Home Gaming 71.5 million people watch eSports

71.5 million people watch eSports

1 min read
12

ESports prize money vs viewers

Okay, it’s time that I confess – I have only been watching eSports for about a year. Sure, I’d seen the odd match or two before then, but it’s only been in the last 12 months or so that I’ve actually watched, and enjoyed, professional gamers playing games. But I’m not alone, and it’s a growing trend.

According to research group SuperData, eSports (also referred to as competitive gaming) is a rapidly growing market; viewership has increased almost eight-fold in the last four years. In fact, viewership doubled in the past year, growing to over 70 million in 2013. Half of those viewers are from the United States and the average eSports viewer watches games 19 times a month, with a session length of about 2.2 hours.

Interestingly, eSports now outstrips mainstream sports viewership in America, with viewers of the League of Legends Season 3 World Championships more than doubling that of Major League Baseball’s World Series. That’s right – more people are watching LoL than are watching America’s “favorite pastime”.

Of course, this means that more and more publishers are investing in eSports. Riot and Wargaming are industry leaders in this regard, but Valve and Blizzard are also on board. Growth is expected to continue into 2014.

What is causing this surge? Well, researchers infer that it’s mainly due to the growth among Western viewers. eSports has been popular in Korea and China for many years, but now its popularity is taking hold in the US and Europe. As a result, the market has simply exploded as millions of new viewers are jumping onto twitch, MLG.tv and other streaming channels to watch all their favorite eSports professionals battle it out.

Let’s just hope that South Africa can also jump onto this bandwagon. The DGL is seeing record numbers – now we just need for teams to be able to stream more games and we can all get involved.

Like esports?
Check out esports central

Last Updated: April 4, 2014

12 Comments

  1. Admiral Chief Railjack

    April 4, 2014 at 14:34

    • Kensei Seraph

      April 4, 2014 at 14:56

      BOOM!

      What the… a sniper?
      Shit he’s after me next.

      Reply

    • Unavengedavo

      April 4, 2014 at 15:33

      I seriously want to do this O_o

      Reply

  2. Admiral Chief Railjack

    April 4, 2014 at 14:35

    I wouldn’t mind a dedicated SPERTS channel for gaming tbh

    Reply

    • Kensei Seraph

      April 4, 2014 at 15:08

      That… that’s actually a good idea.
      Pity the MSSA would probably either oppose it or control it.

      Reply

  3. Stan Smith

    April 4, 2014 at 14:46

    Same header image as mygaming?

    Reply

  4. El Capitan del Blade

    April 4, 2014 at 14:47

    71.5 Million Viewers, And I ain’t one. Prefer to use my bandwidth to Play, rather than watch…. and my 4MB line struggles with twitch sometimes… Can’t follow games in low res streaming….

    Reply

    • Mighty Meh

      April 4, 2014 at 15:03

      Dota has a brilliant in game viewer.

      Reply

  5. Mighty Meh

    April 4, 2014 at 15:02

    I think the only way it will ever be regarded as a proper sport will be when the “athletes” behave in a manner that promotes it.

    I’d love to see e-sports grow but when I’m in a game of dota being heavily insulted by a so called pro player because I happened to use the courier while I was jungling puts me off instantly. The way they talk to you is absolutely uncalled for!

    Reply

  6. Brian Murphy

    April 4, 2014 at 17:45

  7. Rags

    April 4, 2014 at 21:13

    Welcome welcome. You are late to the party 🙂 Arguably esport in terms of credibility and intensity was at its peak back in 2003. You should really have a look at the early 2000’s for probably the buildup of esport through starcraft, quake, enemy territory and counter strike. The CPL, WCG, ESWC, CB. There are some of of the classic matches on youtube.

    Back then we did not accept FPS games to be played on consoles, not even a LCD monitor. Before we sold out to the highest bidder and to be peons of marketing and advertising as to what ‘esport’ is today.

    Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Check Also

Sony has bought the EVO fighting game tournament series

Sony is betting big on esports entertainment, and it's taking that first step forward with…