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iNcontroL
USA29055 Posts
On May 03 2011 15:02 Chill wrote:Show nested quote +On May 03 2011 13:53 iNcontroL wrote:On May 03 2011 13:40 Chill wrote:On May 03 2011 12:55 Joementum wrote:On May 03 2011 12:02 iNcontroL wrote: fun thread but so far this has been a bunch of people that have absolutely no idea judging/speculating on the salaries of players based on what Destiny said in an interview and what IdrA charges for coaching.
btw he charges that much not because he is in that high of demand but because he doesn't want to coach.. unless someone pays him tremendously. Why not shed some light on it then instead of saying "LOL noobs speculating?" Otherwise, just let us speculate. There's only one player we know of and it's Destiny since he's come out and said how much he makes. Agreed. There is no way to come off as good talking about how much you make playing sc2. And it's just not a good idea. I agree. So berating the curious doesn't add anything.
Nah, you are wrong.
They are speculating. Nobody is denying that. I posted confirming that indeed it is fruitless and they are basing their speculation on the wrong idea in regard to idra.
Wasn't berating.
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Australia8532 Posts
On May 03 2011 14:15 Sokalo wrote: I just recalled something that hasn't been brought up. White-Ra commented that he got a job because there was just no way he could support a family as a progamer. I don't know if he stuck with that though since he still seems to be pretty damn active.
But that's coming from freaking WhiteDuckload-Ra, who's skill and marketability aren't easily matched. But then again, when White-Ra went on that awesome run earlier in the year (maybe even late last year) it was said that in a few months he made more than the average salary for his country.
The ambiguity continues.
And LOL at all the responses to iNcontrol; the guy makes a comment about how this entire thread is about speculation and conjecture.. and he is holding back esports?
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On May 03 2011 15:36 Holcan wrote:Show nested quote +On May 03 2011 15:27 Azzur wrote:On May 03 2011 14:06 Inori wrote:On May 03 2011 13:56 iNcontroL wrote: A. there was no making fun in my post wtf? B. How am I holding back ESPORTS by saying people don't know pro gamer salaries? C. WTFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFF A. It sure did sound like it. B. I didn't say you were holding it back, but you sure don't help it grow by saying "Wow you people are clueless, but I'm not helping you out either, just stating you're clueless!". C. Ok. About being rude and whatnot - nobody asked iNcontroL or Destiny or IdrA or whoever directly how much exactly is he making. Maybe, just maybe, some people want to know how much money they could potentially generate if they pursue pro-gaming. Would you consider it to be rude if asked "How much can software engineer earn?". I definitely wouldn't feel offended by such a question and could answer it with a good estimate without giving away my own salary. I agree with this post. I think it's reasonable that people want to know how much a "typical" pro can make. Like it or not, money is an important (but not the only) factor when choosing a career path. Gaming isnt a career path, some people have been lucky enough to have it fall into their laps, but very few people who are pros set out to become a pro when they first started playing their game. Michael Jordan was supposed to become a baseball player, with luck and timing a basketball was placed into his hands and history was forged. Mauer could have become a NFL 3rd or even 2nd string QB, but instead focused on baseball and now has one of the best careers in the MLB. The fate of winners is but on a whim, and the mere flapping the wings of a butterfly may be forever altering the future of winners to come. I disagree - gaming is a career path. Is it easy and financially lucrative? I would say no, but that is besides the point.
There are people who choose to go on this path (just as many sports people try and make a living out of it). Knowing how much money can be made from this path is something that can influence decisions.
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iNcontroL
USA29055 Posts
On May 03 2011 15:13 Duravi wrote:Show nested quote +There is no way to come off as good talking about how much you make playing sc2. And it's just not a good idea. I don't agree with this in some cases. For instance, MKP's parents did not like him playing SC2 so much and discouraged him from it, but once he was able to start making decent money from it and they saw that, they changed their attitude. If people outside the community can see that there is a possibility for individuals to make good money in SC2 it helps to fight against negative attitudes about gaming and encourages more people to become interested in the community.
I disagree.
The very tip top 1% make enough money to live off of.
Then you have half THAT percent that make a wealthy living off of this game.
What job market would you want to enter where 1% of the people make a living off that money? It's false advertising.
But that is beyond the point. I was stating that I am uncomfortable with a bunch of people speculating on the income of progamers based off a bunch of false information or tid-bits they got from a yt video or some dude's coaching rate.
I am even further displeased with admins somehow painting me the villain and telling me I am "berating" people or PM'ing me and telling me I am not welcome in the thread (IntotheWOw)
really gross tbh
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Other than in Korea going pro is one of the worst things you can ever do in your life - along with those hardcore master league players with over 5k games played and still nothing to show for it...I swear they play for at least 5 hours a day and spend an additional 2 hours or so reviewing and finding strategies.
Look at Greg Fields, the biggest American superstar...18k in winnings over a year (about), maybe if you included a nice salary package of 25k and perhaps fringe coaching/donations/whatever of 2k (because seriously who pays couple hundred bucks for lessons), that comes up to 45k per year, that's about the average American GDP/capita. Very optimistic calculations.
Except that he probably won't be able to do this as a long-term career, as there's probably a burnout around age 32~ like most athletes suffer - an age when most counterparts are climbing the corporate ladder.
The bottom line is that youth-dependent superstars need to be making at least about 100k a year in their prime to insure their future. I hear Greg is pretty smart, though, so he can at least complete some kind of degree in the future and start up an ordinary career. In that sense his situation is actually pretty alright, not due to e-sports, but because of his academic ability.
Now, how about those that aren't able to attend college?
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I disagree.
The very tip top 1% make enough money to live off of.
Then you have half THAT percent that make a wealthy living off of this game.
What job market would you want to enter where 1% of the people make a living off that money? It's false advertising.
I would argue many sports are the same. What percent of the people who play bball or football in high school are actually able to make a career out of it? That doesn't stop people from trying and teams hyping how much they pay. To be fair a wealthy living off of SC2 and a wealthy living off of pro sports are pretty far apart, but I put that more on esports being a very recent thing while those pro-sports have been established for much much longer.
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On May 03 2011 15:46 iNcontroL wrote:Show nested quote +On May 03 2011 15:13 Duravi wrote:There is no way to come off as good talking about how much you make playing sc2. And it's just not a good idea. I don't agree with this in some cases. For instance, MKP's parents did not like him playing SC2 so much and discouraged him from it, but once he was able to start making decent money from it and they saw that, they changed their attitude. If people outside the community can see that there is a possibility for individuals to make good money in SC2 it helps to fight against negative attitudes about gaming and encourages more people to become interested in the community. But that is beyond the point. I was stating that I am uncomfortable with a bunch of people speculating on the income of progamers based off a bunch of false information or tid-bits they got from a yt video or some dude's coaching rate.
There's only one way out of that one, I'm afriad. Speculation will continue until people have concrete information, and that doesn't seem forthcoming.
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iNcontroL
USA29055 Posts
On May 03 2011 15:53 Duravi wrote:Show nested quote +I disagree.
The very tip top 1% make enough money to live off of.
Then you have half THAT percent that make a wealthy living off of this game.
What job market would you want to enter where 1% of the people make a living off that money? It's false advertising. I would argue many sports are the same. What percent of the people who play bball or football in high school are actually able to make a career out of it? That doesn't stop people from trying and teams hyping how much they pay.
Correct. But you wouldn't look your mom in the eye while watching an NFL game and go "Well I've decided I know what I want to do for a living! I'm going to be that 1% that makes it to the NFL!"
Or maybe you do. But they know you won't make it.
By all means chase the dream and go for it. I am obviously not one to say don't. But saying progamers having their earnings made public so kids can make the argument to their parents that they CAN earn a living playing this game all day is not a good argument imo.
You really going to stand behind that?
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On May 03 2011 08:06 Drlemur wrote:
Note: I'm pretty sure they aren't earning as much as they should. For the amount of entertainment they are providing us, I'd like to see these guys get paid like pro athletes --- the people running & casting TL, NASL, etc., should also be getting paid a living. Is it happening yet? If not, I hope it happens soon.
what...paid like pro athletes? lololol I mean I hope just like you do but this is wishful thinking at best. this will not happen anytime SOON. You are aware that the current scene is still developing and hasn't been fleshed out yet?
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United Arab Emirates1141 Posts
On May 03 2011 15:46 iNcontroL wrote:Show nested quote +On May 03 2011 15:13 Duravi wrote:There is no way to come off as good talking about how much you make playing sc2. And it's just not a good idea. I don't agree with this in some cases. For instance, MKP's parents did not like him playing SC2 so much and discouraged him from it, but once he was able to start making decent money from it and they saw that, they changed their attitude. If people outside the community can see that there is a possibility for individuals to make good money in SC2 it helps to fight against negative attitudes about gaming and encourages more people to become interested in the community. I disagree. The very tip top 1% make enough money to live off of. Then you have half THAT percent that make a wealthy living off of this game. What job market would you want to enter where 1% of the people make a living off that money? It's false advertising. But that is beyond the point. I was stating that I am uncomfortable with a bunch of people speculating on the income of progamers based off a bunch of false information or tid-bits they got from a yt video or some dude's coaching rate. I am even further displeased with admins somehow painting me the villain and telling me I am "berating" people or PM'ing me and telling me I am not welcome in the thread (IntotheWOw) really gross tbh
or you could just help all the speculators by being a kind person.
Let's say someone asked me "How much do interns, residents and accredited registrars earn in Australia? How much do Consultants earn? Whats the pay-grade differences between Public and Private Healthcare?"
I can happily give an estimate to all of those questions without exposing my own pay-grade. People like to know because people are curious. Some want to know before they start practicing hardcore to attempt to become a pro-gamer.
At the same time, I can understand that it is a social taboo to ask about salaries. I never asked how much my friend's dad was earning as a Engineer in high-end management. But yea - it's not hard to just let speculators know an estimate. Withholding information makes you look like an awesome guy
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On May 03 2011 15:53 Duravi wrote:Show nested quote +I disagree.
The very tip top 1% make enough money to live off of.
Then you have half THAT percent that make a wealthy living off of this game.
What job market would you want to enter where 1% of the people make a living off that money? It's false advertising. I would argue many sports are the same. What percent of the people who play bball or football in high school are actually able to make a career out of it? That doesn't stop people from trying and teams hyping how much they pay. To be fair a wealthy living off of SC2 and a wealthy living off of pro sports are pretty far apart, but I put that more on esports being a very recent thing while those pro-sports have been established for much much longer.
Look at the pay scales for football...English football, that is, guys. Don't know about American. The top superstars are beyond wealthy...they're filthy rich. I could play for a year and retire happy. Even your average first division (one step below premier league) player makes a pretty decent living out of it.
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United Arab Emirates1141 Posts
On May 03 2011 16:01 Inori wrote:Show nested quote +On May 03 2011 15:57 iNcontroL wrote:On May 03 2011 15:53 Duravi wrote: I disagree.
The very tip top 1% make enough money to live off of.
Then you have half THAT percent that make a wealthy living off of this game.
What job market would you want to enter where 1% of the people make a living off that money? It's false advertising. But saying progamers having their earnings made public so kids can make the argument to their parents that they CAN earn a living playing this game all day is not a good argument imo. You really going to stand behind that? You're still missing the point that nobody gives a damn about how much exactly do you personally make. People speculate because nobody gives them reliable estimates.
Precisely. It's not hard to give an estimate, or even several estimates according to what each pro-gamer does - like if he streams with ads, if he coaches, what team contracts typically are for S-class, A-class players
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By all means chase the dream and go for it. I am obviously not one to say don't. But saying progamers having their earnings made public so kids can make the argument to their parents that they CAN earn a living playing this game all day is not a good argument imo.
You really going to stand behind that?
It gives hope to make money at something you enjoy. I had a roommate in college who now plays football in the NFL and one big reason he wanted to play football at a high level was because he had a relative who was already in the NFL and saw the outcome hard work in something he enjoyed could give him. He also had a back-up plan in case it didn't work out, so obviously it wise to be realistic about it and I totally agree with you in that respect. I just don't see a problem with releasing the AVERAGE amount those 1% do make.
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iNcontroL
USA29055 Posts
On May 03 2011 15:59 JesusOurSaviour wrote:Show nested quote +On May 03 2011 15:46 iNcontroL wrote:On May 03 2011 15:13 Duravi wrote:There is no way to come off as good talking about how much you make playing sc2. And it's just not a good idea. I don't agree with this in some cases. For instance, MKP's parents did not like him playing SC2 so much and discouraged him from it, but once he was able to start making decent money from it and they saw that, they changed their attitude. If people outside the community can see that there is a possibility for individuals to make good money in SC2 it helps to fight against negative attitudes about gaming and encourages more people to become interested in the community. I disagree. The very tip top 1% make enough money to live off of. Then you have half THAT percent that make a wealthy living off of this game. What job market would you want to enter where 1% of the people make a living off that money? It's false advertising. But that is beyond the point. I was stating that I am uncomfortable with a bunch of people speculating on the income of progamers based off a bunch of false information or tid-bits they got from a yt video or some dude's coaching rate. I am even further displeased with admins somehow painting me the villain and telling me I am "berating" people or PM'ing me and telling me I am not welcome in the thread (IntotheWOw) really gross tbh or you could just help all the speculators by being a kind person. Let's say someone asked me "How much do interns, residents and accredited registrars earn in Australia? How much do Consultants earn? Whats the pay-grade differences between Public and Private Healthcare?" I can happily give an estimate to all of those questions without exposing my own pay-grade. People like to know because people are curious. Some want to know before they start practicing hardcore to attempt to become a pro-gamer. At the same time, I can understand that it is a social taboo to ask about salaries. I never asked how much my friend's dad was earning as a Engineer in high-end management. But yea - it's not hard to just let speculators know an estimate. Withholding information makes you look like an awesome guy
But there in lies the problem. There is no standard pay / salary for a player. Some players earn more on a team some earn NOTHING but travel/gear. Some players sell themselves out and advertise/represent sponsored gear. Some players coach (most). Some stream (most) and are partnered but at different scales/rates. All this information is personal to the player. Each player exists in a tedious existence where their team salary is under NDA for obvious reasons as well as their stream revenue. Players who do other activities and get paid for it are told not to share...
Beyond ALL that it's just plain rude. There is a reason there isn't a lot of information on progamers salaries aside from the big big dogs in korea making 100's of thousands of dollars (boxer etc).
So when a thread sparks up where it is fun to talk about other people's money sure, I get that. I think it would be fun too. But when people are interpreting things like "well idra charges 300$ that must mean he gets LOTS of coaching!" or where this thread COULD go (and for some already has) where people start speculating on how much I get for casting NASL or Day9 gets per event... nothing good can come of it. I understand the conversation. I truly do. But just watch where this goes.. you think it will be "oh wow, good for him! I hope he is doing awesome." Or do you think it will be "he prob gets nothing cause he sucks LOLOLOL" or "he is overpaid and hasn't won anything recently."
The natural post to follow mine here is to say I am insecure and worried those flames will be directed at me. If anything is true know this: I am more than comfortable taking the brunt of the criticism.
In any case I can see it isn't really interesting to have me telling you guys this is lame and invasive. I will leave you all to it <3
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On May 03 2011 15:57 iNcontroL wrote:Show nested quote +On May 03 2011 15:53 Duravi wrote:I disagree.
The very tip top 1% make enough money to live off of.
Then you have half THAT percent that make a wealthy living off of this game.
What job market would you want to enter where 1% of the people make a living off that money? It's false advertising. I would argue many sports are the same. What percent of the people who play bball or football in high school are actually able to make a career out of it? That doesn't stop people from trying and teams hyping how much they pay. Correct. But you wouldn't look your mom in the eye while watching an NFL game and go "Well I've decided I know what I want to do for a living! I'm going to be that 1% that makes it to the NFL!" Or maybe you do. But they know you won't make it. By all means chase the dream and go for it. I am obviously not one to say don't. But saying progamers having their earnings made public so kids can make the argument to their parents that they CAN earn a living playing this game all day is not a good argument imo. You really going to stand behind that?
but what if we don't give a crap about becoming a pro-gamer and simply just want to know how much you guys make. we are just curious and want to know. we are not going to use this information to persuade mother and father, or in any other ill manner. we just want to know how much you guys make...so maybe we can donate if you guys give us a low number
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United Arab Emirates1141 Posts
On May 03 2011 16:05 iNcontroL wrote:Show nested quote +On May 03 2011 15:59 JesusOurSaviour wrote:On May 03 2011 15:46 iNcontroL wrote:On May 03 2011 15:13 Duravi wrote:There is no way to come off as good talking about how much you make playing sc2. And it's just not a good idea. I don't agree with this in some cases. For instance, MKP's parents did not like him playing SC2 so much and discouraged him from it, but once he was able to start making decent money from it and they saw that, they changed their attitude. If people outside the community can see that there is a possibility for individuals to make good money in SC2 it helps to fight against negative attitudes about gaming and encourages more people to become interested in the community. I disagree. The very tip top 1% make enough money to live off of. Then you have half THAT percent that make a wealthy living off of this game. What job market would you want to enter where 1% of the people make a living off that money? It's false advertising. But that is beyond the point. I was stating that I am uncomfortable with a bunch of people speculating on the income of progamers based off a bunch of false information or tid-bits they got from a yt video or some dude's coaching rate. I am even further displeased with admins somehow painting me the villain and telling me I am "berating" people or PM'ing me and telling me I am not welcome in the thread (IntotheWOw) really gross tbh or you could just help all the speculators by being a kind person. Let's say someone asked me "How much do interns, residents and accredited registrars earn in Australia? How much do Consultants earn? Whats the pay-grade differences between Public and Private Healthcare?" I can happily give an estimate to all of those questions without exposing my own pay-grade. People like to know because people are curious. Some want to know before they start practicing hardcore to attempt to become a pro-gamer. At the same time, I can understand that it is a social taboo to ask about salaries. I never asked how much my friend's dad was earning as a Engineer in high-end management. But yea - it's not hard to just let speculators know an estimate. Withholding information makes you look like an awesome guy But there in lies the problem. There is no standard pay / salary for a player. Some players earn more on a team some earn NOTHING but travel/gear. Some players sell themselves out and advertise/represent sponsored gear. Some players coach (most). Some stream (most) and are partnered but at different scales/rates. All this information is personal to the player. Each player exists in a tedious existence where their team salary is under NDA for obvious reasons as well as their stream revenue. Players who do other activities and get paid for it are told not to share... Beyond ALL that it's just plain rude. There is a reason there isn't a lot of information on progamers salaries aside from the big big dogs in korea making 100's of thousands of dollars (boxer etc). So when a thread sparks up where it is fun to talk about other people's money sure, I get that. I think it would be fun too. But when people are interpreting things like "well idra charges 300$ that must mean he gets LOTS of coaching!" or where this thread COULD go (and for some already has) where people start speculating on how much I get for casting NASL or Day9 gets per event... nothing good can come of it. I understand the conversation. I truly do. But just watch where this goes.. you think it will be "oh wow, good for him! I hope he is doing awesome." Or do you think it will be "he prob gets nothing cause he sucks LOLOLOL" or "he is overpaid and hasn't won anything recently." The natural post to follow mine here is to say I am insecure and worried those flames will be directed at me. If anything is true know this: I am more than comfortable taking the brunt of the criticism. In any case I can see it isn't really interesting to have me telling you guys this is lame and invasive. I will leave you all to it <3
Hmmm it's just a taboo which is specific to E-sports then. So I guess the point you're making is that unless things become more transparent in the future for whatever reason, the current status quo is that all of this is confidential and to speculate is fruitless and even more so, rude.
We get you, will stop prodding seeing as you won't budge
EDIT: and Apologies for being a little upfront in the last post. Just let loose from frustration which was unfounded. All good, will let this topic rest in peace.
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On May 03 2011 16:05 iNcontroL wrote:Show nested quote +On May 03 2011 15:59 JesusOurSaviour wrote:On May 03 2011 15:46 iNcontroL wrote:On May 03 2011 15:13 Duravi wrote:There is no way to come off as good talking about how much you make playing sc2. And it's just not a good idea. I don't agree with this in some cases. For instance, MKP's parents did not like him playing SC2 so much and discouraged him from it, but once he was able to start making decent money from it and they saw that, they changed their attitude. If people outside the community can see that there is a possibility for individuals to make good money in SC2 it helps to fight against negative attitudes about gaming and encourages more people to become interested in the community. I disagree. The very tip top 1% make enough money to live off of. Then you have half THAT percent that make a wealthy living off of this game. What job market would you want to enter where 1% of the people make a living off that money? It's false advertising. But that is beyond the point. I was stating that I am uncomfortable with a bunch of people speculating on the income of progamers based off a bunch of false information or tid-bits they got from a yt video or some dude's coaching rate. I am even further displeased with admins somehow painting me the villain and telling me I am "berating" people or PM'ing me and telling me I am not welcome in the thread (IntotheWOw) really gross tbh or you could just help all the speculators by being a kind person. Let's say someone asked me "How much do interns, residents and accredited registrars earn in Australia? How much do Consultants earn? Whats the pay-grade differences between Public and Private Healthcare?" I can happily give an estimate to all of those questions without exposing my own pay-grade. People like to know because people are curious. Some want to know before they start practicing hardcore to attempt to become a pro-gamer. At the same time, I can understand that it is a social taboo to ask about salaries. I never asked how much my friend's dad was earning as a Engineer in high-end management. But yea - it's not hard to just let speculators know an estimate. Withholding information makes you look like an awesome guy But there in lies the problem. There is no standard pay / salary for a player. Some players earn more on a team some earn NOTHING but travel/gear. Some players sell themselves out and advertise/represent sponsored gear. Some players coach (most). Some stream (most) and are partnered but at different scales/rates. All this information is personal to the player. Each player exists in a tedious existence where their team salary is under NDA for obvious reasons as well as their stream revenue. Players who do other activities and get paid for it are told not to share... Beyond ALL that it's just plain rude. There is a reason there isn't a lot of information on progamers salaries aside from the big big dogs in korea making 100's of thousands of dollars (boxer etc). So when a thread sparks up where it is fun to talk about other people's money sure, I get that. I think it would be fun too. But when people are interpreting things like "well idra charges 300$ that must mean he gets LOTS of coaching!" or where this thread COULD go (and for some already has) where people start speculating on how much I get for casting NASL or Day9 gets per event... nothing good can come of it. I understand the conversation. I truly do. But just watch where this goes.. you think it will be "oh wow, good for him! I hope he is doing awesome." Or do you think it will be "he prob gets nothing cause he sucks LOLOLOL" or "he is overpaid and hasn't won anything recently." The natural post to follow mine here is to say I am insecure and worried those flames will be directed at me. If anything is true know this: I am more than comfortable taking the brunt of the criticism. In any case I can see it isn't really interesting to have me telling you guys this is lame and invasive. I will leave you all to it <3
okay I understand how it might be invasive. you got a point. but instead of giving us specific numbers, cant you give us a ballpark? like a summary? that would be fair. you dont have to list names and stuff.
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Why do you think its rude incontrol? I know that is the general opinion, especially in america, but why is talking about salary so taboo? I have never understood the reasoning behind this. Perhaps people worry that if it is too low it makes them appear worthless?
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On May 03 2011 16:05 iNcontroL wrote:Show nested quote +On May 03 2011 15:59 JesusOurSaviour wrote:On May 03 2011 15:46 iNcontroL wrote:On May 03 2011 15:13 Duravi wrote:There is no way to come off as good talking about how much you make playing sc2. And it's just not a good idea. I don't agree with this in some cases. For instance, MKP's parents did not like him playing SC2 so much and discouraged him from it, but once he was able to start making decent money from it and they saw that, they changed their attitude. If people outside the community can see that there is a possibility for individuals to make good money in SC2 it helps to fight against negative attitudes about gaming and encourages more people to become interested in the community. I disagree. The very tip top 1% make enough money to live off of. Then you have half THAT percent that make a wealthy living off of this game. What job market would you want to enter where 1% of the people make a living off that money? It's false advertising. But that is beyond the point. I was stating that I am uncomfortable with a bunch of people speculating on the income of progamers based off a bunch of false information or tid-bits they got from a yt video or some dude's coaching rate. I am even further displeased with admins somehow painting me the villain and telling me I am "berating" people or PM'ing me and telling me I am not welcome in the thread (IntotheWOw) really gross tbh or you could just help all the speculators by being a kind person. Let's say someone asked me "How much do interns, residents and accredited registrars earn in Australia? How much do Consultants earn? Whats the pay-grade differences between Public and Private Healthcare?" I can happily give an estimate to all of those questions without exposing my own pay-grade. People like to know because people are curious. Some want to know before they start practicing hardcore to attempt to become a pro-gamer. At the same time, I can understand that it is a social taboo to ask about salaries. I never asked how much my friend's dad was earning as a Engineer in high-end management. But yea - it's not hard to just let speculators know an estimate. Withholding information makes you look like an awesome guy But there in lies the problem. There is no standard pay / salary for a player. Some players earn more on a team some earn NOTHING but travel/gear. Some players sell themselves out and advertise/represent sponsored gear. Some players coach (most). Some stream (most) and are partnered but at different scales/rates. All this information is personal to the player. Each player exists in a tedious existence where their team salary is under NDA for obvious reasons as well as their stream revenue. Players who do other activities and get paid for it are told not to share... Beyond ALL that it's just plain rude. There is a reason there isn't a lot of information on progamers salaries aside from the big big dogs in korea making 100's of thousands of dollars (boxer etc). So when a thread sparks up where it is fun to talk about other people's money sure, I get that. I think it would be fun too. But when people are interpreting things like "well idra charges 300$ that must mean he gets LOTS of coaching!" or where this thread COULD go (and for some already has) where people start speculating on how much I get for casting NASL or Day9 gets per event... nothing good can come of it. I understand the conversation. I truly do. But just watch where this goes.. you think it will be "oh wow, good for him! I hope he is doing awesome." Or do you think it will be "he prob gets nothing cause he sucks LOLOLOL" or "he is overpaid and hasn't won anything recently." The natural post to follow mine here is to say I am insecure and worried those flames will be directed at me. If anything is true know this: I am more than comfortable taking the brunt of the criticism. In any case I can see it isn't really interesting to have me telling you guys this is lame and invasive. I will leave you all to it <3 Good for you Geoff, calling it like you see it.
Admittedly I was slightly uncomfortable with the topic from the get go, but you've summed things up pretty well. Explaining roughly how much one stands to make is one thing, trying to pry into people's finances is another, and can only be harmful to those players and the community as a whole.
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