Late last year, I stood in the middle of a community tournament in Nakuru. I watched over 300 young gamers compete with an energy that was nothing short of electric. The skill was there, the hunger was undeniable, and the numbers backed it up: Kenya has over 22 million internet users, with 75% of our population under 35.
Africa’s gaming market has already crossed the $1 billion mark annually, dominated by mobile gaming. We aren’t just playing games; we are sitting on a massive, untapped digital economy. But as I watched those matches, one question kept haunting me: How do we turn this raw momentum into a structured industry?
THE BOLLYWOOD PLAYBOOK: CULTURE FIRST, SCALE LATER
To move forward, we should look at how India built Bollywood. They didn’t try to outspend Hollywood on day one. Instead, they focused on local stories, cultural identity, and consistent production.
African esports must do the same. Instead of obsessing over billion-dollar global stages that centralize growth in capital cities like Nairobi or Lagos, we need to focus on:
- Localized Narrative: Shout casting in Swahili and vernacular to lower the barrier to entry.
- Distributed Talent: Building 47 active county ecosystems rather than one elite capital circuit.
- Cultural IP: Moving beyond games built outside our narrative and encouraging African game development.
THE “BAOBAB” MODEL: MORE THAN JUST MATCH DAY
At the grassroots level, our energy naturally flows into events. Tournaments bring visibility and unite communities, but an industry is like a Baobab tree, it needs many branches to survive. Beyond the competition, we must create structured pathways in:
- Education: Integrating esports modules into TVETs and universities.
- Production: Training local crews in broadcast and league operations.
- Incubation: Tech hubs collaborating with gamers to build African-rooted Intellectual Property (IP).
THE SHADOW IN THE ARENA: ADDRESSING FINANCIAL TRUTHS
As we grow, we must confront the “uncomfortable truth” seen globally: millions go unpaid in esports. From the $210 million TSM-FTX collapse to recent regional failures leaving $700,000 in unpaid prizes, the “spectacle” model is often fragile.
For a grassroots revolution in places like Nakuru to last, we need more than just passion. We need governance and financial discipline. We must define success not just by the size of the trophy, but by the security of the player’s contract and the sustainability of the local league.
THE CONVERSATION STARTS NOW
Esports in Kenya is not just entertainment. It sits at the intersection of technology, youth employment, and the creative economy. If we nurture every branch, competition, development, education, and media, we won’t just grow a hobby. We will build an industry that tells our stories and builds our legacy.
The youth are ready. The culture is forming. The raw material is here in Nakuru. Now, let’s build the structure to support it.
