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E-sports and the Philippines: an electronic love story

  • Professional gaming has come a long way en route to becoming a history-making medal event at last December’s Southeast Asian Games in Manila
  • As e-sports booms around the world, the Philippines has a thriving community of gamers keen to take their competition to the Olympics

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Thailand players focus during their game against Myanmar featuring duringMobile Legends: Bang Bang matches at the 30th Southeast Asian Games in Manila last December. Photo: AFP
Caviar Acampado is a Sea Games gold medallist – and he did not even need to leave his computer screen. After a decade as a professional gamer, Acampado, 27, landed the Philippines its last gold medal in the 2019 Southeast Asian Gamese-sports category as he beat Singapore’s contender in the computer game Starcraft II.
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By the end of the campaign, the Philippine e-sports team had won three gold medals, the most of any team.

The regional championship, which took place last December, was the first time e-sports was a medal event at a multi-sport competition approved by the International Olympic Committee – which makes it all the more unthinkable that a month prior, Acampado was not even sure if he would be taking part.

“I didn’t want to [join] at first,” he said, explaining that he had actually considered retiring from professional gaming in 2017. “But when I got to the opening ceremony and saw thousands of people supporting the players, I felt humbled and that really drove me to win.”

Those words captured not just his victorious feeling, but that of the entire local industry.

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