Starcraft II Pro Awarded Athlete's Visa by U.S. Government

Michael Epstein

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Sep 9, 2013
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Starcraft II Pro Awarded Athlete's Visa by U.S. Government

E-Athletes have as good a reason to enter the country as any kind of player.

Korean Starcraft II player Kim "Violet" Dong Hwan has been granted a five-year visa to enter and reside in the United States as a professional athlete, the first person to receive an official visa for playing Starcraft II professionally.

The decision to offer e-athletes "P-1A" visas, the same visas offered to professional athletes, came five months ago, after Canadian League of Legends pro Danny "Shiphtur" Le petitioned and received special permission to enter the U.S. so he could receive a salary for his role on Team Coast Gaming.

Though Hwan's case was not a special exception, like Le he needed support from a US-based organization, who lobbied government officials on his behalf: Where Le had the support of LoL developer Riot Games, Hwan had talent agency Cyber Solution Agency (CSA).

While the international recognition of the "E-athlete" profession is an important accomplishment for E-Sports in general, it's an even bigger victory for Hwan, who would have been drafted into military service had he not received permission to enter the US:

"It was do or die for [Kim]," CSA's Andrew Tomlinson told The Daily Dot [http://www.dailydot.com/esports/kim-violet-dong-hwan-recognized-athlete-us-government/] "He either got the visa or entered the Korean military."

Hwan repeatedly applied for student visas to study English: He was denied three consecutive times and was told that he would be put the "no fly" list and permanently banned from entering the US if he attempted to enter the country without permission. Le says he would like to eventually apply for U.S. citizenship.

You can get a more detailed account of Kim Dong Hwan's road to recognition as a professional athlete at The Daily Dot [http://www.dailydot.com/esports/kim-violet-dong-hwan-recognized-athlete-us-government/].

Source: The Daily Dot [http://www.cybersolutionsagency.com/articles/news/eSports/12/Korean-Pro-Gamer-viOLet-Secures-5-Year-Pro-Athlete-Visa/]



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TiberiusEsuriens

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Jun 24, 2010
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This is pretty cool, as I did not know Epsorts visas were a thing yet. The really odd part, though, is that a citizen of another country is coming here to escape the draft, instead of the other way around. Times change, eh?
 

The Apple BOOM

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Visas from MOBAs and RTSs, now we just need them for FPSs and Fighters and we'll be set. I still hate how some people can interpret the law so that my chosen hobby can be considered illegal gambling. Hopefully the force that sets that right is a government visa, and not a high profile court case.
 

Eddie451

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Apr 4, 2010
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I think this is great, just proves the massive growth of e-sports as a whole.
 

RaikuFA

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E Sports are not real sports. All you do is click and scream at people for things that were your fault.

Hell by this logic people that play Phoenix Wright are real lawyers.
 

james.sponge

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RaikuFA said:
E Sports are not real sports. All you do is click and scream at people for things that were your fault.

Hell by this logic people that play Phoenix Wright are real lawyers.
I agree that they shouldn't be called athletes (professional gamers is a better term), nevertheless they should be given some kind of recognition for what they do. I mean it's mighty difficult to play StarCraft at such high speed, add multi-tasking, adapting your tactics, fast thinking it's not something your average pub match Joe can do without years of hard work.
 

option1soul

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Good for him. I taught English to Koreans for three years and all I ever heard were horror stories (and even more traumatic news statistics) about military life.
 

AldUK

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RaikuFA said:
E Sports are not real sports. All you do is click and scream at people for things that were your fault.

Hell by this logic people that play Phoenix Wright are real lawyers.
I don't think you quite understand what professional SC2 players have to do to compete at the top level. If you believe that more than 10 of the top 100 players actually enjoy the game anymore, you would be kidding yourself and here's why; they move away from home, often to other countries to be a part of team-houses. In those team-houses they live a strict regimen of training, sometimes adding up to 12 hours of practice daily. They receive very low wage, if any at all and rely on results to continue their careers. They travel to tournaments all over the world frequently, meaning many of them suffer from sleep deprivation and depression and after all of that, they are told that their passion is 'just a game.'
 

RaikuFA

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AldUK said:
RaikuFA said:
E Sports are not real sports. All you do is click and scream at people for things that were your fault.

Hell by this logic people that play Phoenix Wright are real lawyers.
I don't think you quite understand what professional SC2 players have to do to compete at the top level. If you believe that more than 10 of the top 100 players actually enjoy the game anymore, you would be kidding yourself and here's why; they move away from home, often to other countries to be a part of team-houses. In those team-houses they live a strict regimen of training, sometimes adding up to 12 hours of practice daily. They receive very low wage, if any at all and rely on results to continue their careers. They travel to tournaments all over the world frequently, meaning many of them suffer from sleep deprivation and depression and after all of that, they are told that their passion is 'just a game.'
I really don't. I figure they play it just to stroke their ego's.