• Log InLog In
  • Register
Liquid`
Team Liquid Liquipedia
EDT 22:06
CEST 04:06
KST 11:06
  • Home
  • Forum
  • Calendar
  • Streams
  • Liquipedia
  • Features
  • Store
  • EPT
  • TL+
  • StarCraft 2
  • Brood War
  • Smash
  • Heroes
  • Counter-Strike
  • Overwatch
  • Liquibet
  • Fantasy StarCraft
  • TLPD
  • StarCraft 2
  • Brood War
  • Blogs
Forum Sidebar
Events/Features
News
Featured News
Team TLMC #5 - Finalists & Open Tournaments0[ASL20] Ro16 Preview Pt2: Turbulence10Classic Games #3: Rogue vs Serral at BlizzCon9[ASL20] Ro16 Preview Pt1: Ascent10Maestros of the Game: Week 1/Play-in Preview12
Community News
StarCraft II 5.0.15 PTR Patch Notes61BSL 2025 Warsaw LAN + Legends Showmatch0Weekly Cups (Sept 8-14): herO & MaxPax split cups4WardiTV TL Team Map Contest #5 Tournaments1SC4ALL $6,000 Open LAN in Philadelphia8
StarCraft 2
General
StarCraft II 5.0.15 PTR Patch Notes #1: Maru - Greatest Players of All Time Weekly Cups (Sept 8-14): herO & MaxPax split cups Team Liquid Map Contest #21 - Presented by Monster Energy SpeCial on The Tasteless Podcast
Tourneys
SC2's Safe House 2 - October 18 & 19 RSL: Revival, a new crowdfunded tournament series Maestros of The Game—$20k event w/ live finals in Paris Sparkling Tuna Cup - Weekly Open Tournament SC4ALL $6,000 Open LAN in Philadelphia
Strategy
Custom Maps
External Content
Mutation # 491 Night Drive Mutation # 490 Masters of Midnight Mutation # 489 Bannable Offense Mutation # 488 What Goes Around
Brood War
General
Soulkey on ASL S20 ASL20 General Discussion BW General Discussion ASL TICKET LIVE help! :D NaDa's Body
Tourneys
[ASL20] Ro16 Group D [ASL20] Ro16 Group C Small VOD Thread 2.0 [Megathread] Daily Proleagues
Strategy
Simple Questions, Simple Answers Muta micro map competition Fighting Spirit mining rates [G] Mineral Boosting
Other Games
General Games
Stormgate/Frost Giant Megathread Borderlands 3 Path of Exile Nintendo Switch Thread General RTS Discussion Thread
Dota 2
Official 'what is Dota anymore' discussion LiquidDota to reintegrate into TL.net
League of Legends
Heroes of the Storm
Simple Questions, Simple Answers Heroes of the Storm 2.0
Hearthstone
Heroes of StarCraft mini-set
TL Mafia
TL Mafia Community Thread
Community
General
US Politics Mega-thread UK Politics Mega-thread Things Aren’t Peaceful in Palestine Russo-Ukrainian War Thread Canadian Politics Mega-thread
Fan Clubs
The Happy Fan Club!
Media & Entertainment
Movie Discussion! [Manga] One Piece Anime Discussion Thread
Sports
2024 - 2026 Football Thread Formula 1 Discussion MLB/Baseball 2023
World Cup 2022
Tech Support
Linksys AE2500 USB WIFI keeps disconnecting Computer Build, Upgrade & Buying Resource Thread High temperatures on bridge(s)
TL Community
BarCraft in Tokyo Japan for ASL Season5 Final The Automated Ban List
Blogs
i'm really bored guys
Peanutsc
I <=> 9
KrillinFromwales
The Personality of a Spender…
TrAiDoS
A very expensive lesson on ma…
Garnet
hello world
radishsoup
Lemme tell you a thing o…
JoinTheRain
RTS Design in Hypercoven
a11
Customize Sidebar...

Website Feedback

Closed Threads



Active: 1917 users

Before ESPORTS: US National Video Game Team

Blogs > heyoka
Post a Reply
1 2 3 Next All
Heyoka
Profile Blog Joined March 2008
Katowice25012 Posts
July 26 2011 06:04 GMT
#1
Team Liquid means a lot to me. For many years I have cherished the idea of dudes competing in video games, starting when I was 12 and found the world of Tribes leagues (which only had audio casts because broadband was still a rarity). I have spent a lot of my free time following that keeping up with leagues and learning about the kinds of crazy competitions tried and failed. Its a hilariously large part of who I am, few things get me pumped up like reading about some dudes locked in eternal combat through a video screen. Team Liquid has continuously fed my passion for years far better than any other place on the internet, and for my 5000th post it only makes sense to share one of the more entertaining stories I've run across.

BEFORE ESPORTS
America's National Team


When digging around for info on the Nintendo World Championships (an event for which I am now the proud owner of a signed poster), I got curious about earlier events. Sometimes the sentiment around here that competitive gaming is a relatively new phenomenon irks me a bit, so here is the story of something briefly mentioned in one of my favorite documentaries, Chasing Ghosts.

[image loading]
Look at that logo, so...8 bit.
-p4NDemik


That's right, The U.S. National Video Game Team. Badass. You can infer from the poster they were traveling to the White House, presumably challenging everyone in their path. The vision for this likely involved going on all sorts of wacky adventures in themed clothing, challenging roaming gangs in their quest. Maybe while discovering true love like Fred Savage. Perhaps engaging in a few practice montages, ultimately culminating in a colossal battle against the ultimate arcade terror - the Japanese. Supposedly they had to mint more coins after the advent of Space Invaders, so surely they were viewed as quite the formidable foe.

That turned out to be sort of true -- they did travel the country in a bus playing people in arcades. Unfortunately, the Japanese Embassy didn't really get it and there was never any kind of official match. The project lasted for several years though, despite sounding like a bizarre fever dream.

This is their story.

[image loading]
Ben Gold (far left) was a serious badass at 17. Now he has kids and is a pushover.


The USNVGT (nice acronym!) was the ultimate realization in a line of ideas from Walter Day. You might recognize him as the lovable, eccentric game referee from King of Kong, Frag, and Chasing Ghosts. He also started Twin Galaxies, the arcade competition world's Team Liquid. Despite being 60 years old he has a passion for competitive gaming that rivals even our most devout. I like to imagine this is who Nazgul becomes in 30 years.

[image loading]
Poster says 1982, cool. The tournament was held January 1983.


An entrepreneur who thought video game players could become sports stars, he was constantly looking for ways to promote. That's Incredible! contacted Walter about doing a special on games after a successful show featuring Ms Pac-Man (aside: this is probably the first real multi-region gaming event ever). After pitching the idea several times, he eventually turned the event into the Video Game World Championships held in January 1983. The format is smart: compete in 5 games then normalize and add totals, with the 3 top finishers moving on to a filmed TV event.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zO3ctKcI8Kg
ESPORTS


Later that year, Walter was approached about rounding up players for The Electronic Circus. In a field full of unbelievable events, ill-placed money grabs, and poorly thought out concepts, this thing is one of the most unreal stories I've come across.

Someone decided it would be a good idea to run a huge, traveling show that centered around arcade machines. They would hire a team of players to demonstrate the games, entertaining visitors with their skill and competing for high scores against each other and challengers. They were promised up to $3,000 per week in salary plus "endorsement deals". The grand vision involved a tour of 200 cities in 40 weeks. Exactly how they intended of averaging less than a day and a half in each location is anyone's guess. The man who originally gave the pitch is remembered for saying it may take us five years to get video gaming as popular as tennis, but we're going to work toward that. 5 years! You couldn't scream ESPORTS louder if you were shouting it from a mountaintop with a megaphone.

Shockingly, it lasted exactly 5 days before being shut down. The expenses were absurdly high, it was promoted poorly and no one came for their inaugural week in Boston. In a pleasant turn of event the players were actually paid for the days they worked (contracts which had been reduced to $1,500 a week). As near as I can tell this is the first instance of contracted play, it included some kind of morality clauses that forbid the players from "performing unjust acts".

The inspiration for the team started with the LIFE photo session and became an obsession by the time That's Incredible was aired. But the spark that set me in motion was The Electronic Circus.
-Walter Day


Day's idea was to keep the main focus but cut the flab, he was determined to succeed where the Electronic Circus men had failed. They would tour the country, visiting arcades and challenging all comers, setting high scores and gaining the respect and admiration of women and sponsors (his words).

[image loading]
The master tournament series went through a few name changes.


At the same time Twin Galaxies was running a tournament called the 1983 Video Game Masters Tournament, essentially a way to gather up high scores for the Guinness World Record book. The plan was to take this newly formed team and drive to each city the event would be held in, 8 total, to talk to the media and do demonstrations. Typical promotional stuff to spark interest.

[image loading]

I started with a simple concept. I just made T-shirts. Six of them; six red and white shirts, each with the last name of a player emblazoned on the back and the Ottumwa logo on the front. The back of my shirt said 'Day' of course. Billy Mitchell, Steve Harris, Tim McVey, Jay Kim and Ben Gold each got shirts, too. I paid $60 for them, all the money I had. This was my first investment in the team.


Innocent enough start. That part where he says it was the last of his cash is interesting but we're not here to judge. They began in August of 1983, loading up a rented bus with nine arcade machines hooked up to a generator. They played games in the bus and brought mattresses to sleep there at night, though occasionally they slept in the homes of friends of their cause. They were basically road hustlers but with video games.

Driving across Ohio in daylight, with our U.S. National Video Game Team emblems flapping, was a great high. Everybody saw us, kids pointed, cars honked, girls waved. We were gods.


Paradise doesn't last forever. They ran into problems with the bus and it completely broke down on their way to Minnesota. They briefly used a school bus but the kids hated that, so they ended up switching to roaming around in a rental car. The stops sound like they mostly went as planned, the kids weren't great with media but learned how to handle the press along the way. Disappointingly this video is the only one that has found its way to youtube.

The end of their trip had them visiting Nintendo and Sega factories, talking about games with them and playing some prototypes. Their trip ended with them hightailing it out of the Sega factory right as the employees were being told they had been sold to Bally/Midway and were being shut down. A fitting end? They went their separate ways, scattered across the country until the next season.

They never were able to crack the Japanese Embassy, though they successfully challenged the country of Italy in a confusing situation where they never actually met face to face and played. Apparently there was some kind of rivalry at least.

In the following years Walter went off to do whatever it is Walter does (think up increasingly offbeat promotion ideas hopefully). Steve Harris, one of the original six members, assumed control of the team and oversaw their activities until its death. Around the same time he also formed Electronic Gaming Monthly, the magazine that kept the team in print journalism for several years and probably did a better job of introducing them to the right audience than any other outfit.

Exactly how and why the team descended into nothingness isn't anything I have been able to clearly piece together. Most of the members were reluctant to accept console gaming, not believing they challenged a player's skills enough to matter. Pretty sure that makes the skill argument literally the oldest on in the book.

As arcades waned in popularity through the last 80s and Nintendo plowed the way for a new generation of home systems it seems their relevance must have simply disappeared. Unable to fetch sponsorship directly from game companies, their goal at the start, they really had no purpose when arcades began to shrink. That is pure speculation though, I really have no idea. The period between the mid 80s and mid 90s is largely dark to history. The only thing for sure is that 1986 was the last year they added new members.

Maybe there is a lesson to be learned here, now that we are facing ESPORTS growth in the west. Maybe. It is, at the very least, a good reminder of how fragile these scenes are. All of these men dreamed of making video games their career and none of them were able to do it, all becoming the boring kinds of middle aged men their teenage selves hated and feared.


****
@RealHeyoka | ESL / DreamHack StarCraft Lead
DoukNoukem
Profile Joined November 2010
Canada27 Posts
July 26 2011 06:18 GMT
#2
Man, I loved all the old video game tourneys and everything Twin Galaxies has done.

Great blog!
"Your face? Your ass? What's the difference?"
DroneAllDay
Profile Joined April 2011
United States140 Posts
Last Edited: 2011-07-26 07:04:00
July 26 2011 06:19 GMT
#3
Wow kinda a cool B.E. (before E-SPORTS) look, a very nice, interesting read. I also believe that this shouldn't be in blogs.

Edit: changed almost to also (I'm blaming auto-correct on that one.)
Don't pressure me please, I like my drones too much
Torte de Lini
Profile Blog Joined September 2010
Germany38463 Posts
July 26 2011 06:30 GMT
#4
So rare, a game with high-scores! I miss the times where people fought to beat each other points D:

I think what I miss the most is the feeling of consequence, where if I die, the game ends.
I just played bioshock and it was by far the most discouraging part of the game for me.
https://twitter.com/#!/TorteDeLini (@TorteDeLini)
Xxio
Profile Blog Joined July 2009
Canada5565 Posts
July 26 2011 06:32 GMT
#5
Well-written, insightful, and informative. Such a good read.

On July 26 2011 15:19 DroneAllDay wrote:
I almost believe that this shouldn't be in blogs.


Agreed!
KTY
p4NDemik
Profile Blog Joined January 2008
United States13896 Posts
July 26 2011 06:36 GMT
#6
Sick you finally released it! Great read!
Moderator
HawaiianPig
Profile Blog Joined July 2008
Canada5155 Posts
July 26 2011 06:42 GMT
#7
Sobering thoughts at the end there. Nice article
AdministratorNot actually Hawaiian.
Dingobloo
Profile Blog Joined September 2010
Australia1903 Posts
July 26 2011 06:54 GMT
#8
Wow, Didn't realize that's why Steve Harris started EGM, very informative and interesting read.
meep
Profile Blog Joined August 2009
United States1699 Posts
July 26 2011 07:10 GMT
#9
ESPORTS!
閑静 しずか (ノ・_・)ノ
Kiante
Profile Blog Joined December 2009
Australia7069 Posts
July 26 2011 07:20 GMT
#10
really good read. my only question is why isn't this spotlighted :O
Writer
duk3
Profile Joined September 2010
United States807 Posts
July 26 2011 07:32 GMT
#11
Awesome read, really interesting to see all the old game events
Time flies like an arrow; fruit flies like a banana.
Ruyguy
Profile Blog Joined January 2011
Canada988 Posts
July 26 2011 07:34 GMT
#12
awsome read before I sleep. Well written I remember watching that donkey kong movie about walter day and stuff a while ago too. Nice 5000 post.
Sermokala
Profile Blog Joined November 2010
United States13990 Posts
July 26 2011 07:47 GMT
#13
This should be a Final Edit a News piece if nothing else the best post I've seen on team liquid in the year I've been here.
A wise man will say that he knows nothing. We're gona party like its 2752 Hail Dark Brandon
mizU
Profile Blog Joined April 2010
United States12125 Posts
July 26 2011 07:52 GMT
#14
Before there was ESPORTS there was Day... 8. Amazing.
if happy ever afters did exist <3 @watamizu_
RoyaleBrainSlug
Profile Joined December 2010
United States295 Posts
Last Edited: 2011-07-26 08:00:19
July 26 2011 07:58 GMT
#15
People need to watch the King of Kong documentary. It's all about early pro-gaming, and a really entertaining story of one man who always comes in second... its not yellow :O
Zileas is my Homeboy
Pandemona *
Profile Blog Joined March 2011
Charlie Sheens House51491 Posts
July 26 2011 08:15 GMT
#16
wow that story was sad the way i read it anyway, poor gaming scene in the 80s

And they never did get to play the Japanese Not fair!!!

Such a cool idea though, glad there is people like that who helped changed the scene for us, whats worst...1980s...is now, 30 years ago 0.O makes you feel old eh -_-

Nice article thanks for the insight
ModeratorTeam Liquid Football Thread Guru! - Chelsea FC ♥
chinstrap
Profile Joined April 2011
United Kingdom253 Posts
July 26 2011 08:45 GMT
#17
Great read!

Is it just me or was the coverage of that tournament pretty good? They kinda lost the tension at the end but for a first shot at ESPORTS it could have been worse ^^
DivinO
Profile Blog Joined July 2009
United States4796 Posts
July 26 2011 09:01 GMT
#18
To the way right of that first picture... isn't that Billy Mitchell?
LiquipediaBrain in my filth.
Vansetsu
Profile Blog Joined October 2010
United States1454 Posts
Last Edited: 2011-07-26 09:08:31
July 26 2011 09:01 GMT
#19
Nice 5000th post! Though these particular events are past my time, it reminds me of how long I could seemingly keep myself occupied with 1$ in an arcade. Platformers and Pinball are where it certainly started for me.

EDIT: After reading this I think that after the Up and Down matches this morning, I am going to stream the greatest unknown NES game ever created. Prepare to be blown away.
Only by overcoming many obstacles does a river become - デイヴィ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ド
butch
Profile Joined August 2010
Belgium684 Posts
Last Edited: 2011-07-26 09:20:13
July 26 2011 09:19 GMT
#20
Pretty sure the dude on the right was on MTV True Life: I'm a Gamer, with Fatality etc.

found it:
+ Show Spoiler +


Marauder Die Die
1 2 3 Next All
Please log in or register to reply.
Live Events Refresh
Next event in 7h 54m
[ Submit Event ]
Live Streams
Refresh
StarCraft 2
WinterStarcraft491
RuFF_SC2 130
CosmosSc2 66
Vindicta 35
StarCraft: Brood War
Artosis 673
Shuttle 564
Light 181
Aegong 82
NaDa 23
ajuk12(nOOB) 18
Icarus 6
Dota 2
monkeys_forever855
NeuroSwarm159
Counter-Strike
Stewie2K441
Fnx 428
PGG 141
Super Smash Bros
C9.Mang0385
Mew2King36
Other Games
summit1g6873
shahzam825
JimRising 549
Trikslyr61
Nina45
ViBE29
Organizations
StarCraft 2
Blizzard YouTube
StarCraft: Brood War
BSLTrovo
sctven
[ Show 15 non-featured ]
StarCraft 2
• Berry_CruncH133
• davetesta21
• AfreecaTV YouTube
• intothetv
• Kozan
• IndyKCrew
• LaughNgamezSOOP
• Migwel
• sooper7s
StarCraft: Brood War
• RayReign 18
• BSLYoutube
• STPLYoutube
• ZZZeroYoutube
League of Legends
• Doublelift4941
Other Games
• Scarra1225
Upcoming Events
RSL Revival
7h 54m
Zoun vs Classic
Map Test Tournament
8h 54m
Korean StarCraft League
1d
BSL Open LAN 2025 - War…
1d 5h
RSL Revival
1d 7h
Reynor vs Cure
BSL Open LAN 2025 - War…
2 days
RSL Revival
2 days
Online Event
2 days
Wardi Open
3 days
Monday Night Weeklies
3 days
[ Show More ]
Sparkling Tuna Cup
4 days
LiuLi Cup
5 days
The PondCast
6 days
Liquipedia Results

Completed

Proleague 2025-09-10
Chzzk MurlocKing SC1 vs SC2 Cup #2
HCC Europe

Ongoing

BSL 20 Team Wars
KCM Race Survival 2025 Season 3
BSL 21 Points
ASL Season 20
CSL 2025 AUTUMN (S18)
LASL Season 20
RSL Revival: Season 2
Maestros of the Game
StarSeries Fall 2025
FISSURE Playground #2
BLAST Open Fall 2025
BLAST Open Fall Qual
Esports World Cup 2025
BLAST Bounty Fall 2025
BLAST Bounty Fall Qual
IEM Cologne 2025
FISSURE Playground #1

Upcoming

2025 Chongqing Offline CUP
BSL World Championship of Poland 2025
IPSL Winter 2025-26
BSL Season 21
SC4ALL: Brood War
BSL 21 Team A
Stellar Fest
SC4ALL: StarCraft II
EC S1
ESL Impact League Season 8
SL Budapest Major 2025
BLAST Rivals Fall 2025
IEM Chengdu 2025
PGL Masters Bucharest 2025
Thunderpick World Champ.
CS Asia Championships 2025
ESL Pro League S22
TLPD

1. ByuN
2. TY
3. Dark
4. Solar
5. Stats
6. Nerchio
7. sOs
8. soO
9. INnoVation
10. Elazer
1. Rain
2. Flash
3. EffOrt
4. Last
5. Bisu
6. Soulkey
7. Mini
8. Sharp
Sidebar Settings...

Advertising | Privacy Policy | Terms Of Use | Contact Us

Original banner artwork: Jim Warren
The contents of this webpage are copyright © 2025 TLnet. All Rights Reserved.