The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, February 3, 2011- 3B For the glory of the games Departmentally challenged 'Smash Bros.' and 'StarCraft' unite in competition By SHIN HIEFTJE Daily Arts Writer Though most members of the student body might not be aware of them, two devoted, tightly knit video game communities exist in the far corners of cam- pus. These underground groups don't advertise at Festifall - one isn't even officially recognized by the University as an organiza- tion. Yet, because of the competi- tive appeal of the games, both groups have gained members and formed passionate commu- nities through word of mouth and online promotion. They are the Smash League and the Star- Craft Team. Though their numbers might be small, both groups at the Uni- versity are part of a larger video game scene, both regionally and nationally. The brotherhood of "Smash" As TVs roll into the room, peo- ple do as well, happily greeting each other with GameCubes and controllers in hand. Players yell to each other about impressive combos or recoveries. This is the Thursday night scene on the third floor of Mason Hall, where a local "Smashfest" is being held in one of the classrooms. Smashfests are organized "Super Smash Bros." events that regularly happen on campus. Players compete in both "Super Smash Bros. Brawl" and "Super Smash Bros. Melee," two different versions of the game. Both involve pitting famous Nin- tendo characters against each other in combat. Since it's long after class hours, no room reservations need to be made and TVs can be wheeled in from almost every room on the floor. "It's almost as if Mason Hall was built for this," said Engineer- ing sophomore Robin Harn, one of the club's main organizers. While it's obvious that every- Smashfests take place on the third floor of Mason Hall. one in the room is very skilled and serious about their play, there's a very genial atmosphere as well. It feels vibrant - chit- chat is everywhere, and every- one's eyes are focused on the screens. By 10 p.m., more than 20 people have shown up for this traditionally four-person game. Not all are even students at the University - a few of them have come all the way from East Lan- sing and Southfield. Ann Arbor is a hub in the state of Michigan for those who love competitive "Smash Bros." "The entire Michigan (video game) community grew out of Ann Arbor," said LSA senior Jason Bowyer, who was, here when the competitive "Smash Bros." scene took off in 2007. The players are here to have fun, but many of them are also here to hone their skills to become more competitive for larger tournaments. There are regional tournaments for money prizes in Chicago and Ann Arbor, and larger ones in places like New Jersey. As recently as two weeks ago, part of Michigan's Smash League traveled to Kansas to compete ina tournament. "I've traveled out of state over 30 times," Bowyer said. "You'll see tournaments that are giving out four to five grand for first place." Though Bowyer has never won that much, he says he won $900 at one of the tournaments he attended. Most of these gatherings, whether local Smashfests or national tournaments, are orga- nized through Smashboards.com - the primary website regarding "Super Smash Bros." play. When asked why the game is so compelling competitively, players said that both a desire to improve their technique and the inclusive nature of the scene is what drew them in. "There's no ceiling to 'Smash' - you can keep getting better and better," Harn said. LSA sophomore Brian Northrup, one of the other main organizers, said he plays from an aspiration to be the best. "(However), the community aspect of it is really what's kept me here," Northrup said. Despite its popularity among select students, the "Smash" community at the University is fairly nebulous. Smashfests can often be impromptu, and some people have fallen away from the scene while others have joined. "(The group) has become a little more hardcore, so not as many older guys come," Northrup said. "But we've kept a number of people; we've gained a lot more." World of "StarCraft" A more structured and sub- dued scene can be witnessed on Saturday nights at the computer labs in the Michigan League, where the University's StarCraft Team meets to play. They play "StarCraft II: Wings of Liberty," an in-depth real-time strategy game, in which players work to tactically produce and manage armed forces successfully in order to defeat their opponent's armed forces. With about eight or so people showing up in the labs to com- pete, it may not look like the University StarCraft Team has much going on, but in reality, they are part of something mas- sive. The team is part of the Col- legiate StarLeague - a league that consists of 144 colleges across the continent, each with its own "StarCraft" team. This league is separated into divisions of 18 teams each. Each team in the division plays the other 17 online in a round-robin fash- ion each week, and at the end of the 17-week season, the top four teams in each division move on to a bracket-style playoffs. Two weeks ago, the Univer- sity's team played the University of North Carolina. Games are structured so that the first team to win three matches wins the game. Michigan pulled a victory in the fifth. Engineering junior Tianyi Liu is the coordinator of the Star- Craft Team. He decides which out of the 50 members play on which days and communicates with other teams about any issues. He says he found out about the Collegiate StarLeague while browsing Teamliquid. net, a website that functions for "StarCraft II" much like how Smashboards.com functions for "Super Smash Bros." "Anyone who's anyone who plays 'StarCraft' goes on Team- liquid.net," he said. Liu and his friends decided to form a team for the Univer- sity once they found out about the Collegiate StarLeague. After posting about the team on Team- Liquid.net, it took off. Though there are' 50 players on the team, not all of them have to show up. Liu said the team is more of an online community than an in-person community. "StarCraft II" is played on PCs, so connection to players across the world is usually smooth and there's no need to travel like there is in "Super Smash Bros." Also, "StarCraft II" is a very graphics-intensive game, so many players like to play from their rooms where they may have a better computer. However, the StarCraft Team is still a community, and it's clear that friends and acquain- tances have been made on the team. Of the eight members who showed up to the computer labs when only two were there to actually compete - the rest were there to watch their teammates play. Players moved their fingers across the keyboard at unbeliev- able speeds, inputting hundreds See GAMING, Page 4B y parents don't throw things out, and our basement is full of photo albums that I go through when I'm home for break. I look back at the birthday parties and first days of school, the friends arm- in-arm and the family dogpiles my uncle used to orchestrate ... and for a good SHARON 50 percent of JACOBS the pictures, I see myself in wide-legged khaki pants and a sweater with a picture of an animal on it. Yes, that's right - for much of my prepubescent years, my fashion sense was a combina- tion of Bret from "Flight of the Conchords" on top and military- inspired getup on the bottom. But "Conchords" didn't existback in Y2K, and military (while all the rage last fall) simply wasn't in vogue in fifth grade. My frill-less, pink-free clothing, combined with a constantly messy mop-top haircut, made a clear statement to the world: I dressed like aboy. It's not that strange of a phe- nomenon, really - I have plenty of friends who used to cut their hair short and favored sneakers peering out from jeans to little- girl flats beneath frilly skirts. In the celebrity realm, Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt's daughter Shiloh has caught plenty of attention from paparazzi and gossipmongers for her hoodie- and striped shirt-dominated "personal style" (or however one would label the wardrobe prefer- ences of a three-year-old) and last summer's tabloids proudly proclaimed that "Shiloh wants to be a boy!" At any rate, my own (tabloid- free) childhood fashion sense went relatively unnoticed as I grew up. I encountered minimal teasing, and eventually I came to like floral patterns better than grinning cheetah faces on my shirts. The only real difficulty duringthis phase was shopping: Despite my obvious leaning against girly clothing, I was loath to leave the "Girls" section of the department store. My insistence on this front made shoppingtrips with my mother insufferable. I would pore over racks and racks of girls' t-shirts looking for the baggiest, most formless ones. My mom would point across the store to where the "Boys" sign heralded hordes of Tommy Hilfiger under- shirts and plain, collared polos, and I would stomp my foot in opposition. There would be no confusion: I did not wantto be a boy. I did not want to be a girly- girl. I was, and took the utmost pride in saying it, a tomboy. Despite its lack of department store signage, there's clearly a place for androgyny in today's fashion world: Ultra-skinny supermodels certainly don't look feminine, but they're definitively women. Pantsuit-clad female talk show hosts and fictional characters running the gamut from Annie Hall to Peppermint Patty all dress on some midpoint along the infinitely distinguish- able spectrum of male and female dress. Nobody's sayingthat the "Men," "Women," "Boys" and "Girls" (and, oddly, "Juniors") Macy's method of sorting is obso- lete, butI think it's-worth noting that this has never really been how things work. Conchords, fig leaves and me. Think about it. In ancient times, both men and women covered their privates with loin- cloths - in some cultures, people still do. And while I'm sure there are differences in style and color, it's nothing like the thongs-and- boxers strata we see today. Heck, when Adam and Eve first broke out the fig leaves after the Tree of Knowledge fiasco, theyset a noble precedent for gender-blind cloth- ing. (Though granted, depending on which Renaissance painter you trust, I guess the pair could have styledtheir eco-friendly garb in a sex-specific way.) Ramses and Cleopatra alike dutifully dabbed on dark eyeliner for a mysterious and royal look in ancient Egypt. Scotsmen tradi- tionally don kilts, which original- ly signified their clan according to the specific plaid pattern and which were worn sans under- pants, purportedly to be more sanitary. Kimonos are sported by both men and women in Japan, though by neither often anymore. The French - well, we say a lot of things about the French and style and gender, but we'll leave them out of it for now. Nowadays, boy hipsters can strut skinny jeans, grunge girls can flaunt flannel and I have no reason to be ashamed of my 10-year-old fashion sense (not that I would be - I was awesome), but it would be wrong to assume this is a modern innovation. See JACOBS, Page 4B HANNAH CHIN/Daily Digital Ops is one of several hubs for the University's competitive gamers. KilliansI Coors Light' I U 310 Opdj S#0N? U73W9ad 5n -,,otaMy~u a ~r Almost famous on YouTube By PROMA KHOSLA Daily TV/New Media Editor On a cool August evening in East London, hundreds of people crowd into the Ice Father Nation pub to celebrate the curious fan community of YouTube. Let's back up a bit. This "curi- ous fan community" can be traced back to 2007, the year that brothers John and Hank Green gave up textual communication in favor of video blogs for 365 days. Several thousand subscrib- ers later, they had spawned a fan community called the Nerdfight- ers. As these fans began making their own YouTube videos, they found different niches in the community. That brings us to the likes of Alex Day (YouTube username nerimon) and Charlie McDon- nell (charlieissocoollike). As of January, Charlie is the most sub- scribed YouTuber in the United Kingdom. In 2010, he, Alex, Tom Milsom (hexachordal) and Ed Blann (Eddplant) formed the band Sons of Admirals - one of many groups spawned by the Nerdfighter community. On this night, they were hosting a con- cert and a book reading by John Green. So where do I fit into this? Well, I consider myself to be fair- ly familiar with the concept of fandom. I'm a huge "Harry Pot- ter" fan - I check the websites, listen to wizard rock, go to con- ventions ... you name it. I went to this Ice Father Nation event with friends I'd met at "Harry Potter" conferences, so if there's anyone who knows what fandom can do for people, it's me. I hay visiting though Nation was my after tw ppened to be in London friends Tom, Rosi (missxrojas) family at the time and and Lex (tyrannosauruslex). t I'd go to Ice Father Rosi and Lex are also prominent to see John again (it British YouTubers who knew third Nerdfighter event, the band; Rosi was organiz- vo in 2008) and to hope- ing the event and managed to secure places for the rest of us behind the merch counter since we were so far back in the entry )w Igot the line. Before we knew it, we were ternet-star selling Sons of Admirals CDs to rabid fans while John Green eatnment by signed books two feet away from He In try ~ us. association. John, the band, Rosi and Lex were treated like bona fide celeb- rities. Fans in line started loudly singing songs by Chameleon Cir- fully meet Charlie, my YouTube cuit - another band with Charlie crush. (It turned out that he and Alex - and cameras flashed wouldn't be there, which signifi- at the rate I remember seeing on cantly decreased my interest in TV during the last Olympics, the event.) None of this was that unusual; I went to the pub with my See MISTAKEN FAME, Page 4B