Enne, kui ütlete, et "nii sitt intervjueerija" vms, siis palun mõelge sellepeale, et Ringvaade on mõeldud ka vanematele generatsioonidele, kes ei pruugi arvutimängudega nii kursis olla, veel vähem e-spordiga. Proovime siiski viisakaks jääda.
It's amazing seeing an interviewer who doesn't have some horrible opinion on esports without even knowing anything about it. Instead she asks questions to try and understand it better.
@@jakob5914 Pigem vist nii jah, kuid sõna "kas" ei suuda ma mitte kuulda, võis see öeldu olla ehk nii?: "Kas on väga töödeldud?" Muutsin igatahes tõlke ära, nüüd on vist suhteliselt loogiline, võid üle vaadata.
7:42 Peaks vastama "Tavaliselt kooli lähen, siis tekib kogu aeg selline refleks. No näiteks sööklas vaadates kui suur mass on hommikust pudru nosimas, tahes tahtmata tahaks mõne automaadi valangu anda ja vaadata mitu nn. 'killi' ma ühe Kalashnikovi valanguga saaksin teha."
"Kas sulle on maailmas vastaseid ka?". "Tulistamismängud, päris õudne?" ja "Tänaval ringi liikudes ei mõtle kuidas inimesed kahjutuks teha?" Täiesti haige mis küsimused.
Translation! May have some issues here and there :) Interviewer (I): And indeed we are very happy to welcome Robin "ropz" Kool who is probably the only esports athlete in Estonia who travels the world and earns hundreds of thousands of euros at such a young age. And it's all true! Ropz (R): Hello, yes, of course it is. I: You're 18, only for a few more days though. R: Last few days indeed. I: What.. what do you do? What is this esport? R: Esport... in short is.. a computer game. I sit at my home playing computer games and.. that is my job. I: You know, before we continue, we took a game from one of your tournaments which is a commentated match, which our viewers would think of as being commentated like skiing or basketball. A computer game is being commentated just the same and it's a short clip of one of your games so the viewers have an idea of what's going on. clip plays with Estonian translation of what is being said I: Quite a brutal story is what I'd want to say to that. R: Yeah... I'd want to say everything is like it is in the video, but without the music. I: Let's go back to the beginning. You were a completely normal student, loved to play computer games. At what point did you discover this game? R: I discovered this game in particular about 3-4 years ago, but I've also played the older versions. I probably started playing the first version when I was 7-8, so 10 years ago. I: They're all shooter games, right? R: Yeah, shooter games. I: That is quite scary. R: Mm.. seems scary to the ordinary viewer, but seems like a fun hobby to some others. I: How does a computer game, where you shoot others lose health gain health, some kinds of rules like that, charm so many people that there are people willing to pay prize money that reaches the hundreds of thousands? R: Because.. it is really watched by a lot of people, then all the viewerbase is involved, because everyone plays video games nowadays , so many youth play, everyone is interested in it and all the big companies involved in it are okay with it because the viewerbase is so big and you can do the advertising. I: Describe, you just came back from a tournament in Germany. How does one ordinary tournament look like? What's it like? R: Mmm.. when I fly to the tournament, the first day I just do that, nothing else. Just discover the place. I: Are you like a superstar when you arrive there? Because you're a great player, (something praise) in that field. You arrive there and you have some privileges, the red carpet is being rolled and so on. R: laughs not really the red carpet, but when you arrive at the airport and the organizer has sent a person to meet you, takes you with them and to the hotel... it's very comfortable! I: Kind of like the life of a star? R: Yeah, a bit. I: So.. we make it to the day of the tournament, it begins. There's some sort of hall/gym and a whole bunch of players are there. R: Well if you go to the tournament then in the beginning there's the group phase, which is usually backstage. So if you make it to the quarter finals then starting from there that's on the big stage or an arena where like.. a maximum of 10000 people can be. And it usually fills. I: And everyone wants to see how other people play video games. Don't want to play themselves, want to watch it being played? R: True. I: What makes you such a talented player in this game? If there are so many people interested, they play a bit at home, but for some reason they don't do as well.Why are you better? R: Well.. it's years' worth of experience, we can put it like that, so I've played for over 10 years and it's all like.. it has physical and mental parts like reflexes in the physical department, fast movement and so on. But on the mental side, there's like.. i don't know, mental games - where you position yourself, how you trap the enemy and everything about the mental part like that. I: Do you have any opponents in the world? R: Of course laughs I: But you haven't met them yet? R: What do you mean, opponents? I: Like.. players as good as you. R: Oh, of course there are. With my team we're around top 5, top 6 in the world at the moment. I: And you have a German team? R: Yeah, this year we.. our top placing was second best (in the rankings), but we're still chasing that #1 spot. But it's pretty close at the moment, all the teams are in form right and very good right now. I: What country do the best players usually come from? R: Denmark, Fin-, Denmark, Sweden. I: Not from Asia? R: No, not from Asia. Well.. not in my game, but in other games there are a lot of pros from Asia. I: How do you think of your life? You're at such an age where you should be at school from morning to evening and constantly studying and university and all that. But you're making hundreds of thousands doing what you love. What motivation is there to continue going to school? Do you even go to school? R: Well, at the moment my school situation is that I met with my teachers and I told them that I'd want to do more of this (esports) and we made a deal, because I'm in my last form of gymnasium (high school?), so I can do the last year in the span of two years. So I'm homeschooled, so I can do my studies whenever I want. I have time. And it's very good for me. I can study whenever I want, play whenever I want. It fits very well. I: How do you motivate yourself to study at school in general? It's great to be a star and fly from one point in the world to another and do the bang-bang-bang(shooting noises) things and just cash out the money from the bank. R: laughs Well.. that's one motivation, but last year I had it so I just went to school regularly, it was quite horrible. When you go to school from 8 to 3-4 and then there's usually 7 hours of practice so the whole day is like, gone. I: 7 hours a day you play this game on average? R: Yeah, when we have practice. I: One same game? 7 hours a day? R: It's a job. I: What does it do with your brain? Because I used to be in my late teen years and then I had been playing some computer games and when it went over 2-3 hours then the next day you were looking at the world like you'd want to move this over there and would do that differently, who's coming around that corner. What does it do with your brain? R: I think this game has quite a positive effect on the brain, if you like, can understand what you are doing then it has a positive influence. You can compare it to a math problem, but this is a game of like.. how you can beat your opponents. It's like just a game basically. I: Walking around on the street you don't think when people are approaching that: "Oh there comes three more, how can I neutralize them"? R: laughs I: That doesn't go through your head? R: No, not really like that, no. I: It's not like that. R: laughs I: So, tell me what will you do with your big pile of money, young man/young person/youngling? R: Mm.. invest, invest at one time. Right now there aren't really any ideas. It's just collecting, will see in the future, if needed. I: What were your first winnings? R: First winnings were.. well.. weren't that big, was like.. 10 000 maybe, for the whole team. I: What was the first thing you bought? When you thought: "When I get this money, now this I will buy,"? R: I bought myself a new phone, actually. I: Now this sounds like a logical answer for an 18 year old person! laughs When is the next competition? Where can we cheer along? R: It's always possible to cheer along, through the internet of course. Unfortunately I don't know when you could do so in Estonia. But my next tournament is definitely in January, somewhere in the middle. We're going to England and we'll try to qualify for the biggest tournament which will happen in March of next year. I: Thank you so much for coming tonight and best of luck!
Well it is actually a very good question. Because back in the day when I was playing the game, I started automatically holding my eyes close to corners and stuff IRL as well, expecting someone to be behind the corner. Of course I did not think of shooting them, but just that's how the brain of a gamer develops.
Pole eestis ainuke esportlane kes rändab mööda maailma ringi, Clement "Puppey" Ivanov on meil juba pikemat aega üle maailma kuulsust kogunud ning on praegugi 18. kohal maailmas enimteenivate esportlaste edetabelis.
Can she stops with the money ? lmao how can a reporter not understand the principle of supply and demande andunderstand he is good at what he does. Looks like a very old minded lady.
It's completely understandable that for older people like her it seems kind of weird and surprising that people are getting paid for playing videogames.
wtf was that fragmovie who edited it to look like so hardcore and why did they choose that specific vid hahahah, they could of just taken a piece out of an actual game live
EST: Tyyp on nagu: kas sellist tunnet ei ole et kui nurgatagant keegi tuleb siis laseb pariselus maga? ENG: her logic is like: dont you have that feeling that when somebody in real life walks do u dont u want to just kill him/her?
Man I hope she was kidding when she asked: "On the streets you don't think how you could eliminate other people?" At least did ropz answer her chuckling
@@petursteinn9718 After I playing CSGO for some time, I started looking around corners naturally in real life too, like one does in CSGO lol. It's completely normal question and shows that she knows the subject quite well herself. It is definitely something that has happened to me, and I was surprised honestly when she asked about it from Ropz :)
Anda harus angkat kepublik kasus Sandra dari Estonia, apa dan siapa yang menghalanginya untuk menjadi terkenal, sehingga video nya di RU-vid harus di hapus dan instagramnya juga harus di hapus, apakah dia mendapatkan intimidasi atau bagaimana..?sekarang di Indonesia lagi ramai tentang masalah ini.. silahkan anda lihat di RU-vid video fiki naki dan sandra dari Estonia... Sandra adalah gadis yang baik,kami di Indonesia mencintai nya... please..you must help Sandra from Estonia