E3 video game show comes with rise of celebrity player

E3 video game show comes with rise of celebrity player

June 16, 2016
Players battle in an online computer game at a Bethesda Softworks preview event on Tuesday in Los Angeles, California. - AFP
Players battle in an online computer game at a Bethesda Softworks preview event on Tuesday in Los Angeles, California. - AFP

LOS ANGELES - New consoles and blockbuster games always make a big splash at the annual Electronic Entertainment Expo, but this year the undisputed winners are online stages for video game play and commentary.

And with them comes the rise of the celebrity player.

The appetite on sites like Twitch and YouTube Gaming for play video, commentary, trailers, and more seems insatiable, industry insiders say.

“There are hundreds of millions of users watching gaming content every month,” YouTube global head of gaming content Ryan Wyatt said at E3 on Wednesday.

Wyatt admits that he is surprised “that it is this big now.”

YouTube Gaming, a version of the Alphabet-owned video-sharing service tailored as a one-stop shop for game lovers, launched with a website and mobile applications in August 2015.

Now, billions of hours of gaming content are watched monthly at the service — and that number is rising, Wyatt said.

YouTube has made a priority of “empowering content creators,” personalities who captivate online audiences with play, comedy, wit, commentary or combinations thereof.

“They are superstars in their own right,” Wyatt said.

“They are celebrities.”

Wyatt noted that more than half the Top 10 “YouTubers” are gamers, with popular personalities “making a killing” when it comes to earning money.

Last year, entertainment industry magazine Variety published a survey showing that YouTube personalities had the kind of influence on teens typically attributed to Hollywood celebrities.

For example, more than 45.5 million people subscribe to the YouTube channel of Swedish-based comedian and gamer PewDiePie.

“They are basically transcending the gaming industry,” Wyatt said of YouTube gamer stars.

The Amazon-owned Twitch.tv lets anyone broadcast game related content and allows them to connect with publishers or advertisers.

More than 20,00 people attended last year’s TwitchCon gathering of “broadcasters” and publishers, and nearly two million more watched it online, according to the San Francisco-based pioneering game-play streaming service.

“Overall, viewership is skyrocketing,” said a Twitch spokesman who goes only by the name ‘Chase’. “We break milestones every year, there is no sign of streaming slowing down at all.”

There are Twitch broadcasters who boast six-figure incomes and who have people queue “around the block” for autographs or selfies at public appearances, according to Chase.

Sony Interactive Entertainment chief executive Andrew House saw the technology-driven video game industry as a natural venue for the rise of content creator stars and “the democratization of celebrity.”

“To put it bluntly, it is about time,” said House.

“It is great to have faces and a personality for the industry.”

And, there is direct correlation between people watching video games and buying them, according to Twitch and YouTube.

US online retail giant Amazon snatched up Twitch and its huge audience for live-streamed gaming in 2014.

The purchase was one of the largest in Amazon’s history — $970 million in cash for the three-year-old Internet company.

YouTube Gaming created an online destination for all things E3, and is hosting a “battle of the trailers” in which online viewers get to vote for a favorite clip teasing a coming video game.

A “Battlefield 1” game trailer logged more than five million views in the 24 hours after its release. A video of a PlayStation press event held late Tuesday had racked up more than a million on-demand views at YouTube by Wednesday.

Fan voting on game trailers also signaled keen interest in coming “Gears of War” and “Zelda” games, as well as “Quake,” according to Wyatt.


June 16, 2016
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