'Dream come true:' Edmonton gamer puts his PUBG skills to the test in international tournament - Action News
Home WebMail Wednesday, November 13, 2024, 07:07 AM | Calgary | -0.1°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Edmonton

'Dream come true:' Edmonton gamer puts his PUBG skills to the test in international tournament

18-year-old Nolan Burdick is preparing to compete in his first live international video game tournament, where teams have a chance at a $3.5 million dollar prize pool.

32 teams made up of four players each will compete for a prize pool of $3.5million dollars

Edmonton gamer competes in South Korea

4 years ago
Duration 1:43
Nolan Burdick is the only Canadian competing in an international tournament, which is hosted by PUBG esports in South Korea.

Nolan Burdick's love for video games started when he was eight years old. Now, a decade later, the Edmonton teenager is preparing to compete in his firstprofessional video game tournament in South Korea.

"It's obviously a dream come true to do this right now, " said Burdick, 18, from his five-star hotel room in Incheon where he arrived just under a month ago to quarantine for two weeks before he can officially start playing.

Burdick is the only Canadian competing in the international tournament, which is hosted by PUBG esports. The tournament sees 32 teams from around the world playing PlayerUnknown's Battleground (PUBG), a first-person shooter battle royale video game. The teams will compete in a six-week round robin tournament for a prize pool worth $3.5 million.

The last team standing will take home a grand prize worth more than $500,000 USD.

Burdick plays for an American team calledZenith eSports, but the tournament also consists of teams from China, Japan, South Korea, Brazil and more. While two teams are competingremotely due to COVID-19 restrictions, the others will play while safely spaced apart.

Each session starts with 16 teams on a virtual grid that's eight kilometres by eight kilometres in size. The teams are parachuted into various points of interest on a map, like cities or military bases, and then the battle to hunt other teams down and eliminate themis on.

"As the game progresses, the circle starts to close and you have less playable terrain, so teams are forced to fight each other," Burdick said.

"By the end of the game there's only enough terrain for one team out of the 16 in the competitive match to be alive and eventually a team will win."

'Oh my gosh he's going to South Korea'

Burdick started playing PUBG two years ago. At first, he didn't think anything of the game. But he soon found himself winning and finishing atop the leaderboards before eventuallyjoining Zenith.

Top players are recruited with sponsorships, salaries, clothing and trips to tournaments around the world.For this tournament, Burdick says he and his teammates' living costs are all coveredfor the three months they're there.

Because of confidentiality agreements, Burdick says he can't reveal how much he's paid, but it's not uncommon for gamers to make anywhere from $10,000per monthor higher.

All of this has been a whirlwind for the 18-year-old and his family.

"This is what he's worked for, this is the goal," said Rachel Devereux, Burdick's mother.

"Then reality set in and we were like, 'oh my gosh he's going to South Korea for three monthsin the middle of COVID.'"

But Burdick's family was confident with the tournament's safety protocols, and the required quarantinebefore the tournament started. They also viewed this opportunity as a business trip, as the 18-year-old embarked on his first professional tournament.

'Its been a real journey'

Seeing the elaborate international events her son competes,how the esports competitors are treated and what's at stake,hasbeen an eye-opener for Devereux. She's realized all those hours of playing video games has paid off for her son.

"They're paying them for their food for three months, and their five-star hotel, their flights and their visas.Like that is massive amounts,"Devereux said.

She plans to juggle her schedule so that she and the rest of her family can watch Nolan play live online in South Korea, which is 16 hours ahead.

Nolan Burdick played in his first video game tournament in person last year in Sweden, this year he's in South Korea taking on the world's best. (Daan Driessen)

As for where this video game journey will take her son, Devereux says it could lead to a future working for one of the many esports companies when his gaming days are over. But whatever he does, he's got their full support.

"I probably didn't have a great understanding before a year and a half ago. But once he started the trips and getting on a team and having contracts, it changes and it becomes more real, something that I can wrap my head around. And it's been a real journey for us too," Devereux said.

The tournament's round robin format begins on February 2.