Skip to main content

MLB stars are using video games to hone their skills during lockdown

 

In any other year, San Francisco Giants’ right-fielder Hunter Pence would be in the outfield catching fly balls on a given weeknight. Instead, he’s inside his home playing World of Warcraft.

But Major League Baseball (MLB) players like Pence that are turning to video games aren’t just in it for a leisurely hobby (although it is a perk for dull quarantine days). Video games are helping players keep their skill sets sharp while in quarantine so that when the time comes, they can return to the field in full force.

“There’s science behind video games helping with quick decision making because, in a lot of specific games, you’re working on timing and anticipation…similar to recognizing a pitch at the plate,” Pence said.

Hunter Pence
Icon Sportswire / Getty Images

Pence said playing video games — especially World of Warcraft — helps with his right-fielder skills like using his peripheral vision, which is needed when he’s in the outfield and has to focus on many things at once such as watching runners near the bases while also keeping an eye on the ball.

“I like to play World of Warcraft to help with my outfield because of the peripheral viewpoints in the game,” he said.

MLB players like Pence should be in their eighth week of the season right now. Instead, because of coronavirus lockdowns, games are on hold indefinitely, stadiums stand empty and quiet, and athletes are playing video games instead of baseball games. 

Pence is an avid gamer. He even has a Twitch channel where he frequently streams his favorite games, which lately include the Diablo series, Magic: The Gathering, and World of Warcraft. His Twitch channel has more than 21,500 followers.

“During the season, I stream very little, but when I do get to stream on the off-season, I would say I usually stream on Twitch three times a week,” Pence said. 

Hunter Pence playing League of Legends in a recent Twitch stream. Twitch

Video games can help keep the brain active and sharp, researchers have found. A 2017 research article published in the Frontiers in Human Neuroscience journal analyzed over 100 different studies and found that playing video games can increase certain brain skills. The combined studies found that gamers show improvements in skills such as sustained and selective attention. 

Research also found evidence that video games can increase the size and efficiency of brain regions related to visuospatial skills, like how World of Warcraft helps with Pence’s peripheral vision. 

Not all MLB players are hard-core gamers like Pence, though; some enjoy the competition that video games provide. 

Jon Duplantier, a pitcher for the Arizona Diamondbacks, says he’s more of a casual gamer. His games of choice during quarantine are Call of Duty, Mario Kart, Super Smash Bros, and Madden. 

Since Duplantier can’t get out onto the mound, video games are stoking that drive to compete. 

“Video games keep up that competitive edge,” he said. “As athletes, we chase that feeling of competitiveness, of the goal to win.” 

Lockdowns have also shut down a lot of the camaraderie between his teammates in person. But Duplantier says he’s found that type of connection through gaming. 

“Video games are another way for people to connect and hang out,” he said. “Being able to go on Playstation or Nintendo and get to connect with those guys and play games is important in times like this.” 

Even in “normal” times, video games provide much-needed relief to these players when they are criticized for their every move on the field.

“As a professional athlete, everything you do is under such a huge microscope, and you can be too hard on yourself,” Pence said. “It can be tough to sit there after a loss or a bad game and just think about it, whereas sometimes you can get involved in a new game and reset, so to speak.”  

Even when MLB reopens and teams face each other on the baseball diamond in real-life again, video games will still be a useful aide for players. 

“Video games are definitely an escape,” Pence said. “I find a lot of joy entering these different worlds.”

Allison Matyus
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Allison Matyus is a general news reporter at Digital Trends. She covers any and all tech news, including issues around social…
The best video game villains of all time, ranked
Super Mario 3D World + Bowser's Fury

We always establish some level of connection with our player character in games, but it is usually the villain who gets the most time in the spotlight. In many series, it is the villain who remains the constant while the hero changes, building up a rivalry that extends beyond the game itself. What makes a good villain can be a lot of things. They can be especially hard boss fights, have sympathetic goals and motivations, or are just so comically evil that we just love to see them on screen. We've been thwarting some villains since the NES generation, while others are more modern. No doubt we will find even more fantastic villains in upcoming video games, but for now, this is our ranking of the best video game villains of all time.
7. Dr. Wily

Dr. Wily deserves a spot on this list for being one of the first recurring villains on the NES. Each Mega Man game featured a unique cast of robot masters to fight, but the same mad scientist was always behind them going rogue. In the end, we always bested his robots, stormed his castle, and captured him (except for that one time when Mega Man was fed up with it all and tried to murder him). It was always world domination with Wily, and only because his partner got all the glory for their work in robotics. Neither his motivation or goals changed much from game to game, but fighting him at the end was always a treat with all the powers you'd coallected.
6. Bowser

Read more
The hardest levels in video game history
A bonfire burning with a sword in dark souls

Sometimes an entire video game can be hard, othertimes there are hard bosses, but then there are games where there's just one level that cranks up the challenge to unrealistic levels. It is natural for a game to get more difficult as you get further along, but sometimes that curve isn't as smooth as it should be. Or, in some cases, the game decides to change up the gameplay for a level. Whatever the reason, some levels have stood the test of time as being way too difficult for their own good. Even in the cases where the levels are technically fair, they still demand a level of perfection from the player to be considered fun. Here are the hardest levels in video game history we hope to never play again.
Alien "Auto"topsy part 3

It pains us to put a level from a game as great as The Simpsons Hit & Run on this list, but the final level just has every ingredient you need for a terrible level. The goal of this stage is to collect barrels of nuclear waste and deliver them to the UFO to blow it up. You're in a fast but not very responsive car, which is made worse by the fact that if you collide with almost anything while carrying a barrel, it explodes and you have to start over. Oh, and how about putting the mission on a timer? Yeah, you have a time limit on everything in this level, adding stress that only makes crashing more likely. If you don't know the ideal routes to take and get very lucky with traffic and controlling your car, it is next to impossible. This final level is the main reason most players have never beaten this otherwise amazing game.
The Dam level

Read more
L.A. Noire developer Video Games Deluxe becomes Rockstar Australia
A screenshot from LA Noire.

Rockstar Games has acquired Video Games Deluxe, soon to be renamed Rockstar Australia. The studio is based in Sydney and is responsible for the 2017 re-release of L.A. Noire as well as the more recent Grand Theft Auto: The Trilogy.

The news might come as a surprise; after all, the two studios have worked alongside one another for years. However, it was just a partnership until this point. "It's been an honor to work closely with Rockstar Games this past decade," said Brendan McNamara, founder of Video Games Deluxe. "We are thrilled to part part of Rockstar Games and to continue our efforts to make the best games possible."

Read more