Gaming's Glastonbury arrives in Birmingham

Josh Sandifordat the National Exhibition Centre
Getty Images A huge crowd of spectators fills a darkened exhibition hall, silhouetted against bright blue and white stage lights. Giant screens above the stage display a first-person shooter game in progress, with scoreboards visible at the top of the display. The industrial ceiling of the NEC is visible above, with rigging and spotlights cutting through the haze.Getty Images
Thousands of spectators watched competitive gaming tournaments at DreamHack Birmingham

What do the Swedish city of Jönköping, Atlanta in the US and Birmingham all have in common?

They have all now hosted DreamHack - one of the biggest e-sports festivals in the world and described by promoters as the "Glastonbury of gaming".

The National Exhibition Centre is hosting the first ever UK edition this weekend, with 50,000 people expected through the doors.

If, like me, you are not much of a gamer and think it is all teenagers in headsets, basement dwellers and button-bashing, I am here to tell you why this all matters.

And, Britain is one of the biggest contributors to video games revenue in the world.

Far from a niche hobby, it is a cultural and economic force - and that's not hard to see when you walk into the NEC's Hall One, to be greeted by an assault on all your senses.

Getty Images A row of gamers sit at a long desk wearing matching green Razer headsets, focused on their screens with green-lit keyboards in front of them. A large Riot Games mural covers the wall behind them featuring colourful game characters. The players include a mix of men and women, one with blue hair and a plush toy on her head, all concentrating intently on their monitors.
Getty Images
DreamHack Birmingham welcomed 50,000 fans to the NEC for the gaming festival's first ever UK edition

The slogan "Play louder together" is plastered across the walls. And the wording is apt. I can barely hear myself think.

Dance music blasts across the exhibition hall, as an army of GoPro-holding content creators wander around in cosplay. It is perhaps not the type of place you would expect to spend your first wedding anniversary.

But Robbie and Michelle White can't think of any other place they would rather be.

The couple, both 29 and from London, are huge fans of Call of Duty, the blockbuster shooter franchise that has taken over an entire hall with major tournaments this weekend.

A woman with long dark hair wearing a grey jumper stands next to a man in a blue and white gaming jersey, both smiling at the camera. They are wearing DreamHack lanyards and standing in front of a large yellow and red display wall. The man is carrying a dark backpack over his gaming shirt.
Robbie and Michelle White are celebrating their first wedding anniversary at DreamHack Birmingham

"During the pandemic, [when] we were separated, I bought her an Xbox to keep us connected," said Network Rail worker Robbie.

"We started playing every day pretty much. It turned into something that we did just to talk and then a hobby that we love."

Marketing worker Michelle added gaming had strengthened their relationship.

"It's communication as well," she explained. "It helps us be able to talk to each other."

Two young men pose in full military-style cosplay outfits. The man on the left wears a black tactical vest and has short dark hair. The man on the right wears a skull-patterned face mask, night vision goggles mounted on his helmet and carries a large replica rifle.
Piers Boatman-Smith and Ross Conroy came dressed as their favourite Call of Duty characters

Piers Boatman-Smith, 21, also from London, and Ross Conroy, 25, from Manchester, are also huge Call of Duty fans.

They are dressed as their favourite characters, with Conroy carrying an enormous replica shotgun, while his helmet was dumped on the floor nearby.

"With having so much gear it is kind of more difficult to get to and from places," he said, joking that his outfit was "very heavy".

But security, he told me, had taken it in their stride.

"They sort of know what to expect and we know what's going to happen," he said. "It's like a conversation starter almost."

A person with long purple and pink hair wearing a black and white jersey and DreamHack lanyard stands next to a man in a white DreamHack hoodie with a three-day pass badge visible. They are standing in a wide NEC corridor with other attendees visible in the background. Both are wearing backpacks and looking directly at the camera.
Jax Romero and Connor Burkett estimate they have each spent about £20,000 attending gaming conventions

On the other side of the NEC, Jax Romero, 38, from Texas, is catching up with friend Connor Burkett, 31, from Buckinghamshire. The pair met online about 10 years ago and now meet at conventions across the world.

They estimate they have spent about £20,000 each doing so.

"It's definitely a real friendship," said Romero.

"You bond over video games, it's the same thing as meeting someone in real life at the pub or anything like that."

Asked whether people might struggle to understand the amount they spend, Burkett responded: "It's the same as [asking] 'Why do people go on holiday?'. because we make it into our own little holiday."

Two cosplayers stand side by side in a busy exhibition hall with rows of gaming monitors and a large Fortnite sign behind them. The woman on the left wears a turquoise braided wig with pink cat ears, glasses and a white corset top. The woman on the right wears a silver-white bob wig, red contact lenses, a black tactical outfit with a gold chain and pink gloves.
Content creators Just Kamara and Tilly Super Dog dressed as Fortnite characters

Throughout the weekend there will be competitive gaming, cosplay, live entertainment and appearances from celebrities including the Sidemen and I'm a Celebrity winner Angry Ginge.

Among the cosplayers are content creators Just Kamara, 32, and Tilly Super Dog, 21, both from London, who had dressed as Fortnite characters.

They tell me gaming has become more inclusive over the years but there was still some work to do.

"Like certain communities are still a bit questionable about it, but it's definitely got better," said Kamara.

A bald man with a short dark beard smiles at the camera wearing a black jacket over a black T-shirt. He is standing in a corridor with dark glass panels behind him. The background is slightly blurred with warm overhead lighting.
DreamHack's Shahin Zarrabi says the festival aims to combat loneliness among young people

Students from universities and colleges across the country, including Birmingham, Coventry and Herefordshire, are also among those attending.

DreamHack's head of festivals Shahin Zarrabi, says the aim is to bring the virtual world "back to the physical space for a while".

"Younger generations especially but people as a whole are feeling more lonely," he says.

"As they get more connected, counter-intuitively, they feel more lonely.

"For me, it's important to build these types of experiences to bring them out [and] make them feel like they belong somewhere."

As I wander past a "free play" section with a huge bank of computers, my perception shifts and I realise just how big a deal this all is.

From recognisable multinational firms, like Samsung and Logitech, to Birmingham-based (but admittedly huge) games studio Facepunch, it soon becomes apparent this is a world away from the solitary bedroom gamer stereotype.

It is an enormous community and this weekend Birmingham is at its heart.

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