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Alfie Byrne, or as he's known to his online friends, "Dagda", is the newest member of the number-one Altscape guild in the world, "RogueLight". Renowned for their overwhelming influence over No Man's Land, the lawless PvP zone in which the winner takes all, Dagda applied to this prestigious guild on a whim. He wasn't even expecting a response. He'd only been playing for a month, and despite being skilled, his win ratio was hardly impressive. To be perfectly honest, the only reason he spent so much time in No Man's Land was to mess with other players using his strange meme builds. About a week had passed before he finally heard back, and to his surprise, he had been accepted into the guild. From this day forward, his mundane life as a regular high schooler would be thrown into a series of bizarre twists and turns - and the game Alfie once saw as an escape from the stress of school would send him spiraling into a mysterious conspiracy.
We’re not the first to observe that the thing about sport is that it comes with a built-in narrative arc. There will be heroes and there will be villains. There will be triumphs and there will be disappointments. There will be winners and there will be losers (unless it’s a sport like football which, to Ted Lasso’s continuing befuddlement, allows for a “tie”). But what happens off the pitch, or outside the field, or court-side, can often be as dramatic – if not more so – than what happens on, as it takes a certain type of person to excel at sport: gifted, driven, and sometimes, yes, a little psychotic Documentary-makers have found a rich seam to exploit in retelling sports narratives recently, and looking at some of the more exceptional characters who’ve risen to the fore (The Last Dance being the most high-profile example, although there has been a raft of other good ones), but nothing can delve into the intricacies of a great athlete’s mind like a book, especially in the hands of a great writer. Here we’ve recommended some of our favourites of this century and the last, that will keep you gripped to the final whistle Barbarian Days: A Surfing Life by William Finnegan (2015) Finnegan’s Pulitzer-Prize-winning memoir about his lifelong obsession with surfing – starting in California as kid, then Hawaii as a teen, taking him right though to New York in the present (a lesser-known surf spot, certainly) – is a searing and startling paean to the sport. Yes it can seem pointless, and yes it can be punishing, but Finnegan is able to encapsulate the feeling of freedom and euphoria like few others, while also describing his own meandering personal history, which somehow transformed him from a twentysomething stoner surf-bum into a renowned political journalist for the New Yorker, particularly for his reporting from Apartheid-era South Africa. Blood Horses: Notes of a Sportswriter’s Son by John Jeremiah Sullivan (2004) Like so many of the titles on this list, John Jeremiah Sullivan’s first book – printed in the UK for the first time in 2013 after the success of his brilliant 2012 essay collection, Pulphead – is a sports book but also something more. It began as a consideration of the life of his late father, Mike Sullivan, who had been a sportswriter for a Kentucky newspaper, and whose fascination with sport in general, and with horse racing in particular, his son had never quite managed to understand. In telling the story of the legendary racehorse Secretariat, one of whose Kentucky derby wins his father attended, he unpicks a sport that is both fascinating and mystifying in equal measure. Land of Second Chances: The Impossible Rise of Rwanda’s Cycling Team (2013) If sport can be accused of providing neat story arcs (see intro!), or clear-cut heroes and villains, Lewis’s British Sports Book Award-winning exploration of the attempt – by a group of American former professional cyclists – to set up a cycling team in Rwanda a decade after the genocide there in which 1 million people were slaughtered, is as nuanced and fascinating as they come. Lewis, a contributing editor to Esquire, spent time in Rwanda with the would-be riders, including the talented Adrien Niyonshuti, who lost six brothers in the 1994 genocide, and also the professionals who helicopter in to set up the country’s first team, but who, in the case of coach Jock Boyer, turns out to have a dark past of his own. Football Against The Enemy by Simon Kuper (1994) Financial Times columnist Simon Kuper wrote this accomplished and quirky footballing travelogue when he was still only in his early 20s. And it's remarkably good; arguably the first and even best in the now-not-so-new wave of 'literary' football tomes that have followed in ever-greater numbers. Kuper travels to 22 countries to find out how football has shaped individual national politics and culture – and vice versa – meeting players, politicians and picking up anecdotes and observations along the way.we all
(E-sport team, MOBA+Rogue-like game) ----------------------------------- Some of us might have been too young to see the creation of things, that's correct. But surely, the throne was fabricated here. So how come, that every king who sat in that chair comes from a foreign land? How is it that heroes and saints from overseas are more worshiped than those of our own kind? I ask you. They chant and praise, the strongest, that is not wrong. They scream and insult, the looser, that's twisted, but fair. "Failure will puncture life from the beginning through the end. That's life.“ A young old soul said that once. But in e-sports, it is about the next and the next of the next, isn't it? The fact that our veterans failed on the stairs to the trophy, means the end? I refuse to agree! Life will give birth to talent, experiences will shape that talent into skill, and challenges will hammer those skills into real weapons. And with that weapon, we will stab the king, and dethrone his heir. This is not just a game.