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Do you consider videogames to be a sport?
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Made in ca
Fixture of Dakka




Kamloops, BC

Title says it all, I myself would probably say no but then again things like dart throwing and pool is considered a sport so I don't know.
   
Made in us
Infiltrating Hawwa'





Through the looking glass

There's a reason their called e-sports and not sports. I find sports to mean something that requires physical prowess. Almost everything but reflexes is mental based in e-sports.

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Made in no
Terrifying Doombull





Hefnaheim

Sport implies that you need to use your body, not just your tumbs.
   
Made in gb
Avatar of the Bloody-Handed God






Inside your mind, corrupting the pathways

More of a sport than golf, certainly

   
Made in au
Lady of the Lake






It's like golf, if it was as popular and as interesting as the super bowl at times.

Once again the difference and why they're called e-sports.

This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at 2012/11/03 08:04:15


   
Made in gb
Oberstleutnant





Back in the English morass

 Trondheim wrote:
Sport implies that you need to use your body, not just your thumbs.


You do use your body.

There are already a lot of sports which require little physical activity. I don't see how Gaming is any different.

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Made in gb
Powerful Pegasus Knight





No. Get off your ass.
   
Made in gb
Sniping Hexa





SW UK

If Darts, Snooker and Golf are considered sports, I don't see a reason why gaming shouldn't be. The definition of the term "sport" is tricky to apply to gaming, IMO there should be a definite distinction between "games" and "sports". "Games" would involve skill but little/no physical activity, "sports" would involve both.

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Made in au
Rampaging Khorne Dreadnought




Wollongong, Australia

It can be considered a sport, chess is considered a sport, so is darts and pool. There are some games such as the RTS and MOBA category which you need a lot of skill to be good at it. Those ARE considered sports in Korea.

 
   
Made in gb
Powerful Pegasus Knight





If it's a sport it should go in the 'Sports for fat people with no interest of bettering their fitness' category. I know when I go out on a weekend and do a 40k MTB ride then come home and play COD which one is a sport.

Is there any reason video games need to be considered sport? What purpose does it serve other than, the only one I can see, making people who do no physical exercise feel better about themselves.

This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at 2012/11/03 13:40:44


 
   
Made in us
Secret Force Behind the Rise of the Tau




USA

Sport, being an ill defined word that basically means whatever one wants it mean, makes this questions unanswerable

There you go guys. The smart ass remark of the thread

   
Made in us
Rough Rider with Boomstick




United States

No I do not consider them sports.

 rockerbikie wrote:
It can be considered a sport, chess is considered a sport, so is darts and pool. .



They are? Sense when? I never considered them sports

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Made in us
Secret Force Behind the Rise of the Tau




USA

The Olypmic Committee considers Chess a sport.

   
Made in us
Decrepit Dakkanaut





 LordofHats wrote:
The Olypmic Committee considers Chess a sport.


and heaven forbid you are caught with Wistrol in your system, if you are a chess olympian
   
Made in us
Rough Rider with Boomstick




United States

 LordofHats wrote:
The Olypmic Committee considers Chess a sport.


Ha, well Ill be damned. I never would have considered it one. Thanks for that lol

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Made in gb
Plastictrees



UK

Art, not sport. /Thread

Seriously, I don't think a sport is something that requires physical prowess but not everything that is competitve and requires ability is a sport.

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Made in us
Decrepit Dakkanaut






New Orleans, LA

 Cheesecat wrote:
Title says it all, I myself would probably say no but then again things like dart throwing and pool is considered a sport so I don't know.


No. But then, I don't consider darts, bowling or pool to be sports either. Those are activities.

Soccer, football, baseball, tennis and so on are sports in my book.

I'm iffy on Golf, but having lugged around clubs in Houston's summer heat and humidity without a golf-cart for 18 holes has made me reconsider my position.

These are my opinions. Yours may differ.

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Made in us
Shas'o Commanding the Hunter Kadre





Richmond, VA

Certain games I'll consider E-sports, such as starcraft.and halo.

I don't consider league of legends one however.

Video games can't become sports unless we are talking futuristic laser tag, and even then it's not a sport.

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Made in us
Decrepit Dakkanaut





Besides, if we institute "video games" as an olympic sport, who among those "e-L33t" players could legitimately pass a drug test?
   
Made in eu
Hallowed Canoness




Ireland

Voted "not sure". It seems to me that what is a sport and what is not would be defined by public consensus rather than a general definition - for once you apply definitions, you'll end up either having to accept that video games are sports, or you will have to concede that a number of currently accepted sports are actually not.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sport#Meaning_and_usage

Give it another ~30-50 years and (provided we do not nuke ourselves in the mean time) video games will have become an accepted part of everybody's daily lives much like television is today, and by then will be featured more prominently like today's sports, perhaps even replacing some in popularity. Some few nations are already there.

Personally, I find it a little silly, especially once you start comparing stuff like billard to FPS. One is a "coordination sport", the other ... apparently not? Because you're coordinating a crosshair on a screen in front of you, rather than a cue on the table in front of you? Sounds like a bunch of elitist protectionism.

juraigamer wrote:Video games can't become sports unless we are talking futuristic laser tag, and even then it's not a sport.
Without ever actually having thought of laser tag as a sport (or a "video game" for that matter), I have to ask ... why not? I'd be interested in the reasoning / the supposed difference to "actual" sports.

This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at 2012/11/05 20:02:43


 
   
Made in ca
Stone Bonkers Fabricator General






Video games are absolutely not a sport! Give me a break.

 
   
Made in us
Decrepit Dakkanaut





 KamikazeCanuck wrote:
Video games are absolutely not a sport! Give me a break.



I actually find it hard to consider video games a "game" in the traditional sense that is often associated with darts, billiards, cards, and even p/p RPGs. My reasoning for this, is because how many of us "shut down" our minds when we have that controller, HID (for computers), or whatever that is involved with video games? I know that I can lose time with the mindless fun that is video games. And this is quite the opposite with other activities, such as previously mentioned, billiards, RPGs and T/T games.
   
Made in eu
Hallowed Canoness




Ireland

Ensis Ferrae wrote:I actually find it hard to consider video games a "game" in the traditional sense that is often associated with darts, billiards, cards, and even p/p RPGs. My reasoning for this, is because how many of us "shut down" our minds when we have that controller, HID (for computers), or whatever that is involved with video games? I know that I can lose time with the mindless fun that is video games. And this is quite the opposite with other activities, such as previously mentioned, billiards, RPGs and T/T games.
That sounds weird, considering that billard, RPGs and Tabletop games are all present in video games as well.

I'm sure there are lots of video games where you can indeed "shut down your mind", but do the current "e-sport" games such as Counterstrike and StarCraft truly count as such? Is it not true that you have to focus immensely on proper hand-eye-coordination and nigh-instinctive reflexes to beat an opponent at CS, as well as planning and executing carefully laid out building and combat strategies in SC whilst simultaneously reacting to whatever the other player does?

I always shut down "some part" of my mind when I'm playing, but I need reflexes for FPS (like with clay shooting) and logic for strategy games (like with chess). What I'm playing thus depends on what part of my mind I feel needs relaxing. If I want to shut down completely I grab a good book and go chill, casually allowing my fantasy to work by itself without any sort of "you need to win" pressure like it exists when playing most video games.
   
Made in us
Nigel Stillman





Seattle WA

The moniker "e-sport" fits well here.

I consider competitive structured play in video games an e-sport.


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Made in us
Proud Triarch Praetorian





 juraigamer wrote:
Certain games I'll consider E-sports, such as starcraft.and halo.

I don't consider league of legends one however.


I am curious why you consider those two to be sports but LoL is not a sport.
   
Made in ca
Stone Bonkers Fabricator General






 Lynata wrote:
Ensis Ferrae wrote:I actually find it hard to consider video games a "game" in the traditional sense that is often associated with darts, billiards, cards, and even p/p RPGs. My reasoning for this, is because how many of us "shut down" our minds when we have that controller, HID (for computers), or whatever that is involved with video games? I know that I can lose time with the mindless fun that is video games. And this is quite the opposite with other activities, such as previously mentioned, billiards, RPGs and T/T games.
That sounds weird, considering that billard, RPGs and Tabletop games are all present in video games as well.

I'm sure there are lots of video games where you can indeed "shut down your mind", but do the current "e-sport" games such as Counterstrike and StarCraft truly count as such? Is it not true that you have to focus immensely on proper hand-eye-coordination and nigh-instinctive reflexes to beat an opponent at CS, as well as planning and executing carefully laid out building and combat strategies in SC whilst simultaneously reacting to whatever the other player does?

I always shut down "some part" of my mind when I'm playing, but I need reflexes for FPS (like with clay shooting) and logic for strategy games (like with chess). What I'm playing thus depends on what part of my mind I feel needs relaxing. If I want to shut down completely I grab a good book and go chill, casually allowing my fantasy to work by itself without any sort of "you need to win" pressure like it exists when playing most video games.


Ya, I definately do a lot more thinking playing video games than playing darts.

 
   
Made in us
Dark Angels Librarian with Book of Secrets






Then you've never actually played darts...

And I am surprised that racecar driving hasn't come up in this thread, either...
   
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Decrepit Dakkanaut






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No.

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Made in us
Fanatic with Madcap Mushrooms






Chino Hills, CA

They're not sports in the traditional sense.

They're highly intense competitions, but not sports. Warhammer isn't a sport, but it can be highly intense and competitive (relatively intense, heh)

Some people play to win, some people play for fun. Me? I play to kill toy soldiers.
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Made in ie
Hallowed Canoness




Ireland

SoloFalcon wrote:And I am surprised that racecar driving hasn't come up in this thread, either...
I actually thought about it, considering that you "just" sit on a wheel and steer regardless of whether you're sitting in front of a screen or out on a real track, with the only difference thus being the risk involved.
But you probably need a bit of strength in the arms to properly steer a racing car, so certain people would just point out the "physical requirement" as the defining trait. Or do racing cars all have servo-assisted steering? I have no clue about that.
   
 
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