Something went wrong. Try again later

Giant Bomb News

167 Comments

Spend Your Weekend Watching Other People Play Video Games

You know, why don't you do something totally different on this site for a change?

Lots of people, watching StarCraft.
Lots of people, watching StarCraft.

If you're the sort of person who's been looking to transition from "sort of casually interested in seeing highly skilled people play really difficult games for money" to "lying on your couch watching streamed matches of StarCraft II and/or Street Fighter IV for two days straight," this might well be the best weekend in the history of the world for you to take that momentous step.

I'm talking about the world of competitive gaming (or "e-sports," if you can stomach the term), and there's a staggering amount of it happening over the next two days.

For me the main event is MLG Anaheim (you know, California), where the folks at Major League Gaming are pulling together the best of the best to compete for cash and glory in live streams of Halo Reach, Call of Duty: Black Ops, and--count 'em--two separate feeds of StarCraft II filled with dozens of top Western players and a handful of the biggest names from the Korean scene, and commentated by some of the best casters on the Internet, including noted fancy gentleman Sean "Day[9]" Plott. You can watch the low-quality streams of all this stuff for free at MLG's site, or, hey, how about in this player right here.

A few months ago, MLG ran a Dallas event so disastrous, rife as it was with unstable video streams and in-game networking issues, that the group's CEO personally took the stage on the last day to issue a formal apology. After that performance, I wouldn't have endorsed another one of their events. But at its next show in Columbus, MLG thoroughly got its act together by fixing its network issues, bringing in top players and commentators from the Global StarCraft League in Korea, offering free high-quality streams to everyone, and even getting rid of its peer-to-peer video service due to audience demand. Based on that follow-up performance, I have no reservation about recommending the MLG feeds if you want a good, free way to see what competitive StarCraft II is all about.

Of course, Halo and Call of Duty will be going on as well, if you're into that. I just can't get into competitive first-person shooters in the same way as I have StarCraft, though.

Another genre I can appreciate on a competitive level is the fighting game, and I'll be darned if EVO 2011 doesn't have you covered there. That's going on in Vegas all weekend, and there are two live feeds over on the official site streaming high-level games of SF4 Arcade Edition, Marvel Vs. Capcom 3, Mortal Kombat, and more. Of course, if you want to get in on the seedy hotel-room cash games of Jackie Chan, you'll just have to make the trip to Vegas yourself.

Lastly, you could always skip straight to the gold standard of live competitive gaming events by watching the GSL's season finals, also going on this weekend. You can watch live streams of the finals for free if you feel like staying up till some ungodly hour on North American time; otherwise, a video-on-demand account will cost you a decent chunk of change. Those new to the game may want to stick with the more accessible MLG option for the moment, though I can tell you from experience that there's nothing quite like being in the middle of a couple thousand people screaming their heads off at an all-in zergling rush.

Brad Shoemaker on Google+

167 Comments

Avatar image for liquidswords
LiquidSwords

2728

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 1

Edited By LiquidSwords

Had a great time on the GB chat! A great EVO experience for me

Avatar image for clubsandwich
clubsandwich

3961

Forum Posts

2399

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 9

Edited By clubsandwich

this was so epic omg

Avatar image for truthtellah
TruthTellah

9827

Forum Posts

423

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 2

Edited By TruthTellah
@GioVANNI said:
@TruthTellah said:
And Fuudo, the Japanese Harry Potter, pulls off the  Finale.  Latif looked simply exhausted but still put on a nail-biter.  In the last hour, he beat Tokido, Daigo, and Poongko.  Wow.  He put all his heart and soul in it, but he simply couldn't take down four titans in a row. Best EVO yet.  MLG was fantastic, and EVO was hyped as heck.  Great weekend of gaming. Glad to get to enjoy it with millions of others. :)
Yeah, that Poongko match was intense.  Too bad he was dominated the whole time by Fuudo.
Sadly, I think Latif just wore himself out with those titanic wins.  As one of the announcers warned after his defeat of Daigo, getting -up- that much after such big wins one after another might tire him out, and that seems to be what ended up taking him down.
 
No one man should have all that hype.
Avatar image for meatsim
MeatSim

11201

Forum Posts

150

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 23

Edited By MeatSim

The level of competition was insane.

Avatar image for egocheck616
EgoCheck616

820

Forum Posts

37

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 1

Edited By EgoCheck616

The first thing I did after watching the tournament was buy a copy of SFIV:AE on Steam + all of the costumes.

Help me.

Avatar image for csl316
csl316

17004

Forum Posts

765

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 10

Edited By csl316

A weekend well spent. I vowed to just pop in occasionally when Anaheim rolled around, but instead I got nothing done and didn't go anywhere til the finals (which I still managed to watch on my phone while ignoring everyone).

Although blue flame hellions made the Starcraft tournament rather repetitive, it was still full of solid games, memorable moments, and a friggin' 72 minute game (with 10 of those minutes being absolutely incredible).

Hopefully Brad got a few people into competitive gaming with this post. It certainly looks to be the case.

Avatar image for jjor64
JJOR64

19700

Forum Posts

417

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 3

User Lists: 5

Edited By JJOR64

@EgoCheck616 said:

The first thing I did after watching the tournament was buy a copy of SFIV:AE on Steam + all of the costumes.

Help me.

Good choice my friend.

Avatar image for dan_citi
Dan_CiTi

5601

Forum Posts

308

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 2

Edited By Dan_CiTi

EVO was damn good this year. 

Avatar image for tennmuerti
Tennmuerti

9465

Forum Posts

1

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 1

User Lists: 7

Edited By Tennmuerti

Evo was a blast to watch, especially the last day, shit got totally out of control.

SC2 matches started out strong and kept up till the start of the last day, but by the time finals came around I was honestly kind of sick of watching TvT

Avatar image for starvinggamer
StarvingGamer

11533

Forum Posts

36428

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 25

Edited By StarvingGamer

This EVO was 1000x more HYPE than last year. UMvC3 and SSFIV:AE Rebalanced next year alongside I hope Skullgirls and KoFXIII fuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuu I can't wait.

Avatar image for liquidswords
LiquidSwords

2728

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 1

Edited By LiquidSwords

Said it in the chat, seems like I spent time with the side of the GB Community I rarely see or talk to in the forums or live events. Thanks for answering all my EVO noob questions! Seriously pumped to see more competitive events online and even try to attend some to spectate.

Avatar image for fox01313
fox01313

5256

Forum Posts

2246

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 1

User Lists: 19

Edited By fox01313

Just not the same for me to watch people play games for very long on a tournament, just prefer to watch individual epic matches than the whole tournament. I'm glad regardless to see this kind of competition going on & getting more attention so more people can see it as some of these players have pretty much memorized the game so it's a great way to see some of the more obscure bits of a game when they pull  it off.

Avatar image for bearshamanbro
bearshamanbro

294

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

Edited By bearshamanbro

What a great weekend! Blazblue, MvC, and AE were all packed with awesome matches. I was most surprised how enjoyable the finals for Blazblue were. Very exciting matches with lots of momentum swings. As much as I like playing Tekken, they really need to find a way to make that more exciting to watch. I imagine Tekken is done at evo until Tag2.

Avatar image for logan3
logan3

46

Forum Posts

180

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 4

Edited By logan3

80,000+ viewers on the EVO stream! Epic matches! This year was mad hype!!! EVO2K12, going next year!

Avatar image for iamawesome
IamAwesome

44

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

Edited By IamAwesome

I think Fuudo was just the better player no matter what. Latif couldn't even defeat a drunk Fuudo on the after hours stream.

Avatar image for mnzy
mnzy

3047

Forum Posts

147

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

Edited By mnzy
@EgoCheck616 said:

The first thing I did after watching the tournament was buy a copy of SFIV:AE on Steam + all of the costumes.

Help me.

Hit the forums if you run into problems.
Avatar image for hypotheticalsolution76
HypotheticalSolution76

146

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 1

User Lists: 0

Thanks Brad for the friendly news announcement. I had an absolute blast watching EVO 2011 and checking in with the SCII tournament. It was the first time I watched EVO and by the end, I began rooting and pumping my fist. I really got into the competition. 
 
On a side note, I thought it was a great decision to offer sneak peaks at the upcoming fighting games during the main tournament breaks. When I logged off last night from the stream, I saw 80,000 current users and 1.1 Million views.  I hope everybody who got the chance to see the action had a great time like I did.