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CompeteSoft: Connecting deployed gamers with homefront gamers

Sections: Ads & Media, Competitions, Consoles, Consoles-Other, Conventions, Exclusives, Features, GameCube, Interviews, Leagues, Linux, Mac, Originals, Other Media, PCs, PCs-Other, Previews, Pro-Gaming, PS1, PS2, PS3, Teams, Web, Wii, Windows, Xbox, Xbox-360

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CompeteSoft logoIn both civilian and military communities worldwide, the world of video gaming is expanding more and more, especially with popular massive multiplayer online titles. MMO games such as World of Warcraft, War Hammer and Call of Duty 4 have become a way of life and provide people with ways to meet other people who share their love of interaction through gaming.

One of the major fascinations of MMO games are the teams and communities players form while online, and a kinship a soldier often has to leave behind when he deploys. Ed Hale, a former member of 2nd Battalion, 325th Airborne Infantry Regiment, 82nd Airborne Division, now a corporate executive officer for CompeteSoft, Inc., offers free online gaming servers to Soldiers across the globe.

Hale, who graduated from West Point in 1971, said the idea for the community gaming concept came to him after finishing his five-year enlistment.
“The people I worked with at Fort Bragg forged some of the most vibrant memories I carry with me, even today,” Hale said.

But after leaving the service as a ranger and infantryman, he said trying to find a career in an unstable computer industry made it hard to maintain a career, with one job layoff after another.

“(So) five years and 110 jumps later, I found myself struggling over 25 years, working for numerous firms with either hardware, software or service/support responsibilities related in some way to computers or computer peripherals,” he said.

During one of his many ‘dot com’ job searches, Hale finally found a job in Texas where he met his current business partner, Randy Van Gelder. The two would eventually start an online business for the growing competitive XBox community called TeamCompete. When they realized how many of those gamers were deploying service members, they wanted to create a community for military gamers. So they created CompeteSoft.

“Our mission is to provide a free online space where gamers in the military can play solo or in teams, set up matches, record scores and establish bragging rights, with their fellow service members, friends and families for free,” he said. “We don’t sell anything. This is something we do because our military men and women deserve anything we can provide that’s safe, fun, free and connects them to family and friends.”

Hale admitted that he never knew any gamers over the age of 50 until they began registering on the site.

“You would be surprised at the number of gamers we have met who are (50 years old) and older who play online with their kids, on teams and in online leagues,” Hale said, and added that learning about the different kinds of online gamers was just as exciting. “We have a small handful of gamers over 50 who are actually military veterans.”

Veterans like Anthony Rivera, a Navy veteran who has been using CompeteSoft since 2004, said he enjoys being able to compete in multiple video game competitions.

“I also use the software to compete and to build a team of members with like minds,” Rivera said. “Another advantage of using the software is the abilities it has to brand a team a member etc. The experience that members will get out of the program is the social network potential it has. Compared to other software on the market I believe that there is nothing like it.”

Hale said CompeteSoft was created to become a place where active duty, retired and former military service members of all branches, veterans, Department of Defense civilians and their families play online games together. Hale said anyone could participate and play along side their military counterparts on the server since the site is free.

Staff Sgt. Craig Rader, noncommissioned officer in charge, Armed Forces Network Korea – Television News, said he uses CompeteSoft because he prefers to compete and interact with ‘real’ people instead of computer-generated opponents.

“I also enjoy talking and meeting people from around the world with similar game interests as mine,” Rader said. “With global servers, I can play against gamers worldwide, so being geographically remote becomes less of an obstacle while online.”

Rader said he’s still fairly new to CompeteSoft but has enjoyed the convenient and unique features the site provides.

“(Ever since) I discovered CompeteSoft and StripesGamer through an advertisement in the Pacific edition of Stars and Stripes newspaper, the site has allowed me to reach out to other players and play in organized online matches much more conveniently than other commercial sites,” Rader explained. “I recommend this site because it offers a chance for service members to connect with each other through gaming. As far as I’ve seen, it’s the only site that caters specifically to a military audience and offers services specifically suited to the military.”

Hale predicts CompeteSoft will grow. “Military gamers may not all have the newest consoles and many prefer playing the PC games or handheld games they have been playing for the past few years. Tools and games that best satisfy the player’s lifestyle and interests will be sought out and provided as the site grows and matures,” he said.

Site [CompeteSoft] Site [TeamCompete]

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