Professional gaming has gained a lot of viewers in the last few years. League of legends viewing has gone from a small gathering to the Seoul football stadium packed with space for 66,000 people and getting around 270,000 people watching online through a stream, the year before, 32 million people watched (http://www.theverge.com/2013/11/19/5123724/league-of-legends-world-championship-32-million-viewers). Dota 2 has a similar following, with the last professional tournament getting 250,000 people watching through a stream and the tournament was held in Seattle, Washington, with a prize pool of just over $10,000,000 (http://dota2.gamepedia.com/The_International_2014). Prize pools range anywhere from $20,000 per tournament to $10,000,000. The last League of Legends world finals had a prize pool of $2,130,000, 1 million going to the winning team.. The 1 million is split between the 5 team members on the team. To get to the level to play in these tournaments, you need to train for hours a day, making it a full time job. The amount of time players put into becoming the best is incredible, some people going for 10 hours of training a day. The US government now recognizes professional League of Legends players as athletes, giving them visas to go to the country and work. The boss of ESPN, even though Dota 2 was streamed on their channel ESPN3, said “It’s not a sport – it’s a competition. Chess is a competition. Checkers is a competition….Mostly, I’m interested in doing real sports” (http://www.forbes.com/sites/insertcoin/2014/09/07/espn-boss-declares-esports-not-a-sport/)…