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Kenya video gamers face uphill battle to make their mark

For years, the virtual world of video games was the only place where Kenyan gamer Brian Diang’a felt safe from his abusive, alcoholic father and their unhappy home in Kibera, Africa’s largest slum.

“Gaming was my only escape,” Diang’a told AFP, describing a childhood mired in poverty and violence.

Popularly known by his online avatar Beast, the 28-year-old discovered video games when he was nine.

“My dad had become an alcoholic and he would come back home in a drunken stupor and beat up my mom. Home became somewhere I did not want to be.”

His daily visits to gaming dens worried his mother, who believed they were a bad influence on her son and a distraction from his schoolwork.

“I would receive a beating from my mom every time she found me in these gaming parlours,” Diang’a said.

Far from being a gateway to the world of drugs and crime, his childhood pursuit has instead taken him to tournaments and offered lucrative opportunities to work with tech brands.

Today, he earns around 50,000 Kenyan shillings (US$430 or RM1,883) a month in a country where youth unemployment remains a huge problem.

Diang’a never imagined that his childhood passion could lead to a professional career, until 2013.

“I bumped onto YouTube videos where I saw gamers abroad playing Mortal Kombat – a game that I frequently played to pass time – and getting paid up to US$5,000 (RM21,942) to compete,” he said.

So he decided to try and join their ranks.

Unconventional career

Diang’a is one of several Kenyan gamers trying to find their feet in a multi-billion dollar industry that is slowly making its way onto international platforms such as the inaugural Commonwealth esports championships, which is expected to feature Kenyan participation.

But they are outliers in a society that has traditionally seen academic performance or exceptional athletic ability as the only route to success.

Law graduate Sylvia Gathoni told AFP her gaming accomplishments still surprised her parents.

In 2018, Gathoni, who plays Tekken under the name Queen Arrow, became the first Kenyan gamer to be signed by an international team, and is currently contracted to US-based UYU.

“The older generation has been wired to think that to be successful you have to go through a specified path which is – go to school, work hard in your academics and then pursue a particular career,” Gathoni said.

Instead the 25-year-old has travelled around the world to take part in international tournaments featuring some of the biggest names in the industry including France’s Marie-Laure Norindr, better known as Kayane.

‘No structure’

But the sector still faces major hurdles in Africa.

The continent has struggled to capitalise on its large youth population – 60% of Africans are aged under 25, figures that usually attract sponsors drawn to the prospect of a young, growing fan base. Read More…

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