Why get a real job? If you’re good enough at Halo 3, you could be making more cash kicking butt in Halo cash tournaments than working a real job. Every though about becoming a professional gamer and battling others in Halo for cash?
Halo 3 League looks like it just started up play-for-cash tournaments for gamers good enough to take on opponents to win some money. Prizes range from $15 to $1100, and sign-up fees from $5 to $20. Obviously, the larger the cash pool the more competitors involved.
These tournements allow much larger spectrum of players to come together and play. While your "friends" may range from 4-12 people, these tounry's range from 100-250+ people. Along with such a wide variety of of players, your skill will have to compete with a much larger spectrum.
To make sure you don't complete get killed in a Halo tournament Halo 3 uses a customized version of TrueSkill ranking system for 'matchmaking', or the automated grouping of players of similar skill. Halo 3's matchmaking system is based on two different measures of player ranking, skill and experience (based on the number of 'rating points' or EXP, respectively). Skill is the numerical TrueSkill rank of the player in a given multiplayer mode. The TrueSkill ranking is affected by both wins and losses; wins against a much higher ranked opponent will rank a player up faster, while losses against players with lower ranks will cause a player to drop in rank faster. The experience system is linear, with a player gaining experience for winning a game and losing experience for quitting or otherwise leaving a game, with no effect for losing a game. To find an Xbox tournament to participate in, check out our round of sites that host xbox tournaments.
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