Video gamers try to bust lazy-boy image
World Series of Video Games used to trash slacker stereotype
![]() Ed Reinke / AP Abe Bisson of Hamilton, Ohio, performs at the World Series of Video Games, where video gamers try to break their slacker image. |
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LOUISVILLE, Ky. - Matt Ringel knows there's a certain image that comes to mind when you start talking about hardcore video gamers: think teenage boys with messy hair and dark circles under their eyes from staying up all night, their eyes glued to a screen and their fingers frantically flitting about a keyboard or a controller.
It's an image Ringel knows well. A passionate gamer even as he closes in on 40, Ringel has spent his fair share of long nights playing with his friends.
But now as the commissioner of the World Series of Video Games, Ringel is eager to dispel the notion of gamers as soda-swilling, junk food-eating slackers with an aversion to showers and social activity.
The majority of the players who will compete in one of the handful of World Series events this year have a life, Ringel said. Even better, they have personality.
"These guys, it's totally antithetical to 'the lazy gamer,'" Ringel said. "They're highly regimented, highly disciplined. They're into physical conditioning. They're normal people."
Now in its second year, the World Series offers gamers the chance to compete in a handful of popular titles — including "Guitar Hero II," "World of Warcraft" and "Quake 3" — with the winners taking home thousands of dollars in prize money. The series latest event starts July 5 in Dallas.
Yet Ringel's ultimate goal isn't just to bring the best gamers in the world together. He's trying to make the World Series into a TV-ready venture in an effort to give the gaming world some crossover appeal.
To that end, he's created a system in which the top players in a given game are seeded and accumulate points based on their performance. Part of the prize money for the winners goes toward a travel voucher designed to help them attend the next event. The top point winners at the end of the year will travel to Dreamhack, Sweden, for the finals.
Ringel thinks by having the same faces pop up in different places he can present story lines as part of the TV package the World Series has with CBS. The World Series will make four appearances on the network this summer.
"You want to get the viewer involved," he said. "It helps if they can identify the top players."
Ringel said similar strategy in Asia has made the top players there "rock stars."
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