UAF esports teams building on first semester of competition

Students play games at consoles at UAF's Alaska Esports Center
UAF photo by JR Ancheta
Student gamers sit at consoles at UAF's Alaska Esports Center, which opened in March.

The 糖心vlog官网 entered the world of intercollegiate esports competition this semester, fielding four teams that compete against gamers across the country.

The teams consist of about 20 students who play games that include League of Legends, Valorant, Beat Saber and Splitgate. Launching UAF鈥檚 first official season of competition has helped build momentum for both casual and serious gamers at UAF, said esports coordinator Mike Juell.

UAF鈥檚 Alaska Esports Center, which opened in March at the Wood Center, includes 12 gaming computers, four televisions for console gaming and 1-gig internet speed. The space, which is supported by a 10-year, $500,000 gift from GCI, has steadily become a campus gathering spot for both competitive and casual gamers. 

鈥淲e鈥檝e kind of established gaming as a communal thing that everyone can be part of,鈥 Juell said. 鈥淵ou don鈥檛 need to be a dominant player to be part of it.鈥

The fledgling area of intercollegiate esports competition doesn鈥檛 have tiers of competition or NCAA regulation, which makes the landscape 鈥渒ind of the Wild West right now,鈥 Juell said. 

Some teams have coaches and scholarships, others are more loosely organized. During a recent week, the UAF team battled the University of Hawaii, a small liberal arts college in Canada and a community college in the Midwest. 

The Nanook teams don鈥檛 have coaches, instead relying on student 鈥済amer guides鈥 to organize the teams. Their contests vary from single weekend tournaments to season-long competitions, with UAF athletes contending in several events during their inaugural season. UAF also offers $1,000 scholarships to Alaska gamers who were state champions at the high school level. 

The emerging visibility of the teams is a positive sign for the future of esports competition at UAF, Juell said, as well as a prominent way to connect with prospective students.

鈥淚n order for us to keep up the pace and be able to recruit students who are interested, you need to be able to offer this experience,鈥 Juell said. 鈥淯AF has invested in this, and there鈥檚 an opportunity for everyone to get involved.鈥

ADDITIONAL CONTACT: Mike Juell, mdjuell@alaska.edu

069-22