University in major tie-up for pioneering '˜esports' collaboration

The University of York and ESL - the world's largest esports company - have announced a new teaching and research partnership agreement.
IN CONTROL: Students compete in the eSports Grand Final.IN CONTROL: Students compete in the eSports Grand Final.
IN CONTROL: Students compete in the eSports Grand Final.

Esports – the competitive playing of video games online – is projected to grow into a multi-million pound industry over the next two years. In 2016 the industry generated over £384m in revenue, and over 290m people worldwide watched or played esports in 2016

The partnership will allow York to pioneer UK-based teaching and research facilities tailored to the rapidly evolving esports industry.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

In the UK alone there are 3.1 million esports viewers spanning a wide demographic – 21 per cent of these are women aged between 21 and 35.

Peter Cowling, director of the Digital Creativity Labs at York and Professor in Computer Science, said: “Esports has massive potential to outgrow conventional sports, and our collaboration with ESL provides us with an exceptional opportunity to pioneer highly relevant, impact-driven research in this area.”

Recognising the potential of esports, the UK Association for Interactive Entertainment (UKIE) has highlighted the importance of growing the UK as an esports hub, including the need to develop UK-based, highly skilled talent and to foster technological innovation.

This new collaboration includes York’s Digital Creativity Labs, an £18m research initiative focusing on the convergence of digital games and interactive media and one of the biggest games research labs in the world; the University of York’s Department of Theatre, Film and Television; and the Department of Computer Science, one of the highest ranked in the UK.

The collaboration has three key aims:

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

• Teaching - ESL will hold regular masterclasses with University of York students, including workshops and taster days. The University is committed to aligning teaching offerings to the needs of the industry, while also offering BSc & MSc dissertations on esports. ESL and York are co-designing an elective module on esports content production as a third year, credit-bearing module, aiming to launch Autumn 2018.

• Research - Alongside an investment of over $1m in continual research into future innovations in the esports industry, the collaboration will see paid PhD internships take place through the Intelligent Games and Game Intelligence (IGGI) PhD programme and Digital Creativity Labs. Pioneering esports research already explored by DC Labs investigates areas including AI, human behaviour, interactive storytelling, data visualisation, game analytics and more.

• Careers - ESL internships will provide hands-on experience for outstanding undergraduate students, while industry placements will be available for select PhD students.

Related topics: