Video: How The Valorant Beta Broke Records and Took over Twitch
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Adam Neylan Writer
Tomas Roldan Video Editor
Adam Fitzsimmons Lead Graphic Designer
Colin McNeil Supervising Producer

First person shooters are some of the most high octane, edge of your seat games in all of esports. Whether it be the synchronized dance of an Overwatch League team fight, or a 360 no-scope in Call of Duty, the FPS genre has something to offer for everyone.

But for those with a desire for more precise mechanical gameplay there has really only been one option: Counter-Strike.

For the better part of two decades the  Counter-Strike series held a virtual monopoly on the subgenre of tactical shooters.

It was widely argued that Counter-Strike, which requires pinpoint accuracy, godlike reflexes, and a keen strategic mind was the ultimate competitive shooter experience, one that might never meet its match.

But in the spring of 2020, Riot games introduced VALORANT, the tactical shooter that the world didn’t even realize it was waiting for.

Over the following month VALORANT would take the world, and twitch by storm.

With near record viewership and insane levels of fan engagement, the VALORANT Closed Beta became one of the biggest events in Twitch history, while also becoming one of the platforms biggest targets for VALORANT scams and view farming.

But how did this all happen? For that, we have to rewind back to the beginning, when VALORANT was known simply as Project A.

Deep-dive into how VALORANT took over Twitch in the first installment of Upcomer’s Twitch Takeover video series.

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