“Yeah, that’s true but I could have also put a deposit on a house with the amount of dope I’ve smoked in my life, the amount of alcohol I’ve drank,” Bromley laughs. I ask him if he could possibly put an exact number on the amount of cash he’s fed into the Big Buck Hunter slot at his local.

Will Bromley’s mum reckons he could have put a deposit down on a house with all the money he has fed into Big Buck Hunter.

It’s a hot day in Newtown and Bromley is wearing thongs and boardies, a trucker hat and his Big Buck Hunter World Championship T–shirt. It's a pretty unassuming costume for someone who is revered—in certain circles—as an elite athlete. Because as it stands he’s the fourth best Big Buck player on the planet.

“For the last two weeks, I’ve come first in the world,” he says matter-of-factly, explaining that each week, players compete internationally in “target treks” in the hope of winning $100 USD of gaming credit. Serious players have a Buck Card, which allows them to sign into the game and compete in the worldwide tournament. Bromley aims the gun at a list of names on the screen, highlighting his name, which is in the number one slot, along with an Aussie flag and his personal icon, which is a cartoon jug of moonshine. This moonshine jug is also tattooed on his forearm.

Big Buck Hunter is an arcade-style game where players attempt to shoot bucks—male deer—with a handheld plastic rifle. A mother and her young son are at one of the two Buck machines at the Courty and they also greet Will by name and then park up to watch him play. “You’re so good at that,” says the kid in pure admiration. Bromley smiles, explaining to me that he just got a perfect score in the bonus round.

The bar staff at the Courthouse Hotel know him by name. I offer to buy him a beer but he opts for a soda water instead, explaining he’s on the wagon this week, swimming laps at the local pool and trying to get a bit healthier. The bartender exchanges Will’s fiver for some coins, not bothering to charge him for the soda water, and then he beelines for Big Buck.

“When I first started playing a lot, [Mum] was a bit perplexed by the whole thing, you know, cause like, I’m 41 now and she wanted me to settle down and have kids,” says Bromley. “She’s a bit gung-ho on having grandkids so she sort of blames the game for me not settling down and sort of… getting serious about life.”

At $4 per game, Big Buck training gets expensive. Bromley tells me that last week, after winning first place in the target trek and the $100 USD game credit, he rinsed the whole lot in two or three hours, then played more the next day. He’s been playing regularly since 2004, when he was managing the Kings Cross Hotel.

But late last year, Bromley got featured on the Brown Cardigan Instagram, which helped him score sponsorship from a beer company called Hawke’s Lager. They put on a keg to raise money for his trip to the Big Buck Hunter World Championships in Vegas and forked out for his flights and a hotel over there. Bromley says that when a film crew were interviewing his mum about the trip, it clicked for her that Big Buck was something that he really enjoyed and was good at.

The World Championships saw 64 players facing off one-on-one in shoot out mode, which is where two players shoot bucks simultaneously. Bromley had qualified in sixth place. “I just wanted to get in the top 10, you know?” he says. “I went into it with that premise. I knew my ability, I figured I’d just take every game as it came and it just so happened that I just kept on winning.”

On the second day, Bromley took it easy and tried to get some decent rest before the tournament. “I gave myself a little pep talk in the mirror, I looked at myself and was like, ‘You’ve got this Will, whatever happens happens, just go and have fun, don’t put too much expectation on yourself.’”

“It was insane,” says Bromley when I ask about Vegas. He describes how he blacked out on the first night and woke up to find that he’d blown $600 USD on drinks and gambling. “I don’t gamble, I hate the pokies,” he says, explaining that he was only drawn to the roulette table because the creator of Big Buck Hunter was sitting there with some of the other top American competitors.

Bromley ended up coming fourth, two slots higher than he’d qualified. He was stoked, not just with the result and the $7,000 USD prize money, but to get the opportunity to get to know the Big Buck community a bit more. “We all feel like a family,” he says. “There’s very rarely tension between players. We’re all really supportive of each other… It’s just one big party.”

For more pub-style content, check out our investigative documentary on the ingredients in chicken salt.

Unlike the majority of arcade games, Big Buck Hunter’s culture is strongly built around bars and drinking. This tends to deter kids and more reclusive gamers. While there are a few serious players who own their own machines and have them installed in their basements, Bromley reckons it’s more common for a serious player to buy a Big Buck console and install it at their local pub, making money off it when they’re not playing.

When it comes to technique, Bromley still remembers his breakthrough epiphany. “It was about eight years ago that I realised it was distance shots that gave you the maximum points, not accuracy,” he says. “It was a major game changer for me and changed my whole style of playing.” Bromley then shows me his technique: shooting a particular buck in the rump twice, letting it run away towards the digital horizon, then shooting it dead from a long distance.