News

Forget football. College students are scoring big with esports.

During the pandemic, college sports lost many millions of dollars, resulting in schools having to shutter programs.

But that was not the case for collegiate esports, or competitive video game playing, which has been on campuses for about a decade and is thriving along with the billion-dollar industry it helps feed. For students, esports offers a way to earn scholarships – to the tune of $16 million in 2022  – and build community. For the hundreds of schools that participate, it is a pipeline for filling classes.  

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Esports is offering U.S. campuses a way to attract more students – and to keep them by building a sense of belonging.

In Pennsylvania, the Arcadia University program has more than 50 players, with scholarships ranging from $500 to $10,000 per semester.

“From esports I get a sense of belonging with the community from everyone here,” says senior Corey Klevan, a computer science major.

In Idaho, Boise State University’s esports team started in 2017. The program’s first two years saw challenges from parents skeptical about its usefulness. But watching their kids get scholarships, as well as name, image, and likeness deals, helped change minds. 

“Parents have figured it out fast,” says Chris “Doc” Haskell, the program’s co-founder. “Two years has been the distance between when they didn’t really trust it to now they come in as their child’s No. 1 advocate.”

Sean Ey’s left hand clicks a computer keyboard with the adroitness of a court reporter taking notes. His right hand cups a mouse that his fingers tap with equal deftness. 

He is playing a video game as a soldier hunting artificial intelligence-generated enemies inside an empty airplane. They trade fire with heavy machine guns until his avatar is felled. His PC screen taunts him with the words, “Mission Lost.” 

Mr. Ey isn’t home playing among friends. He is at college, flanked by coaches who steer thousands of dollars toward his education each year to play video games for them. Mr. Ey, a junior computer science major at Arcadia University just outside Philadelphia, is part of the rapidly growing collegiate esports world. 

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Esports is offering U.S. campuses a way to attract more students – and to keep them by building a sense of belonging.

“I’ve played video games since I was 4, so it’s been a massive part of my life,” he says. “I’ve met so many people, and to be able to do it in this style and play at such a competitive level, it’s great.”  

During the pandemic, college sports lost many millions of dollars, resulting in schools having to shutter programs. But that was not the case for esports, which has been on campuses for about a decade and is thriving along with the billion-dollar industry it helps feed. For students, esports offers a way to earn scholarships – to the tune of $16 million in 2022 – and build community via club and varsity competition. For the hundreds of schools that participate, it is a pipeline for filling classes.  

“The benefit of having an esports program at a university is obviously it’s going to drive enrollment,” says Nick Alverson, director of esports at Arcadia.  

Previous ArticleNext Article