Esports orgs target more diversity in gaming; Mayor Q to join weekend ‘Among Us’ stream to boost message

August 13, 2021  |  Startland News Staff

Image courtesy of Generation Esports

Two Kansas City esports organizations are uniting behind one jersey to help make the rapidly expanding online gaming community more accessible to students in Title 1 schools across Missouri.

Mason Mullenioux, Generation Esports, High School Esports League

Mason Mullenioux, Generation Esports, High School Esports League

Esports brings kids together who might not otherwise have the chance to be a part of a broader community,” said Mason Mullenioux, CEO of Generation Esports (GenE), the largest and longest-running competitive gaming organization for high school students in the United States — created by the founders of Kansas City-based High School Esports League (HSEL).

The new partnership between GenE and the Kansas City Pioneers — a lifestyle brand and the metro’s premier esports team — ceremoniously hits play 6 p.m. Saturday with an “Among Us” stream live on Twitch, featuring Kansas City Mayor Quinton Lucas.

Click here to watch the Twitch stream.

Throughout the stream, Lucas and Dr. Dred Scott, the president and CEO of the Boys & Girls Clubs of Greater Kansas City, are expected to discuss crime prevention in Kansas City, Boys & Girls Clubs initiatives, and how esports aligns with those efforts.

“Among Us” became a popular social deduction game in 2020. Players take on one of two roles: crewmate or impostor. Crewmates aim to complete tasks and identify impostors while impostors try to eliminate crewmates before crewmates complete their assigned tasks.

Saturday’s stream is also expected to include Marcus Denmon, Kansas City native and professional basketball player for the Shanghai Sharks; Nehemiah Odior, director of programs and partnerships at GenE; and local teens from the Boys & Girls Club.

Through the partnership, both esports organizations plan to advocate for greater youth access to esports, their leaders said. 

Mark Josey, Kansas City Pioneers

Mark Josey, Kansas City Pioneers

“Gaming is changing the fabric of our culture, and our goal is to help kids understand that esports is a viable career path, whether it’s becoming a pro gamer, content creator, designer, game developer, tournament organizer, or another opportunity that matches their skillset,” said Mark Josey, CEO of the Kansas City Pioneers. “The opportunity to work with Generation Esports to reach and impact thousands of high school and college students in building communities and tournaments while engaging directly is exactly where we want to align. We want to make sure that simply having access to esports isn’t a barrier to entry.”

Founded in 2019, the Pioneers compete in top-tier esports at some of the highest levels in Valorant, Rocket League, Halo, Rainbow Six Siege, Madden NFL, and Call of Duty.

Click here to read more about the KC Pioneers’ momentum in 2021.

Its counterpart, GenE has donated $500,000 in scholarships across the country for esports-related programs, Mullenioux said, noting High School Esports League alone features 3,000 partnered schools and 80,000 participating students. The organization also offers STEM.org accredited programs.

Click here to learn more about Generation Esports.

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

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

2021 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    Rich Smith, president-emeritus, and Kevin Lewis, CEO and president, Henderson Engineers — one of 12 companies in the first cohort of the CEO-to-CEO Challenge

    Meet the 12 KC companies pledging to buy from diverse vendors; Join them in the CEO-to-CEO Challenge

    By Tommy Felts | March 8, 2022

    Editor’s note: The following story was sponsored by KC Rising, a regional initiative to help Kansas City grow faster and more intentionally, as part of a campaign to promote its CEO-to-CEO Challenge on supplier diversity.  A dozen high-profile Kansas City companies are at the vanguard of a new regional effort to boost supplier diversity programs…

    Primary Color Music, Post Haus

    Earworms to the Oscars: They’ve redefined jingle writing, now composing music for motion (pictures)

    By Tommy Felts | March 5, 2022

    Notes of passion are composed throughout every piece of Sam Billen’s entrepreneurial melody. But it’s the most recent crescendo in his career that has him thanking the Academy.  “It sounds cheesy, but it’s actually pretty cool,” said Billen, composer and founding partner of Primary Color Music, detailing the experience of guests who step foot inside…

    Maggie Kenefake, Royal Street Ventures, Clarence Tan, Boddle, and John Thomson, PayIt, during a previous C3KC conference at Union Station

    Innovators can’t do it alone; C3KC conference calls for cross-sector attack on wealth gap, KC’s biggest pain points

    By Tommy Felts | March 4, 2022

    Editor’s note: Startland News is a media sponsor for the Junior League of Kansas City’s C3KC conference. Click here for tickets to the event, which features a keynote address by best-selling author Adam Grant. Challenges abound in Kansas City, Kimberlee Ried acknowledged, but opportunities for innovation to push change are even more plentiful. An in-person conference…

    Matt Baysinger, Sinkers Lounge, Swell Spark

    Roll over, Wordle: Tabletop golf, cocktail bar tee’d up as KC’s next big game experience with Power and Light opening

    By Tommy Felts | March 4, 2022

    Sinkers Lounge is reinventing mini golf in the same way Top Golf reinvented the driving range, said Matt Baysinger. “With all the ideas we have in our heads about what mini golf is, I think Sinkers Lounge will far surpass that. Tabletop golf is this combination of shuffleboard, mini golf and pool that doesn’t quite…