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ELEAGUE announced a new competitive reality TV show featuring Street Fighter players.

The show’s winner will receive an invitation to ELEAGUE’s Street Fighter invitational tournament in June.

ELEAGUE will have to carefully balance the drama reality show viewers crave with the genuine personalities fighting game fans know and love.

ELEAGUE, Turner’s broadcast esports programming arm, has announced its first foray into reality television. ELEAGUE The Challenger: Street Fighter V will bring seven Street Fighter V players together in a Big Brother-style house to compete in various challenges. The winner will receive an invitation to the Street Fighter V Invitational 2018, ELEAGUE’s next fighting game competition with a prize pool of $250,000.

The show’s trailer introduced the seven contestants, which include the outspoken Daluan “LOW TIER GOD” Sparrow and popular female competitor Leah “Gllty” Hayes. Sparrow has received criticism within the community for his many controversial statements, including transphobic comments made against Gllty, and some within the FGC feel that his actions make him undeserving of a spot on national television. While these players are popular within the fighting game community—commonly referred to as the FGC—they and the other contestants are not household names.

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To host their reality series, ELEAGUE is bringing on Steve “Tasty Steve” Scott and Stephen “Sajam” Lyons. The duo, known in the FGC as “TastyJam,” have appeared on every fighting game broadcast for ELEAGUE as commentators.

A reality show with Street Fighter players certainly has potential. Tasty Steve and Sajam are skilled entertainers, and FGC members are often more outspoken with their rivals than the more reserved players in other esports. ELEAGUE has shown a willingness to use existing drama to create broadcast-ready storylines, as shown by their presentation of the rivalry between Kenneth “Kbrad” Bradley and Joshua “Wolfkrone” Philpot at last year’s Street Fighter invitational.

On its surface, the FGC can appear as an unprofessional, abrasive niche set apart from the esports industry. Events often lack the production quality of the Overwatch League, and players are often more willing to voice their dislike for one another. However, just like any community, this is only one side of the FGC. Fighting game fans do not support media that focus solely on their negative side. However, they tend to rally around companies that show the friendly, welcoming side of the FGC. If the show treats the FGC with respect, thousands of players of every fighting game will tune in to support it. ELEAGUE will have to carefully balance the drama reality show viewers crave with the genuine personalities fighting game fans know and love.

ELEAGUE The Challenger: Street Fighter V kicks off on TBS on Friday, April 20 and will run for five weeks.