While I haven't gone to college yet, from what I hear from my sister, missing even a day will fuck you up big time. Something like this? He chose right in my opinion, but I have to wonder what made that dad so anti-gamer.
And not everyone goes pro as a full time 24/7 thing. A lot of people play competitive scenes while still having regular lives and commitments. Its not just about the money here, its about the passion. He's smart enough to pass it up given the current options, so I'd imagine he's smart enough to turn in his hat when real life requires more attention than the games.Clive Howlitzer said:It might sound cruel but if his parents are paying for his education and he lives at home for free. His parents call the shots. That is the price you pay for living at home. Also, I feel like going down the road of 'pro-gamer' is one he'll regret later. The average 'pro-gamer' will earn far less than someone with even a decent career elsewhere. It is also something that while it might seem cool to do now, will rapidly fall out of later.Chefsbrian said:Grouchy Imp said:Erm, good? At what point did it become acceptable to question whether or not computer games were a viable alternative to education?Normally I'd agree with both of you, but classes in most post secondary area's are either wrapping up or finished now. I don't know his exact school, but its likely the same deal, he's probably done classes and is just home now, so frankly this makes little sense to me. Sounds like many parents I deal with at work, just disliking video games because the media they consume dislikes them.Clive Howlitzer said:Good. His education is more important than a pro gaming career. His parents have the right idea.
What this guy said. Most of the people in here got another thing from the article. The choice between Tournament and College was imposed on him by HIS PARENTS. It wasn't a problem until his dad made it! The trip was all expenses paid, AND during summer! With no classes or finals, and by his own admission during that time he would be moving back for the summer with his parents!DrOswald said:Grouchy Imp said:Erm, good? At what point did it become acceptable to question whether or not computer games were a viable alternative to education?Dead Metal said:Good.
His parents payed for his education and supported him up to this point, as he says, this is his final year, if he fucks it up that was a life time of money wasted, just for a stupid virtual card game. He can still play this professionally after he's finished his education. There is absolutely no point in jeopardizing his education for a tournament, even if it's as awesome as this.
Plus, he stated he started playing seriously in December, which coupled with the fact that he qualified for this tournament, I believe he's been concentrating more on this than his studies.
Another captcha? Seriously, every time I post I get one of these.Did you guys even read the article? This was not an either or thing until his parents made it so. It was a 1 week all expenses paid trip in the middle of the summer semester. And we know for sure this guy was not going to school during the summer because he is going to be moving back home for the summer to live with his parents.Clive Howlitzer said:Good. His education is more important than a pro gaming career. His parents have the right idea.
This is not a case of his parents preventing him throwing away his education, this is a case of his parents preventing him doing something productive and fun with that week instead of sitting on his ass doing nothing. There is absolutely no threat to his education here, so that excuse is total bullshit. The trip is all expenses paid so neither the parents or the student have anything to lose. The only possible motivation here is an attempt to sabotage this guys prospects as a pro, either because they do not approve and are embarrassed of him (which is an extremely likely scenario) or from some misguided attempt to force him down the proper path in life, which never ends well.
Now, the guy made the right choice, finishing the degree is more important than going to one tournament. But the parents are morons, especially the dad.
PS. As for this guy compromising his studies to qualify for this tourney, I don't buy it. Even a full time student has a ton of free time if he doesn't have a job or any other responsibilities, and hearthstone is a relatively simple game compared to most esport titles. If this was LOL or Starcraft, then probably. But hearthstone is not like those.
Except that wasn't the situation until his parents made it one. It could, and should have been "Go to tournament, then finish college (And possibly reduce the financial burden on his parents if he won anything there). Instead, his parents pulled a Stupid tried forcing an "Either/Or" situation that should have been a "Both".Grouchy Imp said:Erm, good? At what point did it become acceptable to question whether or not computer games were a viable alternative to education?
He wouldn't have to quit to attend the tournament if his parent's weren't spiteful dicks. The choice should have been between "Go on a free travel trip, see more of the world, meet new people, and possibly win a free $25,000, then come back home and finish college while possibly easing his parent's financial burden" vs. "do nothing, achieve nothing, finish college, and be out a significant life experience".Scarim Coral said:That's the deal breaking. If he had lost then quiting college was all for nothing well he got next year but it would be a struggle college wise.Charli said:And hey if he wins that's free money.
....I watched a heathstone caster go from rank 25 to legend in a course of 24 hours. It has nothing to do with time it has everything to do with luck and a good deck, like most card games. Whats more really good decks that everyone can use are listed online for anyone to look at all you need to be is smart enough to figure out how and since hes in his final year of college im guessing hes pretty smart.Grouchy Imp said:You can, but I doubt you can rise high enough through the online leaderboards enough to be noticed and selected for tournaments through casual play. But that's speculation on my part.BoogieManFL said:You can be good at something without putting a vast amount of time in to it. Also, playing games does not immediately mean your schooling suffers. Both CAN coexist. They didn't even have to pay for the trip. Like I said, I fully expect if he was a Basketball or Football player, any physical sport, people who view this entire thing completely differently.Grouchy Imp said:As I've said, this tournament position didn't just fall from the lap of the gods. He must have put in substantial downtime to become skilled enough to qualify, and while that is in and of itself no bad thing it's not what his folks are paying for him to do.BoogieManFL said:Seems that the only chance for loss of said education was because his parents threatened to cut him off.Grouchy Imp said:Erm, good? At what point did it become acceptable to question whether or not computer games were a viable alternative to education?
Sounds like he could have done both, and had the chance to win a sizable amount of money if they were more open minded.
only in the assuming that it was an alternative in the first place.Grouchy Imp said:Erm, good? At what point did it become acceptable to question whether or not computer games were a viable alternative to education?
you think hes a casual player that got into a tourney? i have no idea myself but i would of presumed he was hitting it pretty hardcore myself.Charli said:...For one tournament? Is that really going to ruin his education? I can safely presume my parents know I'm mature enough to manage both things.
And hey if he wins that's free money.
I find it odd that they made him choose like he was going down some dark path to card games all day everyday like some bad joke yu-gi-oh villain.