Meet China’s e-sports warrior princess battling to put women back in the fight
At 22, Li Wei broke down the barriers of professional gaming to enter one of its biggest arenas, and that’s when the war really started
When professional gamer Li Wei was selected to play for one of the Chinese teams at World Cyber Arena three years ago, she thought she had the world at her feet.
As the first woman ever to take part in the annual e-sports tournament, she knew was breaking fresh ground. But even with her place on the team secured, she still had to overcome enormous prejudice on the part of the event’s organisers.
“Nobody will fight a woman,” an official said of her plans to compete.
“But she’s good,” one of Li’s teammates argued.
“She’s good looking, you mean,” the official fired back. “She’ll turn this whole tournament into a joke.”
The exchange of words in the organisers’ office at the 2014 WCA event in Yinchuan, northwestern China’s Gansu province, went on for some time, Li said. The memory of it still haunts her.