What's new

China's school for VIDEO GAMERS:

fallstuff

ELITE MEMBER
Joined
Nov 20, 2009
Messages
9,441
Reaction score
0
Country
Bangladesh
Location
United States
China's school for VIDEO GAMERS:
Fascinating pictures show young people learning how to beat rivals in the digital world as a future career

  • Students in their teens and early 20s pay £1,470 a year to study video gaming at a technical school in Jinan
  • They spend half of their time playing and the other half on 'theory lessons' to become successful gamers
  • The school launched the course last year to cater to China's booming £116 million digital gaming industry
A school in China has started a new course to teach its students how to play video games as a future profession.

The school hopes the £1,470-per-year 'eSports and Management' course could help ambitious teenagers cash in on China's £116 million digital gaming industry.

During the first year of the course, the students in their teens and early 20s spend 50 per cent of their time gaming and the rest on study 'theory lessons' to ensure they would succeed in the industry.


The Lanxiang Technical School, situated in the city of Jinan in eastern China, launched its eSports course last September and has attracted 50 students in its inaugural year.

'At first, many parents thought it was just about playing video games,' school director Rong Lanxiang, told AFP. 'In fact, it's not the case, eSport is developing to a very high degree and it's become an economic growth driver.'

At the school, students focus on improving their skills in some of the most popular eSport games.

League of Legends, one of the world's most played games, is a strategy driven bout where players fight each other in a digital arena.

First person shooters like Overwatch, Counter Strike and the hugely popular newcomer PlayerUnknown's Battlegrounds, are also key parts of this unusual syllabus.

'This was a hobby for me, I was really into playing video games, and it's a new industry, I think there are good prospects in it,' says Teng Xin, who says he racks up at least 20 hours game time a week.

At 22, the student fears he may be too old to be a professional eSportsman, but feels he could be a coach.


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...s-students-learn-pays-play.html#ixzz582B1RKTl
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook

 
. . .
China's school for VIDEO GAMERS:
Fascinating pictures show young people learning how to beat rivals in the digital world as a future career



    • Students in their teens and early 20s pay £1,470 a year to study video gaming at a technical school in Jinan
    • They spend half of their time playing and the other half on 'theory lessons' to become successful gamers
    • The school launched the course last year to cater to China's booming £116 million digital gaming industry
A school in China has started a new course to teach its students how to play video games as a future profession.

The school hopes the £1,470-per-year 'eSports and Management' course could help ambitious teenagers cash in on China's £116 million digital gaming industry.

During the first year of the course, the students in their teens and early 20s spend 50 per cent of their time gaming and the rest on study 'theory lessons' to ensure they would succeed in the industry.


The Lanxiang Technical School, situated in the city of Jinan in eastern China, launched its eSports course last September and has attracted 50 students in its inaugural year.

'At first, many parents thought it was just about playing video games,' school director Rong Lanxiang, told AFP. 'In fact, it's not the case, eSport is developing to a very high degree and it's become an economic growth driver.'

At the school, students focus on improving their skills in some of the most popular eSport games.

League of Legends, one of the world's most played games, is a strategy driven bout where players fight each other in a digital arena.

First person shooters like Overwatch, Counter Strike and the hugely popular newcomer PlayerUnknown's Battlegrounds, are also key parts of this unusual syllabus.

'This was a hobby for me, I was really into playing video games, and it's a new industry, I think there are good prospects in it,' says Teng Xin, who says he racks up at least 20 hours game time a week.

At 22, the student fears he may be too old to be a professional eSportsman, but feels he could be a coach.


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...s-students-learn-pays-play.html#ixzz582B1RKTl
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook
There's a reason why these guys are a superpower now
what a gaming nation!!
OK, it's my pleasure. Now let me tell you, why is the Chinese game industry highly developed?
First, let's enjoy a video. 70kg —— a man like a God.


then - AG empire.
timg

timg


VG empire
timg
timg

u=149842280,2997484901&fm=27&gp=0.jpg
 
Last edited:
. .
What the?? The graphics are pretty bad. Is this the Lithtech 3 or something?
It is a 2016 video. The engine seems to be Lithtech (I'm not sure).
This is China's top players live video.

This is a game. AG vs SV (VG) —— the war between the empire.

in China. E-sports is an Industrial chain. Players participate in the game has a huge bonus. they also signed a contract with video website. many fans give them "gifts". But these "gifts" need to be bought from the website.


Such as 70KG. in his live video when more than 1 million people watching at the same time. think about it, if each fan gives him 1 yuan. he got at least 500 thousand yuan a night!

Then, these game players also set up stores. they sell their own game equipment, a lot of fans will buy.


https://cfbaisha.taobao.com/
https://shop100575284.taobao.com/
https://enpi.taobao.com/

360截图20180225132758630.jpg

360截图20180225133003544.jpg
 
.
It is a 2016 video. The engine seems to be Lithtech (I'm not sure).

I thought so.

This must be Crossfire.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CrossFire_(video_game)

Well it came out in 2008..so i can understand the looks a bit. But even for 2008 the biggest problem was using the Lithtech engine. Even though it says Lithtech Jupiter it looks like to get multiplayer running smoothly they had to knock the graphics down to 1990's quality. It looks worse than the original Counterstrike.

With a good game engine even on a $350 console (vs a real gaming rig with the power to do insane graphics) things can look pretty nice even in multiplayer.
Battlefield on a Playstation
 
Last edited:
.
I thought so.

This must be Crossfire.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CrossFire_(video_game)

Well it came out in 2008..so i can understand the looks a bit. But even for 2008 the biggest problem was using the Lithtech engine. Even though it says Lithtech Jupiter it looks like to get multiplayer running smoothly they had to knock the graphics down to 1990's quality.

With a good game engine even on a $350 console (vs a real gaming rig with the power to do insane graphics) things can look pretty nice.
Battlefield on a Playstation
We're not talking the same topic.
If you talk about images, it's not my interest.
 
. .
Back
Top Bottom