports by the International Olympic Committee for addition as an Olympic sport.

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