Esports becomes medal event at 2022 Asian Games

Gaming takes another step towards sporting mainstream

This picture taken on November 13, 2020 shows Dragon Gou, who played under the moniker "Dragku" for the Chiefs eSports Club, playing video games at his home in Sydney.  Despite a global boom, the closure of one of the southern hemisphere's biggest eSports leagues has left its players in Australia and across Oceania facing an uncertain future. - To go with AFP story eSports-Australia-gaming-LoL, FOCUS by Johnny LIEU

 / AFP / Andrew LEESON / To go with AFP story eSports-Australia-gaming-LoL, FOCUS by Johnny LIEU
Powered by automated translation

Esports has been named as a full medal event for the 2022 Asian Games, in a major step towards the mainstream for a sport that has long harboured Olympic ambitions.

Esports and breakdancing were both included on the programme for the Games in Hangzhou, China, at the Olympic Council of Asia's general assembly in Muscat this week.

"I hope that electronic sports will add value to the Asian Games – and I am sure it will in the future, during the Asian Games 2022 and even beyond that," the OCA's Asian Games director, Haider Farman, said in a statement on Friday.

Esports was a popular demonstration event at the 2018 Asian Games in Jakarta, and a medal sport at last year's Southeast Asian Games in the Philippines.

Efforts to include esports in the Olympics have so far faltered, but the coronavirus pandemic appeared to trigger a shift this year as organisers explored new ideas.

In April, International Olympic Committee president Thomas Bach called for the movement to "urgently" investigate electronic versions of sports and to approach game publishers.

This month breakdancing, skateboarding, surfing and sport climbing were approved for the Paris 2024 Olympics, as the Games strive to appeal to younger audiences.