Esports trendsetters launching Social Distancing Open as gaming champs fire back at COVID-19
April 16, 2020 | Austin Barnes
Opportunities to connect are in high demand and video games could score relief in a level of life that’s been suddenly planked by intense isolation, said Mason Mullenioux.
“Esports kind of lends itself to a situation like this,” Mullenioux, co-founder of the Kansas City-based High School Esports League, said of the coming Social Distancing Open — a virtual Esports tournament set to award more than 200 winning gamers $30,000 in prizes next month and fueled by Generation Esports, the platform behind the league.
“The social component of these sports is huge … I think people are starting to see that. They’re starting to get to the point where they’re getting very bored [at home].”
The event aims to put bored champions of League of Legends, Rocket League, and Teamfight Tactics on display and create a sense of togetherness amid the Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic.
Click here to register for the tournament for free through May 10.
“We’re in a lot better position than most and we’re very grateful for that,” Mullenioux said, noting the High School Esports League has so far had to make only minor, structural pivots to its overall operations during the crisis — now allowing students to compete from home as opposed to school and loosening rules surrounding GPA eligibility.
“Even during this crisis we’ve had a better season this spring than we did last spring, so that shows some staying power and some obvious growth,” he said.
While the league experiences growth — now boasting programs in hundreds of high schools across the globe and preparing to launch a middle school league in more than 50 schools this fall — Esports as a whole is catching on, Mullenioux added.
“I look at my numbers and I see tremendous growth — that’s what I base everything on,” he said, noting the organization’s involvement in a new documentary series — Next Gen, which follows the inaugural national championship winning Minnesota-based St. Louis Park High School Overwatch team on its journey to repeat its success the following year.
The series creators ultimately hope to put Esports on the radars of companies like Netflix and Hulu, Mullenioux said.
“It’s great whenever one of your customers takes the initiative to do something like that,” he said. “It shows that there’s a large amount of passion there and I think that speaks volumes when other people see it.”
Produced independently of the High School Esports League, by Wisdom and acowsay, the organization has signed on as a sponsor of the project.
As awareness of Esports has grown rapidly, student knowledge of major scholarship opportunities within its programs hasn’t, Mullenioux said.
“There’s actually more scholarships left on the table than taken. … In 2018 we helped facilitate around $16 million in scholarships. Over the last couple of years it’s grown to around $40 million in scholarships,” he said, noting gaps in the pipeline from high school to college as a primary cause.
“That’s a problem that we’re actively trying to solve. There’s not a good foundation there, so that’s what we’re trying to build.”
Part of the solution: new partnerships for the High School Esports League, Mullenioux said, teasing a pending deal to launch a college-level program and an overall future that makes Esports all inclusive — part of a 2020 growth strategy that could help students take advantage of readily available college dollars.
“We’re looking at corporate leagues, adult rec, intramural leagues at the collegiate level, YMCA leagues and youth sports that just in general are not tied to scholastics,” he explained.
“We’re really trying to take this platform that we built, this tech solution and our Esports expertise, and give that to communities that want Esports.”
Click here to read more about college Esports and the newly launched Esports program at Baker University.
Featured Business

2020 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
TechAccel, UC Davis lab developing wheat seed to combat climate change
A Kansas City-based tech and venture development firm hopes to engineer wheat seeds that produce higher yield by withstanding warmer temperatures. “We’re taking a concept that is pretty important for wheat worldwide,” said Brad Fabbri, Chief Science Officer of TechAccel. Increasing temperatures make growing wheat more difficult across the globe, studies show. Reports indicate climate…
OP-based motion capture startup DARI Motion sells to Omaha firm
DARI Motion, an Overland Park-based startup that created a motion capture platform that provides biomechanical analysis of athletes, patients and more, recently was acquired by a Nebraska firm. DARI, which stands for Dynamic Athletic Research Institute, was purchased for an undisclosed amount by Omaha-based Scientific Analytics Inc. With the acquisition, the firm aims to transform how…
Alex Altomare: How KC students touched by gun violence changed my perspective
Editor’s note: Kansas City entrepreneur Alex Altomare served as a mentor for Tuesday’s MECA Challenge, which prompted students in Kansas City’s urban core to develop solutions for school shootings. The following is Altomare’s reflection on the experience. MECA Challenge and Startland News are both programs of the Kansas City Startup Foundation. Volunteering, especially with education…
Axing the status quo: Swell Spark builds experiences from West Bottoms HQ
Human interaction is about more than texting and social media posts, said Matt Baysinger, co-founder and CEO of Swell Spark. “One of the best things in life is sharing a meal together, but sharing a meal together is only as good as the conversation you get to have over that meal,” Baysinger said. “If you…

