The International 4: DOTA 2 winners Team Newbee crowned - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 19, 2024, 02:20 PM | Calgary | -4.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Entertainment

The International 4: DOTA 2 winners Team Newbee crowned

Champions have been declared at The International 4 in Seattle, Wash., with a team of video-game wizards from China besting a rival squad from their homeland to take home more than $5 million.

All-star video gamers play for $10.8M US in front of rapt global audience

Are video games a spectator sport?

10 years ago
Duration 2:58
Millions of people worldwide tuned in this week to watch an international video game tournament, and the trend of gamers watching other gamers is growing dramatically

Champions have been declared at The International 4 in Seattle, Wash., with a team of gaming wizards from China besting a rival squad from their homeland to claim more than $5 million.

Team Newbee was crowned the victor over their competitors with Vici Gaming in the video gamechampionship, known simply as TI4 by the initiated. The hugely popular four-day "eSports" event boasts a raptaudience of millions and a prize pool approaching $11 million US.

The $5-million grand prize and total prize pool of $10 million represented the richest purse yet for a video game tournament, but we're not talking some old-schoolarcade rivalry.

TI4is a competitive event so huge it's beginning to blurthe lines between onlinegaming and traditional sport.

Four days of intense competition and fierce rivalrycame to an explosive finale Monday night as professional Defense of the Ancients 2 teams digitally tried to slaughter each other in Seattle's KeyArena.

Defenseof the Ancients 2 orDota 2 as it's more commonly called is a multiple playerbattle arena game. While the game play isvirtual, the money involved was very real.

The runners up earned nearly $1.5 million.

About 10,000 loyal fans paid up to $499 USeach to watch the action in the sold-out Key Arena tickets were snapped up within an hour of going on sale but the screaming and jostling crowd in house is just a sliver of The International's true base.

More Internet traffic thanFacebook

The vast majority of thefans followed the action online including 300 people in Toronto who actually rented a movie theatre so they could watchtogether via live streaming siteTwitch.tv.

Watch: Eli Glasner'sstory Watching the Gamerstonight on The National on CBC Television 10 p.m./10:30 NT*

Or on CBC News Network at 9 p.m. & 11 p.m. ET/PT

If you're not a gamer, or if you're over 30, you're probably not familiar with Twitch. It's athree-year-old network consistingofgamers, or streamers,and spectators logged on to watch them play.

During its peak hours the online broadcast sitecreates more Internet traffic thanFacebook, andindustry reports say Google is in talks to acquire Twitch for more than a billion dollars.

For Twitch's estimated 45 million daily users, it's about engaging with like-minded people.

Twitchco-founderandCEOEmmettShear told CBC arts reporter Eli Glasner that"not only are [users] watching these entertaining and hilarious streamers, or really exciting eSports, or really creative builders in Minecraft, but you're also a part of a community of people talking about it and interacting."

For the past four days, devotedDota 2 fans have been absolutely buzzing aboutTI4on sites like Twitch.

When the tournament's victors are declared on Monday night,not only will they have seized a record-breakingmultimillion-dollar pot, but the winners and their fans will have helped prove that competitive gaming is a powerful new a forcein entertainment.

Be sure to tune into The National tonight for the full story withEli Glasner.