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These strategies will help schools build a technology infrastructure that will help esports thrive

4 ways schools can futureproof networks for an esports takeover


These strategies will help schools build a technology infrastructure that will help esports thrive

Esports is soaring in popularity in K–12 schools and in higher education as student gamers find a competitive and team-based outlet for their video gaming habits—playing not in isolation but among a community of fellow students.

Esports students aren’t traditional athletes, but they still practice after school, play different positions, wear jerseys during competitions, and compete for trophies and college scholarships. Coaches even suspend players whose GPAs dip below the required minimums.

Related content: 8 tips to launch an esports program in your district

Because esports are so popular, more than 1,200 schools now participate in the High School Esports League, a six-fold increase from 2018. Researchers say esports, or competitive video gaming, has become a US $1 billion global industry. Yet, even as the COVID-19 pandemic is impacting esports tournaments by forcing people to cancel or postpone events, and shift to virtual classes for the foreseeable future, online gaming helps kids stay connected in their new self-isolated way of life.

When these kids return to school, they must be aided by a technology infrastructure capable of supporting them in much the same way helmets protect football players. To make this happen, school networks must be able to meet the performance demands of esports teams in several important ways.

1. Ensure adequate bandwidth

In competitive gaming, every millisecond matters. Any network latency or delays could mean the difference between a win and a loss for esports athletes. A high-performing network delivering quality, uninterrupted gaming is a must.

But IT teams also support students and teachers who need seamless access to applications and software as a service (SaaS) platforms as part of their daily learning activities. If the school tries to run esports over the same pipe, the surge in live streaming traffic will push the network past its limits and create contention.

As schools look to start or scale their esports programs, it’s critical for them to understand the impact these initiatives will have on their existing network infrastructures.

IT managers can start by analyzing network traffic to help inform bandwidth use, to set up alerts when bandwidth is saturated, and to detect bandwidth hogs on the network. They should also monitor performance across all devices, applications, networks, and vendors to isolate network slowdowns and determine whether the app or the network is causing issues. From there, they can more efficiently troubleshoot and remediate the problem before users feel the impact.

If performance is an issue, one suggested remedy is to use network segmentation to provide esports athletes with their own dedicated bandwidth, freeing up existing networks to support the daily learning curriculum without interruptions. Applications policies and class-based policing can also be used to prioritize bandwidth for critical applications and functions.

2. Create a dedicated computer lab

Esports demands a lot of processing power. Even with the right amount of bandwidth, if a computer is underpowered, the user experience will be compromised. The typical esports computer lab should be equipped with high-performing PCs capable of consuming, rendering, and processing data in a timely fashion. PCs supporting a higher frame rate (typically 1080p/60 FPS) are recommended.

To realize economies of scale, these investments can also benefit other areas of the school, such as advancing STEM initiatives and other activities requiring high computing power.

3. Plan for regular software updates

If athletes run into bugs or glitches, it could make their games unplayable or cost them a tournament. To address this, esports developers and platform providers work constantly to fix bugs and improve gaming performance.

This puts pressure on IT teams to roll out these improvements as expeditiously as possible, a challenge for school districts with centralized IT functions. Sending staff out to each school to manually patch systems is inefficient and time-consuming. But with automated patch management, teams can centralize fixes and updates across workstations, servers, and esports applications. They simply schedule a job once, and it’s automatically pushed out to devices across the district.

4. Some pointers on security and privacy

The growth of esports is fast attracting the attention of bad actors looking to exploit vulnerabilities in software and networks. Experts predict cybercriminals will increasingly target the esports industry over the next three years, hacking accounts, stealing personal identifiable information (PII), or moving laterally through school networks to sabotage other systems.

As schools add more cloud-based applications to their networks (such as third-party esports platforms), they lose visibility into potential vulnerabilities and have less control over remediation actions, which are handled by the provider. Strategies such as network segmentation and the automatic application of security patches and updates can help ensure cyber risk is minimized and the security posture of the esports program is improved.

These challenges aren’t new, but the imperative is

Many of these challenges aren’t new to school districts, but addressing them can mean the difference between victory and defeat for esports athletes. With these best practices and the right tooling, though, schools can scale their IT infrastructure to support esports programs and other academic areas using their existing IT resources.

There’s also an imperative to act fast. During this time of national crisis caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, kids are at home and passing the time with online gaming. When school’s back in session, this passion will likely translate to even more demand for esports. IT teams better be prepared.

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