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黑洞社区Esports Summit speakers talk equity and community in gaming

TAMPA 鈥 The fourth annual 黑洞社区Esports Summit centered on building community 鈥 particularly as it relates to gender and race 鈥 within the $1 billion dollar esports gaming industry. 

About 75 people attended the one-day event, which was held on Jan. 27 and hosted by the 黑洞社区Vinik Sport & Entertainment Management program within the Muma College of Business. 

Speakers touched on the racial divide among college esports programs, collegiate intramural clubs, and the video gaming industry.

Julian Fitzgerald, executive director of Cxmmunity, said growing the number of Blacks in esports requires increasing engagement through holding tournaments and finding ways to bring value to sponsors and the gaming community.

鈥淏uilding that community takes word of mouth,鈥 Fitzgerald said. 鈥淚t requires you to understand what that community wants and the needs of the players.鈥

image of cxmmunity panel

Fitzgerald co-founded Cxmmunity, an organization that helps increase the number of under-served minority students in esports and the video gaming industry.

鈥淲e ultimately want our students to be innovators in their space,鈥 he said. 鈥淚ntentionality is a key piece but the students are first.鈥

He pointed out that while 83% of black teens play video games, only 4% of the video gaming industry workforce is Black.

John Cash, the chief development and education officer at Cxmmunity, said it has been an uphill battle to convince leaders at historically black colleges and universities to see the value of esports.

Cash developed, launched, and taught the first Historically Black College and University esports/gaming curriculum and certification program at Johnson C. Smith University in January 2020.

By the fall of 2022, 63 of the 101 HBCUs have some sort of esports program. And there are about 42 universities currently engaged in the HBCU Esports League, he said.

鈥淎t least people are opening their eyes to the opportunity,鈥 Cash said.

On the gender front, representatives from HER Galaxy, a Tampa-based grassroots initiative focused on empowering women with esports, talked about ways to expand opportunities and resources for women gamers.

Mike Guttilla, head of business development for Galaxy Racer North America, said they want to hold more community game nights where the esports communities can cross-pollinate.

image of esports summit

In addition, upping the playing field for women gamers means holding women-center tournaments with six-figure prize payouts to stay competitive with male-dominated tournaments. 鈥淭he gap is massive,鈥 Guttilla said.

And competitive women gamers don鈥檛 necessarily come from a video gaming background. They can be part-time players. This month, Galaxy Racer signed professional NASCAR driver Natalie Decker to join its esports team.

鈥淎s we build our talent roster, we鈥檙e finding easy bridges into other sub-communities,鈥 Guttilla said.

The event also included a panel on collegiate esports teams and a discussion by Janelle Wells, an associate professor in the 黑洞社区Vinik Sport & Entertainment Management program, about toxicity and sexism in esports.

The summit concluded with the live-action Florida Spring Valorant tournament that was broadcast on Twitch, held in person, and shown on the Muma College of Business atrium鈥檚 Richard A. Corbett Digital Wall.

The 黑洞社区Green team won the League of Legends grand final against the esports club team from Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University.

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