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Counter-Strike: The image of Counterstrike

By: Drew Johnson - Published October 07, 2005 at 4:29 PM EDT - Writer Archive
Drew "HeatheN" Johnson suggests several ways the CS community can better spread the love of the game.


As everyone inside the gaming community can see, the stock that is competitive gaming is continually on the rise. Even outsiders have to notice the increasing amount of news coverage concerning tournaments, gaming contracts, and even our own media coverage. Our community of gamers has recently received some impressive publicity. Many articles explaining the exponentially huge increase in gaming worldwide have been featured in acclaimed news magazines such as Business Week, MTV News, and even the famed Sports Illustrated. But even with the recent influx of attention on our community, there still remains a problem that hinders one of the major factors in the development of eSports: image.



Our world of gaming has never lacked love and dedication from its many followers, but it has always remained very private nonetheless. What I mean is that the community we are a part of is very misunderstood by outsiders, thus they remain uninterested. For the average Joe, hearing that 3D recently beat Complexity in back to back tournaments does not mean much. For all those who follow competitive gaming, they realize the importance of the news, but to those who don’t understand the ins and outs of our gaming world, they simply turn their heads elsewhere. To many, gamers are written off as some kind of social aberration and not as legitimate competitors.

Why, you ask? Simply because people don’t enjoy watching something they don’t understand. There is a reason why Olympic curling doesn’t get very high ratings.

Similarly, this is the same reason that I don’t follow lacrosse or hockey. I’ve never played either sport nor have I had anyone explain them to me. When I watch either, I have no idea what to look for, so I just change the channel. I have absolutely no idea what is good and what plays are supposed to be sensational. The same exact problem exists with games like Counter-Strike. Someone who doesn’t follow the game wouldn’t know what a flashbang does, they don’t realize that the Terrorist objective is to plant a bomb, and probably couldn’t even tell you that a headshot is different than any other shot. I mean, both make blood come out of the computerized model, so what’s the difference, right?

The point is, plain and simply, our community is too closed off to outsiders. The problem is partially our fault, as fans, but also somewhat inherent in Counter-Strike. The game can be compared somewhat easily to football. Though most Americans have known and loved football from a young age, many foreigners who try to understand the game are baffled by many of the specific and less obvious rules at first. The same idea applies directly to CS. It is not realistic for us to think that others will just hop on the gaming bandwagon with no background information to draw them in.

Though important news magazines and journals have recently been supporting eSports' growth with provacatively interesting articles, that will not be the only contributing factor to push eSports over the edge into the mainstream. It almost becomes our responsibility as players and fans to take this burden upon ourselves. Personally, I used to tell very few of my friends about my involvement with competitive gaming. You could almost say I was ashamed of it. But that’s not how we should treat a community that we are all so closely bound to. We shouldn’t pretend it doesn’t exist. More and more, I tell my friends about it and I tell my journalism professors about it; I tell most everyone I know. Honestly, it is all in the way you convey it.

If you are telling people, “I like to play video games a lot and I even play on a gaming team”, you probably won’t get anyone you know interested. On the other hand, if you talk it up and relay the more interesting aspects of the game, people will become intrigued and ask questions about it. One way I have learned to explain eSports is by explaining how similar it is to playing a high school sport.

Like football, each round can be compared to a play, with a defensive call and an offensive call. Sometimes the offense’s play is tricky and employs a fake, and just as defenses in football use stunts to stack several players on the defensive line, CS defenses can overload a bombsite with 3-4 players. Regardless of whether our sport is played through an electronically generated world, it still is made up of the finer points any other mainstream sport is.



I also tell people about the cameraderie involved with a team. Though not outside sweating and running sprints, gamers who want to be successful still have to be intensely concentrated during their daily practice, which can last up to 3-4 hours per day. It is a great way to compete with friends and also a great way to meet new people.

Let’s all be honest, not every kid can be a varsity football or basketball player. Just because a kid isn’t athletic, does that mean he has no desire to compete? Competitive online gaming is a perfect outlet for kids who want to find people who have similar interests and want to be the best at their sport, just like any other competitor.

If people still don't get it, spend some time surfing the net for examples of eSports in the mainstream. When a person sees an in-depth article portraying eSports in a good light, it can serve as quite the eye-opener. One recent piece I had the luck of coming across was a look at the gaming life of John "fatal1ty" Wendel, the infamous Quake3 and Painkiller star. A well written article that not only covers Wendel, but also delves into gaming as a whole, is on display at businessweek. Having several sources just one link away never hurts when you have people in your life who just don't get eSports.

If nothing else can grab someone’s attention, it never hurts to mention the hundreds of THOUSANDS of dollars that make up the prize purses of the larger world tournaments. Of course, the recent jump to the next level was performed by the CPL’s $1,000,000 world tour announcement. Also notable is the increasing number of gaming contracts being signed. You cannot argue that times are changing when we live in a world in which young men can be signed to a $60,000 gaming contract. As we all know, money can take you a long way in this world, and eSports is no different. Without a doubt, the increase in prize purses and addition of contracts continually helps our community grow.

Overall, we as a community have to help ourselves out. The institution of competitive gaming is not a popularly established one…yet.

Trevor Yuen, a former competitive gamer turned Counter-Strike movie producer, was able to describe gaming very effectively, "No one understands gaming because there is a certain 'nerd stigma' attached to it. People are turned off because their perception of gaming screams basement-dwelling nerds with bad acne".

If gamers can dispel this common misperception and individually emphasize the depth of the game and how it creates a truly competitive atmosphere, we will find our community opening its doors to all kinds of new players and spectators.

Just remember this the next time you’ve been practicing with your team, pubbing, or even just spectating a match, and your friends ask you what you’ve been doing. Don’t say you’ve just been watching TV or doing homework. Explain to them what competitive gaming is and how games like Counter-Strike work. Try to get them interested, too. It’s time that people understand our world of eSports. We’re here to stay.

User Comments

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good read, and o yeah #1!
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good job decent read
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Cool.
Day of Defeat Legend
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team3D is all over the counter-strike : source scene

This comment was edited at 10/07/2005 4:39 PM
#teamtap - dod ^_^ -_- ^_^ #effected - cs
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Great article.

The problem of trying to talk your friends into this is the ever popular reaction of alienation.
°
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This is my #1 artical ever on e-sports so far,
man he just hit the spot were the big diffrence is between e-sports and main streem sports,
(L) I hope this will get to a lot of people.
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Its funny how alot of people dont tell there friends what they are doing. I've also been a pretty popular guy around school because i am very outgoing. I played baseball for 10 years then kinda quit playing due to problems with my arm. Ever since then ive been playing games. I went to the cpl for call of duty, and am currently signed up for quake 4 tourny this winter. I tell all my friends exactly what i am goign to do, most find it very cool. Everyone plays games these days, its a large market. For some people the fact that you can get paid to play video games in appealing to them. The question i get most is "how did you get into that?". The funny part about that question is that question comes out of curiosity so they obviously are intriqued. Telling your friends will not alienate you, it will just create more of a curiostiy about this sport(yes sport).
#thedot 1v1 champ!
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good read
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you go girl
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CS is actualy a pretty common thing. I mean alot of people who play sports also play cs because of how competative CS can get.

Its much harder explaining to someone that your playing WOW to try and level up . Also why WOW is BAd.

Cs is a great sport if u want to call it that. 1.6, source is still bad.
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What's with the picture of the little kids? Talk about a way to turn people off of e-Sports. :P

This comment was edited at 10/07/2005 5:18 PM
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Good Article, Great Read
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VERY Well put GJ. Esports FOREVER
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great read
:)
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very good read
#aspired Respect All, Fear None.
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I am with you on that one brother!
#44
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good read, well written.

#13, thanks for throwing the source-bash in here for absolutely no reason at all. same type of view non-gamers take when assuming all gamers are fat acne-ridden kids. let it grow. source is a year old, 1.6 is 5...

overall though, ive told people i play and how fun and competative it is, and ive even gone so far as to have some girls i know pick up the game from time to time. hell, they even came to cpl :D
Liquid c4 . #Lc4 . www.liquidc4.net

AWESOME TOPCI, GOOD READ, REALLY GOOD ARTICLE.
°
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good read.
http://MEevent.com - Maine's Gaming Community
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Good article, I've thought the same things. But whenever I tell someone, "Oh yeah, I was watching coL vs ue last night on CS...yada...yada" they'll just say, "Er, okay, get a life.". Explaining competitive CS is a long process.
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Not a bad analysis. However, I believe a more effective approach would have been to get more of the minds behind e-sports like managers, people who run Gotfrag, some others and get their opinions. Also, maybe a suggestive section on feasible goals for the gaming community and what we can do to help. Other than that, not bad, but for the most part common sense. At least things are being produced.
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lol love the comparison to football...
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nice read
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I try to explain it to people when I can. Took my girlfriend about 4 years to start understanding, but she's getting there. At first she would laugh and thought it was just silly, but she's sat around doing homework in my room and she's seen the level of compitition and the complexity that goes into making strategies and practicing. She still doesn't like it when I say it's just as much of a sport as soccer (what she plays), but she's starting to see the light :)

EDIT - oh yea and... AWESOME TOPCI, GOOD READ, REALLY GOOD ARTICLE.

This comment was edited at 10/07/2005 6:22 PM
Too good for cal-o, too much of a life for cal-m, cal-im for life.
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Hey its FabiaN its the blue Fila shirt.
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goodie goodie =X
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good read. I always thought of it in terms of football too.
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#6. for sure.
EMO AND PROUD OF IT. :D
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ahh I get bashed cuz I play CS, well the friends that bash me actually played too. But they quit cuz there bad and now bash e-sports in general : /
100011001110100011111001001101
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I'm still ashamed.
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Alienation from your friends would happen if they weren't true friends to begin with.
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lol # 33

But seriously, excellent article. You hit the nail on the head with many of your comments. E-sports and gaming in general is something the can no longer be denied or looked down upon in today's society. There is just way too many people involved in the gaming community to deny that the market is huge and will only continue to expand. I am also a very outgoing person and have played competitive sports all my life (mainly hockey) and since I've decided to go to school instead of pursuing hockey, doesn't mean I have lost my competitive edge. Counter strike is the perfect outlet for me to continue to compete against others. I have been for verbal in the past while telling my friends about how e-gaming is only going to get bigger and that they shouldn't turn their backs on it. After all, we are the first generation (I'm 22) to really see how games have evolved since we were children, and that's why there is so much negativity towards gaming in society today because the baby-boomers generation doesn't consider it a realistic form of sport. It will continue to grow on many new levels though, and we have to be the catalysts to ensure that it happens.

This comment was edited at 10/07/2005 8:36 PM
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ive tried telling people and i still am! :D :D
#redZone 4 lyfe
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dam #1 u read that whole article in 1 minute, i wish i could read that fast
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I think most people need to play the game/sport before they can appreciate the skill of the people/teams they're spectating. What if Valve made CS1.6 free? I bet it'd increase popularity, but then there would be no real way to regulate cheaters.
A lowly chia-pet.
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THE SWORD
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CS:Pro please.
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ok now tell us what was the tip you guys gave to those kids to put those headphones on
10 dollaz?
fan of fnxTRONDAAA
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i tell, my friends... dude go buy cs, it's only $20, and they keep on telling me about their x-box games :/
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yeah, whenever I try to tell my friends about how awesome CS:S and how much better FPS's are with a keyboard and mouse they tell me that 'Halo 2 is so much better' and how 'a keyboard and mouse are clunky' ect...but they have no idea where FPS's started or where the best gamers in the world are (they're playing CS, CS:S, or DoD...)
#warsow.na on quakenet * #3 where does your mother come from? Zimbabwe ?
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good read HeatheN

[i]If gamers can dispel this common misperception and individually emphasize the depth of the game and how it creates a truly competitive atmosphere, we will find our community opening its doors to all kinds of new players and spectators.[/i]

100% AGREE
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Team3D seems to be all over the place lately, kinda nice to see an older team getting more recognition than a younger team... Very good article
Got milk?
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i know who i want to take me home.


good read, thanks.
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young kid play cs .. hehehe
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Most of the people i know don't know much about the "esports" scene but they do know that it exists and they don't reject the idea of it. If they start asking questions I usually explain a few things about it such as the practice that goes into preparing for a competition and what not and they think it's a good idea to play the game as long as you are doing it as a side job.
The only person that laughs and shrugs off the idea of esports is my brother, but i could careless what he says :D Anyways, good article! I've even gotten a few of my friends to get a lil bit competitive over cs as they pretty much go lanning every other day now ;)
:x
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I'm proud to be your brother heathen.
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in terms of the american public most people don't even know there are video games complex enough to allow competition. the most exposure a lot of people get to games is watching some kid play a crappy console game, and that would be a lot of exposure. just look at this article and some of the comments... not telling your friends that you compete in counter-strike... these are supposed to be your friends that are probably very close to the same age as you and the exact people esports is in need of to grow. these are the people that already know how complex video games can be so 80% of the battle of getting someone to understand esports is done already, all they need now is to understand that there is a community around the games already.

think about it, if everyone that is involved in esports introduced esports to ONE (1) person, wam-bam the esports community has DOUBLED! i used to tell everyone about cs back before 1.4 and i was able to go from having no local people to start a lan team with to having enough people to play local tournaments and in cal, these people have friends too and brothers and sisters. my friends brother was introduced through him and now he has a local team as well. i havnt preached the game i love to other people for quite a while since its no longer the game i love anymore but i dont need to. i could easily guarantee i have introduced 20+ people to esports and gotten them involved enough where they even have played in cal and im sure those 20+ people don't keep it a secret and have introduced other people to esports.
a lot of those people didnt stick with cs and have moved onto other games or have added other games that they play but they no longer play games just to play, they now go to lan centers and use irc and other things.

video gaming is bigger than hollywood, we all know that and we all use it to justify esports. the only problem for us is that all those people that make video gaming so big have no idea esports even exists
Alpha Team Clan Shabba Krew Gaming Royalty Syndicate Two Thousand | Pie Squadron | Face Guild

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