Y de cómo los esports necesitan más torneos divertidos a la antigua usanza, aunque sean más cutres.
In Missouri, there is no extensive production crew. Tyler "Tyler1" Steinkamp, in front of a green screen, jumps out to greet his viewers on Twitch. Wearing a suit with the sleeves cut off, he welcomes the growing number of fans to the final of his own tournament, the Tyler1 Championship Series, where the winner will walk away with $10,000.
Over the next five minutes, he interviews his younger brother -- who's dressed in TSM gear -- sings the national anthem, and even has his own CGI dragon interrupt the opening festivities. The numbers keep growing, and by the time the best-of-three finals even begin, the live viewer count is nearing 200,000, a number unreachable for most esports tournaments, even ones backed by multimillion-dollar companies and sponsorships.