您现在的位置是:探索 >>正文
【】
探索1人已围观
简介At the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, a team of Counter-Strike: Global Offensiveplayers stands behind ...
At the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, a team of Counter-Strike: Global Offensiveplayers stands behind a giant stage, going over last-minute strategies before heading up on stage to play a semifinals match inside one of the biggest arenas in New York City.
Behind them sits a row of computers for practice, $400 gaming chairs, and a table stocked with bananas, granola bars, chips, and fruit gummies.
About 200 feet away in the bowels of the Barclays Center, a handful of the top Street Fighter V players in the world sit and stand among the crowd of fans, holding their fight sticks and controllers while waiting to be called up to compete in front of a crowd on fold-out chairs that take up about one half of the converted basketball practice court. Behind them is a nearly empty Red Bull refrigerator.
On Sept. 16 and 17, the esports tournament organization ESL held two competitions under the same roof, and the two scenes could not have been more different.

ESL One New York featured sixteen of the best Counter-Strike: Global Offensiveteams in the world, the top eight of which competed on the main stage in the Barclays Center in front of a crowd of thousands. The prize pool was $250,000.
The Brooklyn Beatdown was open to 256 Street Fighter Vplayers, ranging from local players who knew they never had a chance of making it past the earliest rounds to players who have won some of the biggest Street Fightertournaments in the world. The prize pool was $50,000.
The two competitive games exist in completely separate worlds.
Since hitting the esports scene, Counter-Strikehas consistently drawn a larger audience than Street Fighter. In recent years, CS:GOtournament viewership has far outpaced Street Fightertournament viewership on platforms like Twitch. While the english broadcast of the CS:GOELeague Major finals broke 1 million concurrent viewers on Twitch, Street Fighter V's Capcom Cup english stream just a month earlier barely passed 100,000 concurrent viewers.
Popularity feeds into perception.
With so many more eyeballs on the Counter-Strikescene than the Street Fighterscene, its players are treated more like stars.

Between matches, Counter-Strikeplayers at ESL One New York stayed backstage outside of scheduled signings, for which fans lined up by the dozens and dozens to get jerseys, posters, and mousepads signed. While they were behind the stage or heading up the stage stairs to start another game, security made sure to keep fans away from the railing.
In the Street Fighter room, there was no separation between fans and pros. Legendary players like Justin Wong, Daigo Umehara, Ai "Fuudo" Keita, and Victor "Punk" Woodley sat right alongside regular attendees and even played against them in early rounds and friendly matches.
Before the Counter-Strikegrand finals on Sunday, the top eight Street Fighter Vplayers competed on the main stage but still sat in the audience between matches as Counter-Strikefans trickled in to find suitable seats before the match between Team Liquid and FaZe Clan, scheduled for 2 p.m.
As Counter-Strikeplayers stayed mostly serious during and between games, Street Fighter players joked and even shared some shenanigans while on stage.
Counter-Strikeplayers walked through the arena with fanfare as a stage announcer introduced teams. Street Fighter players were pointed at by an ESL staff member, indicating they needed to walk up to the tiny stage for their next match.
Professional Counter-Strikeis referred to as a scene.
Professional Street Fighterplayers belong to the fighting game community.
The two competitive games exist in completely separate worlds, a fact never more apparent than when they are placed under the same roof.

Counter-Strikeplayers reach a sort of mythical celebrity status thanks to their exclusivity. They're sequestered from fans like traditional sports superstars, set upon an unreachable pedestal that brings an extra level of intensity to the same competition that non-professional players take part in by the hundreds of thousands every day.
Street Fighterplayers are approachable, for the most part, and exist in the same world as the less-skilled players and fans they inspire. Lucky fans can enter open tournaments like Brooklyn Beatdown and square off against the best in the world, lose handedly, and bump fists before parting ways.
Premiere Counter-Striketournaments feel like a bigger deal. Premiere Street Fightertournaments feel more communal.
Both show their own side of esports.
Featured Video For You
Elon Musk's 'Dota 2' AI embarassed esports pros, but that was only the beginning
TopicsEsportsGaming
Tags:
转载:欢迎各位朋友分享到网络,但转载请说明文章出处“夫榮妻貴網”。http://new.maomao321.com/news/45a4299912.html
相关文章
Daughter gives her 100
探索One thing's for sure: you're never too old to learn.。Massachusetts woman Clare Picciuto turned 100 F ...
【探索】
阅读更多8 tips for an American who wants to marry Prince Harry
探索LONDON -- The idea of marrying a British prince might sound foreign to most people. 。SEE ALSO:Here's ...
【探索】
阅读更多classpass learns the hard way you can’t just ‘figure out the business model'
探索One startup is learning the hard way that it takes much more than rapid growth and a dedicated user ...
【探索】
阅读更多
热门文章
- Xiaomi accused of copying again, this time by Jawbone
- Your slacktivism isn't as useless as everyone thinks
- 10 smart money tips that take 10 minutes
- Lebron James comforts Cleveland Indians and fans after World Series loss
- Pole vaulter claims his penis is not to blame
- Uber will have to give holidays, basic employment rights to UK drivers
最新文章
One of the most controversial power struggles in media comes to a close
Netflix downloads could be here soon, but not for U.S. users
Nobody should buy the new 13
Trump is the first president
Felix the cat just raised £5000 for charity because she's the hero we all need
How you can help Indigenous activists fight the Dakota Access Pipeline