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Pub gaming renovation wishlist
from The Mercury 02 21 22
by The Mercury
The "esports lounge" promises to provide a new space for Comets to game, so what does the ideal space look like?
BEN NGUYEN Managing Editor
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Since UTD has just announced plans to convert the The Pub into a gaming lounge, I’d like to give the University a wish list for the new space from someone who would’ve camped out in a gaming lounge if it had existed during my time.
The future look of the Pub is still fairly ambiguous: while there are a few defined spaces that SmithGroup and the University are looking to design, there aren’t any hard commitments for the space yet. However, with even adding a second floor in consideration, it’s safe to say that, for the time being, the sky’s the limit. With three new main areas, a lounge, a PC café-like space, and an “arena” for match spectating, there’s plenty of room to grow.
The key component of the new gaming lounge is obviously the gameplay space. In the open forum, SmithGroup and the Uni- versity conceptualized this being split into a lounge space with TV setsand a “gaming station” akin to the familiar PC café setup. At a bare minimum, there should be enough computers to run a local tournament without issue. Since most esports commonly run five-man teams, 40 PCs would allow four prospective rounds of a tournament torun at once within the confines of the Pub. Besides providing ample space for students looking to rent PCs in their free time, being able to run
LANs will let students experience the thrill of offline competition with a low barrier to entry, much like how intramurals let nonprofessional students play traditional sports.
Of course, having 40 PCs won’t matter if they can’t boot up “League of Legends”. While it may seem obvious, having setups that can properly play video games for a few years at a time is paramount to keeping such a space alive. I’m no hardcore PC builder, but the University should invest in PCs with capable parts, something akin to the NVIDIA 3080 GTX series today at the time of the lounge’s opening. If within a year, the prospective student can get a machine that runs games better than the gaming lounge’s PCs for $100, the appeal is lost. Why pay an hourly rate to play on a potato?
In addition to the main “gaming station” space, there are also plans for a general gaming lounge. My wish for this section is twofold – both enough space for fighting game