A screenshot of Kratos spartan rage in God of war 4. PHOTO | COURTESY
At video game lounges or in living rooms in urban centres, young
Kenyans sit for hours on end, transported into a virtual world where
they fight zombies and mythical creatures through pad controllers and
mouse clicks.
Some employed and others in colleges,
these young Kenyans have carried on their childhood thrill of video
games into adulthood, playing to pass time, with others doing it
professionally in tournaments.
Known as electronic sports or e-sports, the pastime is drawing many crowds and substantial amounts of money.
Mike
Kiguta is one of the few who has won money from video games. Just like
many Kenyans of a certain age, video games occupied a crucial place in
his childhood.
However, he started playing them competitively last year in an Asus-sponsored event at Nairobi’s Sarit Centre.
Together with his friends, they each earned Sh10,000 after finishing fourth.
Mike
who started playing at Tric Café Gaming, a lounge in Nairobi, to while
away the time, says he does not fear getting addicted.
‘‘It
is addictive, perhaps, just like dancing, because someone gets
satisfaction from it and there is the monetary motivation after
winning,’’ he says.
To gun for prize money, he turns to You Tube tutorials to master the gaming skills.
There
are other groups that are organising tournaments in Kenya such as Ace
Pro Gaming and Tekken Two-Five-Four Gaming where winners earn prize
money.
Last year, they organised the first ever league
series, attracting about 20 players. The tournament paved the way for
others this year including Jumia Gaming Tournament, East Africa Gaming
Convention and Pro Series Gaming tourneys.
Broken barriers
As
other young Kenyans go to nightclubs, there is this other group of
‘geeks’ that holes themselves in bachelor pads alone or with a few
friends, attacking and counter-attacking creatures on laptops, Xboxes or
on PlayStations.
Ellis Lunayo who recently got
employed as a technology technician says he does e-gaming for fun and
occasionally gets paid in tournaments.
He started
playing e-sports three years ago during his final year in university. He
prefers the National Basketball League, the English Premier League and
car-racing.
The gaming platform has broken the barriers
that traditionally have been played along gender lines. Ellis
occasionally plays against his female friends, whom he says are fast
matching up to him and his male colleagues. Leon Mandela, also in his
early 20s, has found a new night-life away from the traditional
drink-and-dance.
“It has kept me from the crazy night-life and I always look ahead to playing against friends and neighbours,” he says.
A
near-unquenchable thirst for gaming saw Leon get a soft loan from a
friend to buy his first-ever player while still in university. It was a
PlayStation4 Slim going for Sh38,000 but as technology changes fast, it
is almost reaching the end of its life cycle.
Console
manufacturers often upgrade their products and to keep up with the
latest models, gamers have to dig deeper into their pockets or risk
having an obsolete gadget.
For example, PlayStation 4
pro, the ‘super charged console ‘that offers 4K television gaming goes
for about Sh55,000, with each of its game retailing for at Sh10,000.
Xbox 1X, thought to be among the best goes for over Sh60,000.
Electronic sports has also pushed up sales of more sophisticated laptops dedicated to gaming which range from Sh100,000.

Like
many gamers, Leon’s top games include ‘Call of Duty’, ‘FIFA 18’, ‘Grand
Theft Auto’ and ‘God of War’. He adds that he is excited about the
impending release of ‘FIFA 19’.
These games are not
cheap. Games such as ‘Forza Horizon 4’ which is new and a favourite
among many enthusiasts costs Sh8,000. A dedicated person may play one
game in a week while others play it for one or two months, especially if
they do it every day for an hour after work, and six to eight hours on
weekends.
Davy Kamanzi of Tekken Two-Five-Four Gaming
that organises competitions says that for tournaments, gamers can play
for seven to nine hours.
Prize money
Kenya’s
e-sports industry is unregulated and gaming is not a rich man’s game.
Even in Nairobi’s low-income estates, small makeshift kiosks host lovers
of the game.
Players say it helps them relax while increasing the mind’s ability to solve problems.
A visit to Tric Gaming Café in Nairobi’s Moi Avenue Street depicts a picture of an industry that is growing fast.
The
lounge has more than 10 screens, where gamers play after paying Sh150
per hour. Other lounges charge Sh500 and organise competitions where
winners get up to Sh100,000.
The competitions are
gruelling and to outgun the rest of the players is no mean feat. In some
instances, gamers have adopted an unwritten rule that a loser foots the
bill of the entire session.
In Africa, Egypt is the
top gaming market, generating Sh20.6 billion ($205 million) a year,
according to Statistica. Last year, Kenya ranked seventh among African
countries, with gaming revenue estimated at Sh3 billion ($30 million).
With investors opening more lounges and others organising tournaments,
the game keeps appealing to the young population.
Charles Wambugu of Ace Pro Gaming, which also organises tournaments says, the business is not cheap to start.
“One
tournament requires more than Sh100,000 which goes into the prize pool,
hiring of venue, set-up and media engagements,” says Charles who has
organised events in Kenya and Uganda.
However, Charles says Kenya is yet to reach to a level where gamers can make a living from e-sports.
“We
are still at the infant stage, but not to say we are not making huge
strides. It is only a matter of time before players are able to settle
and concentrate on gaming as a source of livelihood,” he says.
Ace
Pro Gaming usually collaborates with international gaming companies
such as Electronic Sports Circuit in the US and Uganda’s Gamer’s Arena
to sponsor players and the competitions.
“Gamers earn
money from advertising revenue and viewer donations on videos and
streams such as Twitch and You Tube and endorsement deals from companies
that produce gaming products,” Davy of Tekken says.
Collins
Akasa owns The Score Gaming Lounge, a quaint spot with red and black
cozy seats, TV screens with two pads for each screen; a club that almost
looks like a living room. He started the business with a friend. He
says the club attracts both young women and men, mostly from college
going.
When he started, he bought a few television
screens each going for Sh50,000 and has increased them to about eight.
He bought PS4 consoles, at Sh40,000 for one and two pads for each screen
with one retailing at Sh5,500.
‘‘Most youths love
video gaming. It is a game of peers. The women prefer action-packed or
car-racing games while the men pick sports,’’ he says.
jmutua@ke.nationmedia.com
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