
The esports market is worth $1 billion (USD) a year, and Tokido is a prominent figure in that world, having won multiple global fighting game championships. Hear about his life in gaming.
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"Direct Talk"
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Our guest today is Tokido, a professional gamer.
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Tokido is part of the world of esports,
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competitive, multiplayer gaming.
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One hundred million people around the globe compete in esports,
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and the total viewing audience is 500 million.
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Esports is also a billion-dollar-a-year business,
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and is being considered for future inclusion in the Olympics.
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Tokido is a leading esports competitor.
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In 2017, he took home a title
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at a premier international fighting game tournament.
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But he has a surprising background.
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In college he dreamed of becoming not a gamer,
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but a biomaterials engineer.
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So how did he end up as a pro gamer?
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Tokido shares how he took a big bet on gaming.
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Gaming with Passion
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We play video games with absolute intensity.
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We play with so much passion
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that I think it's fair to call us "athletes."
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2017. Las Vegas, USA.
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The Evolution Championship Series
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is the world's largest fighting game tournament.
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This packed crowd is about to watch the finals
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for the fighting game "Street Fighter V."
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That's it! Tokido is the Evolution 2017 champion!
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He's done it!
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You guys know from my face, I am so happy now!
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Everybody, give it up for Tokido.
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Tokido took home 35,750 US dollars.
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The atmosphere in there was the best.
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As we built towards the climax, the voltage just kept ramping up.
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I'll never forget that.
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I think we had close to 10,000 people there.
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They even broadcast it on ESPN.
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And five million viewers were streaming online,
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watching on their devices.
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The biggest prize I ever won in a single tournament is 150,000 dollars.
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Tokido's life revolves completely around gaming.
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He practices eight hours a day.
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What are these weights doing in his room?
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After game time is over, he drinks a protein shake...
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and does an intense hour of strength training.
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This, too, is part of being a pro gamer.
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In a competition, especially the finals or something like that,
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there's so much tension.
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You're just sitting there playing a video game,
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but your heart is pounding.
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Strength training is a good way
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to prepare your body for those intense conditions.
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Tokido also trains at a karate dojo.
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Doing karate is great.
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Karate is about your form, right?
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You practice these forms, and then you use them in actual sparring.
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That's the goal you work towards.
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Alternating between actual fights and training,
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you eliminate inefficiencies and improve precision.
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It's exactly the same thing I do when I play a game.
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Tokido was born in 1985.
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His father was a lecturer at a medical school,
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and his mother was a dentist.
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In third grade, he changed schools,
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and encountered bullying as the new kid.
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My classmates acted like I didn't exist.
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It was a really painful experience.
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It's tough being the outsider as an elementary school kid.
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The reason I got so deep into fighting games
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is that I didn't have any friends to play with,
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but one day I played a fighting game with my cousin.
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And it was a lot of fun.
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From then on, Tokido would come home from school
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and immediately dive into gaming.
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When I was playing games, I could forget about all the bad stuff.
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In hindsight, I see that it was probably a way to escape reality.
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As he got older, Tokido began frequenting arcades.
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It was an era when video games were considered a bad influence.
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Gamers like Tokido were looked down upon by society.
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But he didn't neglect his studies,
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and earned a spot at the University of Tokyo,
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the toughest school in Japan to get into.
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Playing games and studying are actually quite similar.
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It takes time to learn and memorize things,
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so that you can perform well
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and ultimately get the answers right on the test.
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In gaming, you practice day after day,
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and then you show your stuff at the tournament.
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One shot.
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I think that's something games and school have in common.
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Tokido was earning a reputation as an amateur gamer
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while studying biomaterials engineering at the University of Tokyo.
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His research publication won an international prize.
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But after starting graduate school,
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he wasn't accepted to the lab he wanted to join,
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which brought him many sleepless nights.
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Around that time, Umehara Daigo, a mentor to Tokido,
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announced that he was becoming the first Japanese pro gamer.
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Tokido wondered if he could do it too.
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But was devoting his life to video games really a good idea?
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Huh? I had never even imagined
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you could make a living playing video games.
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I hadn't even realized it was a possible career path until then.
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Should he become a professional gamer?
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Tokido sought out Daigo's advice.
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Right off the bat, he said that I should just get a normal job.
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Simple as that.
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Then, right as we were leaving, he said,
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"But you've only got one life to live."
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Then Tokido spoke with his father, Hisashi,
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now a medical school professor.
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He was a strict, stern father.
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I thought talking with him about it would be pointless.
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But his response really surprised me.
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He said, "Oh is that what was troubling you?
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I think you should do it, go pro."
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At one point, my dad had wanted to be a rock musician.
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Something happened and he had to give it up, very reluctantly.
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He thought that if I had a chance, then why not give it a shot?
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I suspect that was his thinking.
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Tokido quit graduate school.
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In 2010, at the age of 25, he announced he was turning pro
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and proceeded to go on a big winning streak.
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Tokido had a signature style in this era.
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Playing as a character called "Akuma,"
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he would knock his opponents over with a leg sweep,
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then attack from above.
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It was an all-offense style that pinned down the opponent.
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People gave me the nickname "Ice Age."
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I really wasn't very tactical.
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I just stuck with my set pattern and played the game my way.
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By "Ice Age," they meant that my style was cold, it was boring.
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But I didn't care at all, as long as I was winning.
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Eventually, though, his opponents figured out his style,
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and wins turned to losses.
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I was losing a shocking amount.
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Just getting crushed.
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And I was so beaten down I couldn't play well.
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The players I was training with were saying things to me like,
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"The way you're playing is letting us down."
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I felt pretty bad about that.
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Tokido went back to the drawing board,
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analyzing the technique of the world's best players,
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including Daigo.
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They had a lot of different tricks. I never noticed that before.
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In the first few matches against someone,
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you figure out what stuff they have,
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and then you figure out what stuff you have that will work against them.
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You bust out a new strategy.
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Like, if I had potatoes, onions, and carrots,
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the me back then would have made the most obvious thing.
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A simple curry.
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But the truly great players try out all sorts of possibilities.
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They come up with recipes you would never expect.
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That's part of their success.
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Tokido stopped worrying about winning above all else.
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If he was able to discover a new tactic,
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then even a defeat became a success.
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In 2017, this new approach took him to Evolution,
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the world's biggest fighting game event.
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In the final, Tokido was up against Punk,
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a fierce American competitor who was favored to win.
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What makes Punk so different from anyone else are his reflexes.
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They're inhuman, superhuman.
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He wants to be able to take advantage of those reflexes.
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So my strategy was not to get in too close.
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I would fight him by keeping some distance between the two of us.
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At this tournament, Punk was 18 years old,
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an up-and-coming star with a string of tournament wins.
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Against an opponent like this,
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Tokido knew it was crucial to take the initial rounds.
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The final begins.
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Tokido's character is in the blue.
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Punk's is wearing pink.
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Tokido's plan works. He takes the first set.
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Punk seems dismayed. He almost can't believe he's losing.
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Contrast that with Tokido,
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who faced countless crushing losses on his way to this stage.
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He looks calm and confident.
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If he wins this round, he wins the championship.
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Tokido unleashes a powerful move.
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Flustered, Punk loses his focus for just a moment,
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and lands right on the fireball.
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That's it! Tokido is the Evolution 2017 champion!
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The moment I won was just incredible.
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Almost 10,000 people chanting my name.
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"Tokido!"
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Standing in the middle of a crowd that big,
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hearing all those voices, I won't have many moments like that again.
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Tokido!
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Tokido has continued to compete successfully on the world stage.
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He always tries to fire up the audience with his play.
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It's something that he believes is vital.
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I hope we can improve the status of gaming.
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The generations that came before us didn't have it easy at all.
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They had so much passion,
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but even though they wanted to share that with the world
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to awe people, to move people, the world wouldn't accept it.
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And I'm sure that hurt a lot.
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But we're now in an era where we can show to people proudly
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that you're allowed to put all of your passion,
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your whole heart into gaming.
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So I believe that's something I have to do.
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(Do you have any words to live by?)
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"Every day, evolve."
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I have to compete against players from all over the world,
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and that competition is fierce.
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In order to survive, I need to keep evolving, every day.
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I want my opponents to say,
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"Wow, you have that technique down too?!"
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I want to surprise them.
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That's part of my strategy.
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And because I want to do that,
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I have to keep practicing each and every day.
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That's it.