In 2020, U.S. military esports activities garnered widespread media attention after a successful legal battle led by the
ACLU forced them to lift the bans on the people they had removed for discussing
war crimes committed by U.S. armed forces.[7][8][9]
History
The U.S. Army Esports team was founded in November 2018. After the Army missed its recruiting goal for the first time in 13 years, the team was founded in an effort to modernize outreach efforts.[10]
U.S. Army Esports promotional video
In 2022, the team finished second in the inaugural Armed Forces Sports Championship in Halo Infinite that was played against the other U.S. service branches.[11]
First Amendment concerns
The official U.S. Army Esports
Discord server and
Twitch became the target of activists who began to post comments and
memes referencing
war crimes committed by the United States. This led to moderators of the Discord server temporarily restricting people from joining, and a number of Twitch users being banned from the U.S. Army Esports Twitch channel.[12][13][14]
The team has been accused of promoting fake giveaways on Twitch by providing links that they claimed would enter viewers into a giveaway for an
Xbox Elite Series 2 controller, but rather redirected viewers to a recruitment form.[16] Twitch asked the channel to remove those links, with which the Esports channel complied. The team noted that they had given away ten controllers, gaming stations, and chairs in the past year.[9][17][18]
Return to Twitch
In response to the mass criticism, the U.S. Army Esports team announced on 22 July 2020 that they would halt activity on Twitch and would likely resume activity in spring 2021.[19] However, the team returned to Twitch on 14 August 2020.[20]
On 22 July 2020, U.S. Representative
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez filed a draft amendment to the House Appropriations Bill that would prohibit the U.S. military from "[maintaining] a presence on Twitch or any video game, e-sports, or live-streaming platform."[21] This amendment has since been defeated however, with the final vote being 292–126 against it and 13 members abstaining from voting.[22]