The rise of e-sports

E-sports has started to reshape the entire sporting industry, fuelled by a young, tech-savvy generation who are no longer content with just watching sports, they also want to participate. Bringing these two worlds closer together is the creation of new, virtual reality gaming experiences. Wave Italy is one such company who is taking e-sports to a whole new level.

All indicators point to e-sports as being the future of all sport. Recent insights suggest that e-sports is set to reach €1.1 billion by the end of the current year, showing a growth of about 27% over last year. And, according to market researcher Newzoo, the video gaming industry will be worth €180 billion by 2021.

Formula One is the latest sector to tap into this lucrative industry, this year hosting its third annual F1 E-sports Championship with teams including Mercedes, Alfa Romeo, McLaren, Ferrari and Red Bull. Anyone with a gaming console has the chance to become a virtual competitive driver, opening up a pandoras box of possibility for racing fans.

Taking this concept even further is Wave Italy, created in 2015 in Maranello, the HQ of legendary Ferrari. The engineering company began by developing a formula one car simulator, the Phoenix Pro, to offer a real F1 experience to the wider public via car museums, autodromes, specialised digital halls, and at public or corporate events.

“In order to achieve this, it was fundamental that we develop internally the control peripherals, such as the steering wheel and pedals set, but with a precise vision,” Alberto Gibellini tells Monaco Life. “Wave Italy was not just trying to upgrade arcade-gaming, we started from scratch with the philosophy: ‘From real racing cars to your simulator’.”

The next step was to branch out to offer their products, the peripherals, to the most exigent sim racers. The final part of the equation was further technological development which led to the Wave Apex – simulators used at the Professional Training Centre in Verona by real professional pilots who come to train with the help of a driving coach and real-time telemetry.

“We have our professional training centre in Italy where we have around 10 to 12 Formula Two, Three and Four teams training there,” says Alberto. “We gathered a team of professionals who can deliver on all stages of the implementation of a driving simulator: hardware, software, design, mechanics, motion, control and security. Marco, for example, was a coach at the Ferrari Academy. He now works for us.”

Wave Italy has developed everything from the ground up: the car structure, the high-tech steering wheel, the motion technology, the interactive seat belts, the racing pedals. All is available to racing enthusiasts to kit-out their virtual F1 car or a sophisticated GT rig, which is often easier to train and race with at home.

“This is as close as possible to Formula One reality,” reveals Alberto. “You have to be very skilled because the pedals, for example, can handle up to 200kg force for the break; the steering wheel is as sophisticated as the one in real F1 cars. The belts, they push and pull you. So, it is also physical training. It’s the closest thing to being in an F1 car without being in an F1 car.”

With e-sports set to be the mainstream entertainment of the future, gaming will gradually fight its way out of people’s lounge rooms and into the public domain.

“There are more than 100 different possibilities for virtual gaming,” says Alberto. “We are working with shopping malls, cruise liners, hotel resorts… every day we find a new opportunity that can be exploited.”

Maurizio Primo, Marco Zipoli and Alberto Gibellini and CEO Alex Martinelli

Just as elite level sports can deliver big pay checks for winning athletes, the monetary rewards are also impressive in e-sports.

“In competitive racing simulations, people are playing from their homes at international championship level and they can win hundreds of thousands of euros,” says Alberto. “There is also a strong interest from real sports car teams to find new talent. If you are fast in simulation, you are fast on track too, you just need some physical preparation. So, even if you don’t win the cup and money a simulated race, if you show a good driving technique you may just get a telephone call from an official racing team asking you to drive for them on asphalt!”

If you think you have what it takes to race in the Formula One E-sports Championship, try out Wave Italy’s pro simulator at Prince Albert’s car museum in Fontvielle.

 

ASM score another win

Prolific striker Wissam Ben Yedder grabbed his ninth goal of the season as Monaco handed Nantes their first home Ligue 1 defeat of the campaign on Friday.

Ben Yedder struck in the first half and had two more efforts ruled out for offside as Leonardo Jardim’s rejuvenated Monaco clinched a fourth win in their last five league outings.

They move into eighth place in the table while Nantes stay second, five points behind leaders Paris Saint Germain who take on bitter rivals Marseille on Sunday.

Nantes’ defeat ended their perfect record at home this season which had seen four successive 1-0 wins over Montpellier, Reims, Rennes and Nice.

“It’s important to win away from home for the first time this season,” said Jardim after Ben Yedder became the first Monaco player in 50 years to score nine goals in his first nine games in a season.

“Ben Yedder was always very effective at Toulouse and Sevilla. He is also in a better physical condition than at the beginning of the season.”

Ben Yedder grabbed the only goal after 22 minutes when he picked up a pass from Alexsandr Golovin, resisted a challenge from full-back Fabio before unleashing a fierce right foot drive into the roof of the net.

The French star thought he had a second just six minutes later when he found the target after an incisive pass from Algeria’s on-loan Islam Slimani.

However, Ben Yedder had strayed offside and the goal was ruled out.

Nantes were just a whisker from equalising in first-half stoppage time but Mali international striker Kalifa Coulibaly’s close-range header was well-saved by Monaco goalkeeper Benjamin Lecomte.

Five minutes into the second half, Coulibaly was again unfortunate when his shot from a tight angle came back off the post of Lecomte.

On the hour mark, Ben Yedder had the ball in the net again but it was scrubbed off by VAR after Slimani was penalised in the build-up for offside.

The match against Nantes was the 188th in Ligue 1 for Leonardo Jardim – a record for a Portuguese coach in Ligue 1 Conforama.

 

Source: AFP

Photo: ASM Official