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Gaming rages on in SA

Predator. Omen. Alienware. They all sounds dangerous. The names suggest threat and even fear. And so they should. 

They are the high-end gaming brands of computer manufacturers Acer, HP and Dell, respectively. Acer adds an explosive edge with its Nitro range.

The names tell you that the user is not going into computer-based combat casually. This gamer wants to win, and will pay the price of premium hardware to do so.

This impulse lies at the heart of the exploding computer games industry globally. Valued at $157-billion, the sector dwarfs the music industry. In South Africa, according to Make Games South Africa chairperson Nick Hall, it is a R225-million business, growing at an average of 75% a year since 2013.

“The game development sector in South Africa has really gone from strength to strength, across all key segments in the sector,” he says. “Our indies are regularly releasing titles to global success, our services sector has made massive inroads into doing work for some of the largest  publishers in the world and our serious games sector is producing world leading products.”

Many of these independent games creators were manning stands at the rAge expo at the Dome north of Johannesburg this past weekend. Celestial Games, which produced South Africa’s first commercial computer game, Toxic Bunny, in 1996,  unveiled its latest innovation: a mobile gaming platform called Table Realms, which turns any handset into a gaming console or screen. 

The buzz around its stand was palpable, and a far cry from previous years when Celestial and other games developers battled for attention. At rAge, names like Curve, Codex Knights, Loot Defence, Nektaar, Akromah’s Tale, and Echoplex all had clusters of prospective players around their booths.

The Xbox stand was a major attraction at rAge.

Continue reading to find out how locally developed games target international markets.

The ultimate target, as with most games developed in South Africa, is the international market.

“Local produced games don’t really sell well in SA,” says Hall. “Consumers only spent about R100 000 on SA games last year. There are many factors to this, but one of the greatest strengths the sector leverages is that we produce in Rands, but sell in dollars. This significantly de-risks projects and lowers the bar for financial success.

“Titles like Broforce have seen huge international success, selling over a million units, Viscera Clean Up Detail, Stasis, Desktop Dungeons, Pixelboy and others have also found success in the international market. This year was a historic moment as the first African owned IP game was released on an Nintendo platform: Semblance, for the Switch. Consequently, such as Polygod and Broforce, get into the Nintendo platforms, which means we now have representation on all the major consoles.”

A poster for Boet Fighter, a surprise hit at rAge.

While console-gaming had the strongest presence at rAge, with a range of Micsoroft Xbox games and FIFA 2019 for PlayStation hogging the attention, the most serious gamers are focused on computers. This is  platforms. This is where the relatively new eSports sector has exploded. Prize money for international tournaments is as high as $25-million, and the big brands have all put their names behind teams around the world.

The top teams tend to be part of multi-gaming organisations, or MGOs, who supply management, administration and organisation. MGO have separate teams competing across multiple games. In South Africa, for example, the Bravado Gaming MGO competes in CounterStrike: Global Offensive (CS:GO), Defense of the Ancients (Dota) 2 and Call of Duty.

Read on to find out about Finesse, an all-female gaming team. 

It even has an all-female team, called Finesse, which competes in CS:GO, and is sponsored by Dell’s Alienware.

The team captain, who prefers to be identified by her gamer name “Salty Monkey”, says she stumbled on CS:GO accidentally, and then heard about an all-female team. She has now been playing competitively for more than two years.

“Salty Monkey”, captain of Bravado’s CS:GO all-female team, Finesse, sponsored by Alienware.

“When we started Finesse, there were very few female gamers in the CS:GO scene, and we were one of only two female teams. We decided that playing together as five girls would show other girls you can enter this space, and be competitive. In the last year we have seen it increase from two to 40 girls’ teams. We are very friendly with them, and make sure we mentor them.”

For now, she says, it is necessary to have separate leagues for female teams, as gaming was seen as a boys’ arena until a few years ago.

“It’s still a very male dominated space, and often you find they are extremely derogatory towards you, even sexualising you, asked for your phone number just because you’re female.

“Ever since started we started the Finesse movement, that has changed drastically, because people are now used to females being on the circuit. Girls only started catching up recently, so unfortunately there is still a skills gap, but we are hoping one day there won’t be any segregation.”

Salty Monkey still can’t make a living from gaming. She is a business analyst for a software company by day. Her team trains for four hours every night, and competes for eight hours every Sunday. Alienware supplies all their hardware, which means they can play equally effectively from home or at competition venues.

Similarly, Logitech G will sponsors the Aperture Gaming MGOO’s all-female CS:GO team,  ApG FE. They provide the brand’s latest devices and peripherals from the G-Gear range, as well as covering players’ expenses for attending events.

None of this enables them to make a living from gaming. Only the top South African teams, competing internationally, are able to “play” full time. Bravado’s male CS:GO team was able to base itself full-time in the USA to compete in – and win – a championship called the ESEA Mountain Dew League, one rung below the top professional CS:GO league in the world.

Is eSports too immature for more local players to make a living from it? 

No, says Vasili Girasis, chief business development officer for Bravado Gaming: “It’s not eSports that’s behind, it’s lack of investment in eSports that is preventing it from going forward. We have a CS:GO team ranked in the top 20 in the world. There’s not a lack of skill, but lack of an investment model.”

(Next week: How the gaming industry is evolving)

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