Esports group acquires Local Legends, signaling gaming growth in flyover country

June 18, 2020  |  Austin Barnes

AbdulRasheed Yahaya, Unified Esports Association

A pipeline for Plains states gamers has been opened with the acquisition of Local Legends Gaming by the Unified Esports Association (UEA). 

“We’ve been working Esports together for about a year and a half and kind of just realized that we have the exact same goals,” AbdulRasheed Yahaya, founder of Local Legends, said of the partnership, which closed in January and was formally announced last week. 

As part of the deal, Yahaya will serve as president of Local Legends and chief business development officer for Wichita-based UEA — formerly known as Midwest Esports, led by Pipeline alum Ramsey Jamoul. 

Click here to read more about UEA and its mission to bring structure and competitive opportunities to Esports. 

“I’ve always been an advocate of betting on myself. If anyone’s going to lose for me, it needs to be me,” Yahaya said of his journey with Local Legends — which he left a corporate job to lead full time in 2019. 

“It felt like a safe bet because I know no one’s going to work harder than me for my own personal success.” 

Click here to read more about Yahaya’s entrepreneurial journey which also included a Westport gaming center. 

UEA has assumed operation of the startup’s popular mobile gaming truck and education and event programming, such as the Community Esports League — which aims to offer pathways to Esports and such financial benefits as college scholarships. 

“The beauty of having the backing of the association is we front the grand prizes. So it takes us away from having prize pools that are generated off of a percentage of admissions. We just put up $4,000 that way the players know that they’re going to be rewarded well for their effort put in,” he said of further perks resulting from the acquisition. 

More than success for Yahaya, the acquisition of Local Legends — founded in late 2017 — signals continued growth for Esports in flyover country, he said. 

“Everyone started to get online,” he said in reference to months-long Stay at Home orders and a period of pandemic that’s proven the potential of Esports. “There’s only so much homework and studying [kids] can do before they want to play games and we’re right there to provide them with a resource to connect.”

Brianna and AbdulRasheed Yahaya, Local Legends Gaming

Brianna and AbdulRasheed Yahaya, Local Legends Gaming

And while Yahaya’s children aren’t quite ready to consider their own entrepreneurial paths, he said he’s hopeful his work with Local Legends and the beginning of its new era will set positive examples for the three of them. 

“I come from international parents. I think they may be the hardest-working individuals that I’ve ever laid eyes on — I’m sure I’m biased — but my dad was always an advocate for me being more successful than he was and my dad was a very successful, hard working man,” Yahaya said. 

“I think that is one thing that’s opened my eyes as a parent to understand that our kids can literally be successful doing whatever they please. And as a parent, my job is to guide them, of course, but also support them.”

Allowing his kids to dream has been one of the most impactful things to come from Yahaya’s entrepreneurial journey, he added. 

“My oldest, I really think he wants to be a YouTuber. I watch him watch other YouTubers and you can just kind of see it in his eyes,” Yahaya said. “But it lets me know that they can see that whatever makes you happy you can truly make a career out of it.”

This story is possible thanks to support from the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, a private, nonpartisan foundation that works together with communities in education and entrepreneurship to create uncommon solutions and empower people to shape their futures and be successful.

For more information, visit www.kauffman.org and connect at www.twitter.com/kauffmanfdn and www.facebook.com/kauffmanfdn

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

2020 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    Jon Kramer and Brian Weaver, Torch.AI

    Torch.AI acquisition boosts its national security thumbprint, building out workforce proudly in KC

    By Tommy Felts | December 27, 2021

    Leveraging Torch.AI’s local talent alongside targeted acquisitions gets the Leawood artificial intelligence firm closer to its goal of securely sharing data with the world, said Brian Weaver, founder and CEO, committing to keeping the surging company in Kansas City. “As our technology is being adopted by more and more customers and those customers continue to…

    Bootleg Bourbon Balls

    Not too late for the ‘naughty’ list: Roll into 2022 with a year-round Kansas City bourbon ball

    By Tommy Felts | December 27, 2021

    A nip of locally distilled Tom’s Town bourbon mingles with bittersweet chocolate and a bourbon pecan mash with each bite into “guilty pleasure” — one of dozens of “notoriously naughty” bourbon and rum balls made by Lisa Fitch. “A lot of people associate them with the holidays, like they do with divinity fudge,” explained Fitch, founder…

    Keith Bradley, Made in KC

    The future is local: How masks helped neighbors look each other in the eyes again

    By Tommy Felts | December 27, 2021

    Editor’s note: The opinions expressed in this commentary are the author’s alone. Keith Bradley is co-owner of Made in KC, a brick-and-mortar and online retailer of locally made goods with neighborhood, marketplace and cafe locations downtown, on the Country Club Plaza, in Lee’s Summit, Lenexa, and across the metro. As we wind down our second…

    The sun sets on Don Chilitos Dec. 22

    RIP to free chips and salsa: Why Don Chilitos just released the KC Tex-Mex staple’s secret family recipes

    By Tommy Felts | December 23, 2021

    Don Chilitos might have served its last bit of CCQ sauce — but that doesn’t mean its final customers had to settle for a handful of chiclets as a memento on their way out the door, Barry Cowden said, explaining his decision to go public with dozens of recipes from the beloved restaurant in a newly…