Players (behind glasses) prepare before a match during the International Dota 2 Championships in Shanghai on August 20, 2019. (Photo by STR / AFP)

SHANGHAI, BALIPOST.com – A record $33.5 million is up for grabs but professional eSports players like those competing in The International in Shanghai this week pay a physical price with deteriorating eyesight, digestive problems and wrist and hand damage.

At first, Evgenii “Blizzy” Ri looks perplexed at the notion: “It’s impossible, how can you get injuries when you play games?”

Then the 24-year-old from Kyrgyzstan discloses that a doctor urged him to take six months off to give his failing vision a badly needed rest.

Ri plays for Natus Vincere, or NAVI, and this week is competing in The International, a world championship said to have the biggest prize pool in the history of eSports.

NAVI and 17 other teams will play the multiplayer battle game Dota 2 in front of thousands of fans at a major indoor stadium while hundreds of thousands more will watch online.

Baca juga:  Ajax finish with 10 men and a goalless draw in Cyprus

If NAVI triumph on Sunday, Ri and his team-mates will become instant millionaires — but success could come at a price.

“I didn’t worry before but now I feel like my eyes are really… I can’t see so much,” said Ri, who practises up to 12 hours a day.

“Ten years I’ve been playing computers so they are a bit… I’ve just got bad vision.

Ri has been told to wear glasses but he does not find them comfortable and said that his deteriorating eyesight does not hinder his performance because the screen is up close.

Baca juga:  KLS Bali Borong 3 Piala di Turnamen Mobile Legend

A doctor recommended simple eye exercises — moving them up and down, left and right — but he admits that he does not do them.

“Actually he also told me not to play the computer for six months to get back my vision, but I didn’t listen.

“I need to play.”

 

– ‘My body is so sore’ –

According to several players in Shanghai, the most common health complaint for pro gamers is Carpal Tunnel syndrome.

Not unique to gamers, it happens through repetitive hand and wrist motions and is characterised by numbness, burning and tingling of the thumb, index, middle and ring fingers.

Baca juga:  Djokovic shakes off poor start to win Cincinnati opener

In severe cases surgery is required.

Some gamers talked about wrist injuries so severe they had to quit and lower back problems related to sitting for too long, day after day.

“I used to play and I had some arm and wrist problems so now I coach instead of playing because I can’t take the strain,” said Kurtis “Aui_2000” Ling, of the Newbee team.

Another hazard of eSports, a fast-growing but little-understood sport, is the mental toll, particularly with life-changing sums of money on the table.

With many players so young — most are in their 20s but there is a 17 year old at The International — some struggle in the hyper-competitive environment. (AFP)

BAGIKAN

TINGGALKAN BALASAN

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

CAPCHA *