Mike Lamond
Mike "Husky" Lamond | |
---|---|
Born |
Mike Lamond May 4, 1987 |
Nationality | American |
Occupation | StarCraft II Caster |
Known for | eSports commentator, Nerd Alert |
Mike Lamond, more commonly known by his online alias Husky or HuskyStarcraft, is a former e-sports commentator specializing in StarCraft II, a video game published by Blizzard Entertainment. He used to regularly appear as a commentator at StarCraft tournaments and his commentary is viewable through YouTube channels.[1]
Early life
Mike "Husky" Lamond was born in Bakersfield, California. He lived in Nipomo in San Luis Obispo County for the first 11 years of his life and then later moved with his family to Gresham, Oregon, where his parents and older brother still reside.
Career
[A good shoutcast] is really up to personal preference. Some people prefer a highly analytical and educational form of casting to improve their game, while others prefer a more casual or energetic feel. I think it really shows in the quality of the cast if the person doing it loves what they are doing and really wants to help spread the popularity of StarCraft.
—Husky on shoutcasting[2]
An avid fan of real-time strategy video games, Husky first learned of StarCraft when he was 11 years old. He stated that he played for 12 years, and spent most of his time on Blizzard's online server Battle.net, accumulating several thousand played matches. Husky began following the electronic sports community when he discovered GOM TV, a streaming service in South Korea that broadcast StarCraft gameplay from professional gamers. This prompted him to begin a YouTube channel where he provided his own commentary on StarCraft: Brood War professional competition. The channel started expanding beyond Husky's own expectations, and at one point Husky was uploading around 100 videos per month.[2] While his channel became popular among other StarCraft: Brood War commentators, he gained a meteoric rise when he decided to exclusively commentate on StarCraft II: Wings of Liberty matches with the game's beta release in February 2010.[3]
During the beta, Husky collaborated with fellow commentator and friend HD to host the HDH Invitational, a StarCraft II tournament consisting of 16 of the top professional StarCraft II gamers. The tournament was played in an entirely virtual environment over the Battle.net server, and the games were later broadcast on YouTube. The tournament was sponsored and cash prizes were awarded.[3]
In July 2010 Husky and HD along with several other game casters, participated in the launch of a new YouTube channel titled The Game Station which seeks to emulate an ESPN-esque presentation of gaming videos of all genres.[3] The channel quickly grew in size, and its success has been attributed partly to Husky's own success on YouTube. Later that year, Husky moved to Los Angeles to pursue a full-time job working at The Game Station.[4] HuskyStarcraft has casted a number of professional tournaments, starting with the HDH invitational and his most recent being the Red Bull Training Grounds Santa Monica on June 21, 2013.[5]
In mid-April 2013, Husky teamed up with TheWarpzone and Stage5TV (The Red5 Studios media channel) to create a music video which was a parody of Maroon 5's "One More Night" titled "One More Fight."[6]
To explain his view of why StarCraft is an exemplary video game for both casting and spectating, Husky stated, "Nearly every single person I have introduced competitive StarCraft to has completely fallen in love with it[...] The level of skill and mental precision required to play StarCraft 2 at the highest levels is completely mind blowing. This is why it is an extremely fun sport to watch."[7] Husky's commentary style has been described as matching the fast-paced progression of the game, with him often losing his breath at eventful moments. This is contrasted with HD's more composed and analytical approach to casting.[3] In describing his passion for video games and the electronic sports scene, Husky stated, "Gaming has always been more than just a hobby for me. I wouldn't say it's a lifestyle, but I just get so much joy out of it that I will forever try and be involved with it as much as possible[...] No outside job will ever limit me when it comes to gaming."[7]
On 26 September 2012 Genna Bain announced the creation of Axiom ESports, with TotalBiscuit and Husky as the teams sponsors and CranK, now AxCrank, as their first player.[8]
Throughout his career of gaming and casting he has also produced and co-produced music video parodies and originals with Kurt Hugo Schneider under the name of Nerd Alert such as Banelings (Justin Bieber - Baby Parody), Nerdy and I know it (LMFAO - Sexy and I know it Parody), Void Rays (Rebecca Black - Friday Parody) and Dear Peach (Luigi Love Song).
After Esports
In early 2015 Husky stopped casting esports tournaments and posting commentaries and appears to have become the manager and producer for Rosanna Pansino's Nerdy Nummies.[9]
See also
- Day9 – StarCraft 2 commentator
- HDStarcraft - StarCraft 2 commentator
- TotalBiscuit - computer game commentator
References
- ↑ Lamond, Mike. "HuskyStarcraft's Channel". YouTube. Retrieved 2012-01-11.
- 1 2 Edwards, Tim (2010-07-27). "Community heroes: StarCraft commentator Husky". PC Gamer. Retrieved 2010-11-22.
- 1 2 3 4 Pennycook, Jeremy (2010-07-29). "Video Games And Their Evolution Into A New Breed Of Spectator Sport". NPR. Retrieved 2010-11-22.
- ↑ Schreier, Jason (2010-11-13). "The Men Who Stare At Protoss". Eurogamer. Retrieved 2010-11-22.
- ↑ "Watch Red Bull Training Grounds Live". Red Bull. 2013-06-21. Retrieved 2013-07-18.
- ↑ Nguyen, John (2013-04-17). "Girlfriend…or video games? Maroon 5 parody knows how gamers feel". Nerd Reactor. Retrieved 2013-07-18.
- 1 2 Kuchera, Ben. "The virtual play-by-play: talking StarCraft 2 with Mike Husky". Ars Technica. Retrieved 2010-11-22.
- ↑ "Definitive eSports news article- Axiom ESports announced". Retrieved 2012-11-15.
- ↑ "HuskyStarcraft(@HuskyStarcraft) Twitter". Retrieved 2016-05-01.
External links
- "HuskyStarcraft" YouTube channel - Main YouTube channel, mostly StarCraft.
- "Husky" YouTube channel - Second YouTube channel, described as "[Stuff that] doesn't fit in with my main channel".
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