Another startup has
dreams of finding a new niche in esports, and it now has a couple of extra
million dollars in its pocket to help it do so.
Faceit bills itself as
the “fastest-growing competitive gaming platform,” and the London-based firm
raised $2 million earlier this year in what it’s calling a “pre-Series A”
bridge round. United Ventures led the funding, convinced to do so thanks to the
startup’s 1.5 million registered users, 2 million monthly uniques, and 5
million hosted gaming sessions. Esports now reaches 134 million people
worldwide and drives $600 million in yearly revenue, a May report from research
firm Superdata found, so it’s no surprise investors are looking for
opportunities in this growing sector of video games.
“We wanted to bring
onboard investors we liked while delaying a proper Series A,” a Faceit
spokesperson told GamesBeat over email.
Twitch may be the king
of esports, being the go-to resource to watch competitive gaming these days.
But Faceit’s taking a different approach. It has online tournaments and daily
and monthly leagues, and joining the service is free (though it monetizes
through 30,000 monthly subscribers paying $5 to $12 a month each). The startup
claims its platform is the “smoothest and most entertaining competitive
experience available.” This comes in part because of what it calls a
“player-centric interface” and an automatic-results verification (just ask folks
who play Hearthstone: Heroes of Warcraft, which lacks such a tool, how awesome
this could be). Victories earn you points that you can redeem in Faceit’s shop.
Faceit also produces
gaming competitions that run on Twitch, where it has 500,000 followers. The
first stage of its Counter-Strike: Global Offensive event reached more than
25.2 million unique viewers and 52.5 million views. It’s also managed the open
online phases of other esports competitions, such as QuakeCon, Dreamhack, and
The International 5. It broadcasts a CS:GO league and the CS:GO star series, a
League of Legends invitationals, Quake Live seasons. It also organizes a Dota 2
pro league.
Niccolo Maisto,
Alessandro Avallone, and Michele Attisani founded Faceit in 2012. Its
competitors include rival esports platform Cevo. The company says its name
captures “the feeling when you’re facing competition or the challenge.”
No comments:
Post a Comment