Depster
Smash Champion
all of your definitions had the word "skill" in them. Nuff said.
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I've never seen smash - or any video game for that matter - being referred to as a sport.
Sorry man! I'm very passionate about gaming and it's competitive future(Edit, I posted this while the person above was posting, and it kinda makes mine look a bit uninformed )
It was just a reference. I'm not at all using it to prove the Sports aspect. However, to most people ESPN coverage only comes to sports. I did say other sports outlets as well...selective quote maybe?People need to stop mentioning ESPN. ESPN stands for Entertainment & Sports Programming Network. Therefore, just because it's on ESPN, has nothing to do with it being a sport or not (the put world record tomato fights on their top 10 list. That's OBVIOUSLY not a sport).
No rules or organization (no, getting everyone in one spot does not count as organization...), ergo, no sportBTW, Tomato Fights require the same skills that Dodge Ball and Baseball do, in one form or another. So...yeah.
Alright, I can understand that argument. Statement retractedNo rules or organization (no, getting everyone in one spot does not count as organization...), ergo, no sport
Competitive (video)gaming is classified as E-Sports. By definition, Competitive Smashing is (E)-Sporting.And of course there are going to be smart***es who come in trying to dance around the definitions to make it somehow still considered a sport when it is obviously not. It doesnt need to be classified as a sport for it to be important.
Haha. So I cant even say what I want without you making me sound like a bully or something. Im pretty sure they can handle it. Im not saying "smash isnt a sport and we are all losers." Im saying we shouldnt need it to be classified as a sport to validate ourselves.
Just because you think that Competitive chess shouldn't be considered a sport doesn't mean it isn't officially recognized as a sport. Too many people are way too obsessed with only considering activities which are considered "highly physically taxing" (i.e., requiring really "manly" qualities such as stamina or strength) as sports. Walk into a sports bar and you'll have idiots arguing about whether or not a blatantly obvious sport is even a sport because it's not "manly" enough (such as, say, the nancy sport that is golfing).Chess is not considered a sport by most people. And those who consider it a sport are those who want to glorify it because they like it. Just like in this situation. But by that definition ANYTHING could be a sport. Thats extremely vague. Walking takes some amount of skill. Eating alot takes skill (and is considered a sport haha although I beg to differ). Even turning the lights on in the dark takes a bit of dexterity and mental ability.
Old neanderthal-level definition clung to by chauvanistic men obsessed with things being "manly".Video games do not require physical prowess, and if you want to call pressing buttons physical prowess than you are a very silly person.
I stand corrected, I guess.In competitive fishing, you're looking for HUUUUUUUUUEG fish. I mean, bass the size of small children, big ol' redtailed catfish (NC Smash get at me) the size of grown men, marlins, salmon... These are big, powerful fish, and most of them are stronger in the water than many humans are on land. Competitive fishing is one of the most arduous sports I can think of.
Yes, actually, it is. At the very least in Europe. I was told by my Competitive DDR/ITG-playing friends that they became officially recognized as sports at least in certain parts of Europe sometime in 2007 or something.Is DDR/ITG a sport? It requires a lot of physical endurance and is competitive.
You're confusing your high school essay with fact. Really, you wrote a high school essay on the issue and now you're an expert? Did you get an A++++ or something? Did the teacher send your essay in to the Olympic Committee to have them declassify bridge as a sport?are people confusing competition vs sport?
ORLY? Starcraft, DOTA, Counter-Strike, Halo, pretty much all Competitive FPS and RTS are today referred to as e-Sports at most expos/major (sponsored) tournaments, etc. The same goes for fighting games, though since FPS:es and RTS:es are more popular at sponsored events, it's rare to have fighting games at these events (thus, rare to have them referred to as e-Sports).I've never seen smash - or any video game for that matter - being referred to as a sport.
Yes it is. Poker has nothing to do with reflexes >_>'. As in, it's not actually a requirement for Competitive poker.i'm pretty sure poker is considered a sport... smash involves attributes present in poker plus reflexes, timing, and a multitude of other things... thus, smash indeed can very well be considered a sport...
Too bad some people are too conservative to accept this change in definition. I don't even know if "manly physical prowess" was ever an official definition of a "sport" or if it's just something most people tacked onto the definition and are now insisting that this is how it's been since the dawn of time.Incorrect sir. My High School research project was over gaming as a sport, and Encyclopedia Brittanica defines sport as
Competitive activity played in individually or in a team.
Why? Why do you think only activities involving running/skating movement should be considered sports?While it's true that video games and chess and stuff and smash (at least melee) are deserving of more than the title of "Game", I still don't ever classify them as sports. Sports are hockey, basketball, football, soccer, tennis, lacrosse, and a bunch of other similar things. They all require running/skating some form of movement as opposed to sitting in a chair and tapping buttons, or in the case of golf, just whacking a ball and then strolling along until you get to it again (Goalies in certain sports are exempt from this, and a a couple things in football like the kicker).
They are sports, whether you like it or not.I think that a intermediate term needs to be created, because sport can't really cover such completely different things, that all just have the same goal in mind. Competitive game still sounds kinda lame though, and although e-sports was mentioned, it still doesn't cover golf, curling, chess, and other things that are almost sports.
Unfortunately for you, it is.Poker isn't a sport.
I didn't feel like sifting through my Webster's manually.So I agree that smash isn't a sport but bringing dictionary.com as an authoritative source makes me cringe a bit.
While something which is prevalent in most sports, the definition has changed so that it's no longer a requirement.1.) it is an athletic activity
There's also a flip side to this:p.s. I really do agree with people needing to validate themselves just like to play devil's advocate.
The pro starcraft gamers do about 4-5 actions per SECOND on the keyboard/mouse sometimes for hours if a set goes long. They sweat like crazy and its really hard. Much harder than golf or bowling. And they are under similar amounts of pressure since last season they were playing for a 96,000 first place prize in gomtv. Thats pretty serious business. Smash has really high apm its been proven. Check the apm thread so its also really tough, I think that if we had sponsors and really high prizes like in SC it would be just as competitive and be able to be called a sport like SC. If moving your fingers isn't competitive or physically demanding I guess playing guitar or keyboard in a rock band is easy to put up a whole concert and keep up energy and not sweat. people just think if it doesn't have a ball or tackles or teamwork that it isn't a sport.Sport is just a term that society uses. It has no intrinsic meaning or value. Society is what places sports above activities even though in reality, some sports may be more like activities and some activities may be more like sports.
For instance, as difficult as golf is, I would say that professional starcraft might actually be more physically demanding. And yet, society claims that golf is a sport, while starcraft is not (unless you live in korea). It's all relative, we should just be happy that melee is as competitive as it is.
chess please .Game is defined in Dictionary.Com as:
a competitive activity involving skill, chance, or endurance on the part of two or more persons who play according to a set of rules, usually for their own amusement or for that of spectators.
Sport is defined as:
an athletic activity requiring skill or physical prowess and often of a competitive nature, as racing, baseball, tennis, golf, bowling, wrestling, boxing, hunting, fishing, etc.
Athletic is defined as:
involving the use of physical skills or capabilities, as strength, agility, or stamina.
Actually, i got 100% on that essay, but that is irrelevant.You're confusing your high school essay with fact. Really, you wrote a high school essay on the issue and now you're an expert? Did you get an A++++ or something? Did the teacher send your essay in to the Olympic Committee to have them declassify bridge as a sport?
What difference does it make if you wrote an essay on the subject if several credible sources (such as the Olympic Games Committee) have proven you wrong?
Also, you're confusing something which is fluid (language) with something which is set in stone. The word "tyrant" originally meant "ruler". With time, its definition evolved into it's present-day definition. Likewise, the word "sport" may have originally meant "Manly activities requiring a lot of physical prowess whose definition is bestowed unto activities if enough manly men like it" or whatever, but tough luck, the world (and the word) has changed. I feel it in the water, I feel it in the air, I smell it in the earth.
Seasons change, so does the language.
Funny thing is though, your character won't move unless you make it. You directly effect your opponents, disrupting strategies, and controlling the map, and that directs the outcome of the match. Why, at any given time, I can KO you and win the match. That sounds like affecting the outcome to me.Actually, i got 100% on that essay, but that is irrelevant.
I personally think that for it to be a sport, you must be able to directly affect your opponent and directly control the outcome of the match at any point in time. Thus, i think everything in track and field are nothing more than individual competitions and are NOT sports. That, of course, is MY opinion, but I personally think those two factors are highly important.
Who cares?Read before you post.
I have been smashing a long time. I was there for true life, for the mlgs, for the OC Biweeklies.
I love smash. But that does NOT make it a "sport." Sports, in generally are explicitly different from video games. There is a big difference between Madden 2k9 and actual football. You cant call them both a sport when they are so obviously different.
As humans we often want to glorify our interests, because in essence, that glorifies and validates us even more. But it is unrealistic to say that a game where you are sweating and tackling, and being tackled, and generally physically involved is categorically the same as a game where you hang out in a room and hit buttons on a controller for hours at a time.
For those of you who like definitions:
Game is defined in Dictionary.Com as:
a competitive activity involving skill, chance, or endurance on the part of two or more persons who play according to a set of rules, usually for their own amusement or for that of spectators.
Sport is defined as:
an athletic activity requiring skill or physical prowess and often of a competitive nature, as racing, baseball, tennis, golf, bowling, wrestling, boxing, hunting, fishing, etc.
Athletic is defined as:
involving the use of physical skills or capabilities, as strength, agility, or stamina.
We love melee/brawl. We want to make it seem important, to other people by categorizing it as a sport. Smash is not a sport. It is a game. A high stakes game. A game where you can win alot of money and spend alot of time practicing at to try to get better. A game many of us may take very seriously. But it is not a sport.
And I dont think we should feel the need to classify it as one.
You obviously didn't read everything i said cuz two sentences later i said smash meets this criteria, but not the other one which i explained in the following paragraphFunny thing is though, your character won't move unless you make it. You directly effect your opponents, disrupting strategies, and controlling the map, and that directs the outcome of the match. Why, at any given time, I can KO you and win the match. That sounds like affecting the outcome to me.
It is?why is chess considered a sport in the Olympics then ?
mainstream sports are hobbies too.It's a HOBBY.
I need not say any more.
The point is that it's an High School essay. It wasn't exactly a masters thesis.Actually, i got 100% on that essay, but that is irrelevant.
Do you even know what the Olympic Games Committee is? "Games" is in the name because they're called the Olympic Games. And the committee classify all of those as sports, not as games. So, really, what was your argument here?You do realize it's called the Olympic Games Committee, not the Olympic Sports Committee.
There are a bajillion sports which are not contact sports in which you cannot directly affect the outcome of your opponent. Like ballroom dancing or, really, any kind of dancing. Figure skating. Skiing. Anything where you are judged by judges (diving, figure skating, dancing, etc.) or even swimming.I personally think that for it to be a sport, you must be able to directly affect your opponent and directly control the outcome of the match at any point in time.
Let me repeat myself:Thus, i think everything in track and field are nothing more than individual competitions and are NOT sports.
And here you hit the nail on the head. You're yet another one of the neanderthals who think sports need to be "manly" and require "manly" things such as strength and athleticism, or, in your idiotic case: injuries!The third criteria (which my argument is based on) is that there must be some sort of injury factor.
You can get carpal tunnel, blisters, sprained wrists/fingers...And here you hit the nail on the head. You're yet another one of the neanderthals who think sports need to be "manly" and require "manly" things such as strength and athleticism, or, in your idiotic case: injuries!
Seriously, what kind of an argument is this?! A sport is only a sport if you can get injured doing it?!
TLDR version: Stev thinks that a sport can only be classified as such if one can get injured while participating in it.