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ESL’s North American chief on the esports explosion at E3

Caffeine has teamed up with ESL for event livestreaming.
Image Credit: Caffeine

Esports is in its early days, but Yvette Martinez-Rea was around during its early, early days, waiting to see when it was going to take off. But in the past year, it’s fair to say esports has exploded and that was evident at the Electronic Entertainment Expo (E3) last week.

ESL teamed up with Tencent to hold a live tournament for mobile game Arena of Valor at E3. The two-day tournament drew crowds to the corner of the South Hall of the Los Angeles Convention Center during the big game trade show, which drew 69,000 people to Los Angeles last week. The tournament was broadcast on six streaming platforms, including the Arena of Valor Twitch channel. The winners will battle in Los Angeles in July for a prize pool of $550,000.

Martinez-Rea, president of ESL North America, said in an interview at E3 that her company specializes in coordinating these kinds of events so that they draw crowds and get plenty of online attention. As esports grows from $906 million in 2018 to $1.65 billion by 2021 (according to market researcher Newzoo), and from 143 million enthusiast fans in 2017 to 250 million in 2021, Martinez-Rea said ESL will be there to handle events from hundreds of people to tens of thousands.

Here’s an edited transcript of our interview.


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Above: Yvette Martinez-Rea is head of North America for ESL.

Image Credit: Dean Takahashi

GamesBeat: Esports is hot at E3, isn’t it?

Yvette Martinez-Rea: I have a stepson in his 20s. He’s like, “Can you get me in?” He never asked me before, but now it’s in his consciousness. He goes to all the comic cons, but he’s never gone to E3.

GamesBeat: [Entertainment Software Association CEO] Mike Gallagher always talks about billions of eyeballs for the show. But there’s never any action attached to that, except that six months from now you buy a game. Now you can actually do things here at E3. Does it seem like an interesting venue to you guys, as a place to have these tournaments?

Martinez-Rea: We’re still experimenting and learning. We do stuff at Gamescom and other places like that. I hear it’s even crazier there, although I’ve never been. There are unique challenges, technical challenges. You’re fighting with so many other installations. It’s always, who’s the audience going to be? What are they doing? How do you time what you do so they’re there at the booth? Every year and every game is a little bit different.

That’s why we enjoy working with Tencent. They’re very involved with us. What are we going to give away? What talent are we going to use? Who are the influencers we’re flying in? How do we make this stand out in a crowded field? They’ve been a good partner. AT&T is a good partner as well. They’re very interested in the best possible experience. It’s different from a studio show where we control all the elements and we know exactly what works.

Yesterday my team called me here and said, “A band is playing 10 feet away. We gotta figure out what time they’re playing, because if they’re playing opposite the tournament—“ Stuff like that pops up that we just don’t usually have to deal with. It makes it trickier, but also more fun. Everyone says that if you survive the E3 surprises, you can do anything.

GamesBeat: Is it just the one game, or are there several games?

Martinez-Rea: Days one and two are the Arena of Valor North American finals, and then day three is more of a showcase with Tekken and Soul Calibur, and maybe a third game.

Arena of Valor

Above: Arena of Valor

Image Credit: Tencent

GamesBeat: For the mobile side, what’s your sense of how crowded that could become? It’s hard to predict whether people are really into the mobile esports yet.

Martinez-Rea: That’s what I think. It’s not really clear yet, but there’s no question, just from having a 14-year-old kid, that this is ultimately going to be the hardware of choice. Whether the games are compelling enough yet, it’s early days. But AoV is doing a good job of focusing on their community in this market.

GamesBeat: That’s where AT&T and the 5G stuff might be a big difference.

Martinez-Rea: Yes, I agree. It’s exciting for that reason. I’d say the esports purists are pretty snobby about it. But we know already that this is going to be a thing. It’s just a matter of time. The VR area is the one where I’m a little less—you and I talked about this. I’m not sure that the content, the games, are there yet. But in mobile it’s definitely coming.

We just did a Clash thing for AT&T at one of their conferences. What I enjoyed was that—you had several hundred people in the audience, moms and dads, all these parents who’d never seen a Clash game. But they got into the competition. I do think it’s because their kids are sitting right next to them and saying, “Oh, I recognize that.” Mobile, you can already see that it’ll have a broader audience from a spectator perspective.

GamesBeat: Are you guys prepared to do these things that could be smaller, like a few hundred people, versus thousands of people?

Martinez-Rea: We did that today. We call it up and down the pyramid. We do a lot of events right now with just a few hundred people in the studio or other places. Sometimes just because that’s the right thing for the title, and sometimes because that’s what the publisher wants to do. That’s the thing I like the most about ESL. We get to see games like Rainbow or whatever develop from small, mature scenes and move them up to things that start to fill larger venues.

Above: The crowds at E3

Image Credit: Dean Takahashi

GamesBeat: It’s interesting to me that nobody’s making use of Staples Center yet. That’s the biggest venue here, if you want to do a big esports show. Your only risk is crossover with the Lakers games, I guess.

Martinez-Rea: That’s been our biggest challenge. I don’t know about the Staples Center specifically, but for the guys that pick venues, especially in the U.S., the schedules are so packed. It’s hard to find the right dates to do that.

GamesBeat: They were saying that E3 would expand to the Gamescom model if they could, but they can’t get the weekend.

Martinez-Rea: Right. It’s always date-oriented. Even from last year to this year, stuff is starting on Saturday. Off in Hollywood and Santa Monica, it’s already feeling like it’s taking over the town.

GamesBeat: Do you think there are more publishers like EA, that spread of publishers that like using ESL, versus the Activisions that are doing all their own organizing?

Martinez-Rea: The little-known truth is that ESL still works with everyone in some capacity. What we hear from publishers is that they appreciate how we have a global scale, but we can do things at a smaller local level as well. We’ve been working with them for so many years in so many ways.

Even with a Riot, who we worked with in very early days—they’ve brought League in house, but they appreciate that esports is a complicated thing. It’s very different than game development. What we find is that even with the Riots of the world, when they start to appreciate the investment and the expertise that takes, they start to come back and say, “Hey, there’s something you can help us with.” We think that will keep happening.

The new publishers that are really embracing this, they’re trying to figure out the right model for esports. They know they have to go big to make it meaningful, but what does that mean? They need to focus their resources. I think Ralf’s approach, to keep ourselves agnostic, sometimes feels a little scary. But what we all say is that not only are there enough publishers and games, but even the ones that bring it close end up not having all the pieces. They come back to us.

GamesBeat: How many people do you have now?

Martinez-Rea: Globally, about 500. In the U.S., about 100. I think we now have 11 studios around the world. We all feel like that’s a good number. Obviously Asia is always a market that we’re trying to figure out. We’ve tried different things there. Otherwise it feels like 11 studios gives us something in every major area.

We’re also seeing that whereas the in-studio events were the big parts of the pie, with the 13 megas, now there’s more of an appetite for these live experiences in different places like E3. The studio footprint is great, but now the next shift is how we can activate outside of a set studio. Between that and the mega-event is the sweet spot now. The Rainbow Six finals we just did was at a casino in Atlantic City. Atlantic City had never hosted an event. They were really interested. Rainbow was really interested.

Above: The ESL esports finals for Counter-Strike: Global Offensive in Katowice, Poland, in 2017.

Image Credit: ESL

GamesBeat: If you were to ratchet up what you do at E3, what would that be like?

Martinez-Rea: We’re always looking at cool and different venues, different places that aren’t necessarily a theater setting. More places are coming to us wanting to do esports, especially in L.A. There’s a lot of traditional places that cater to TV and film production asking if we can activate there. There are pros and cons to it. DreamHack, our sister company, activated at a rodeo venue in Denver last year, which was a really cool place, but you can imagine that it presented its own challenges.

For us it’s so technically demanding in terms of production. It comes down to, can we find a venue that appeals to the right people, but can technically support us? Because mobile it becomes even more of a tax on the venue in some ways, which is why partners like AT&T become important.