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Teams from five world regions will compete in the Clash Royale League world finals later this year. (Picture: ALamy)

Big esports teams look to smartphones with Clash Royale League

Mobile esports is becoming a big deal

Video gaming
This article originally appeared on ABACUS
Teams from five world regions will compete in the Clash Royale League world finals later this year. (Picture: ALamy)
There were times when the idea that esports on mobile could become as big as it is on PC sounded ridiculous. Some suggested that smartphone games were less complex, and therefore less interesting to watch as a competitive sport. Others believed players are simply less loyal to mobile titles, rendering them unsustainable as a recurring event.

That could all change in 2018.

Just this week, Tencent-owned Supercell said some of the biggest names in esports are going to battle it out in this year’s inaugural Clash Royale League.

North America is represented by Team SoloMid, 100 Thieves, Cloud9, compLexity, Counter Logic Gaming, NRG, Tribe Gaming, and Immortals. Europe’s competition will feature Team Liquid, Fnatic, SK Gaming, G2 Esports, Team Queso, Team Dignitas, Allegiance, SK Gaming, and Misfits.

They join teams from China, South Korea, Japan and other Asian regions in the competition, while teams from Latin America will be announced at a later date.

Here’s the fun part: Some of the teams are going to select their rosters from amateur players competing in the ongoing Clash Royale League Challenge. Some 25 million people reportedly signed up for the public competition -- all fighting for a chance to get drafted into a pro team.

The sheer number of contestants highlights the biggest advantage of smartphone gaming: The entry point is low. You don’t need an expensive PC to compete, just a smartphone. In the past that’s been viewed as a disadvantage, but now gaming companies are betting on the accessibility of mobile titles.

The Arena of Valor World Cup will take place this summer in Los Angeles. (Picture: Tencent)
Tencent is hosting the Arena of Valor World Cup this summer in Los Angeles to promote the Western adaption of their hit Chinese game Honor of Kings -- which managed to scale down the complexity of multiplayer online battle arena (MOBA) games like League of Legends into something playable on a phone.
Now other PC games are taking a page from that playbook. Tencent’s official port of the wildly popular PlayerUnknown’s Battlegrounds (PUBG) is now on iOS and Android around the world. The even hotter battle royale game Fortnite was made available for all iOS users this week.
The Clash Royale League kicked off last month in China -- represented by EDG.M, GO, JDG, LGD, NOVA, OP, SNAKE, and WE. The wider Asian tournament follows later this month -- represented by OGN Entus, Sandbox, Kingzone, OP.GG, GameWith, PONOS Sports, DetonatioN Gaming, FAV Gaming, ahq e-Sports Club, KIX, Chaos Theory, and Bren Esports.

Players from Latin America, North America and Europe will compete this fall.

Winners from each of the five regions will butt heads at the year-end world finals.

For more insights into China tech, sign up for our tech newsletters, subscribe to our Inside China Tech podcast, and download the comprehensive 2019 China Internet Report. Also roam China Tech City, an award-winning interactive digital map at our sister site Abacus.

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