No, I'm implying they think they will make a profit.
Publicity stunts are about making profits. How can you possibly not be aware of that.
> They think they can make a profit off of video game tournaments
Implied, but not proven nor provable until a specific statement or filing digging. We are not sure what the ESPN management's idea behind it was. We have 15 years of video game tournaments to go by, so I don't think they started doing this one because *this* one makes money on views. Feel free to correct me whenever these facts are out.
> They think they can profit off of added publicity
I'm guaranteeing it's because of the anti-nerd pro-nerd pro-sport anti-definition cascading arguements across twitter. Anger, curiousity, confusion, 'what's playing on ESPN' 'ESPN x' is the motivation. ESPN does this from time to time.
These two are mutually exclusive. Which is why ESPN shows non-sports like this, kicking a hornet's nest is a good way to make buzz. Just because they used something to generate anger doesn't mean this thing is now sport-worthy. If that were the case then we must consider every competitive video game a sport. Unless, of course, this definition of 'sport' is limited by popularity. Which isn't how sports work.
That's a helluva' claim considering there's not really meaningful difference between them. Competitive game requiring practice and physical skill. DotA's as much a sport as target shooting. Moreso, I'd say.
Okay. Then every video game is now a sport. Happy? And yes, there's a large, large difference in the two. One requires you to sit and remember how to best build every hero, and is hardly even a strategy video game. One requires you to work out, train, practice techniques to not hurt people, build up your endurance.
The similarities are superficial, and anyone claiming otherwise disparages the work that real athletes do.