Paramount+ ‘Players’ review: An esports drama with heart

Players didn’t make me cringe at the time. It would have been so effortless for the fake documentary esports collection on Paramount+ to lean into a satire of offensive stereotypes. But Players chooses peace around violence, and the outcome is just one of the strongest originals from the streaming services so far.

It will help that the new series arrives from American Vandal co-creators Dan Perrault and Tony Yacenda. As fans of the Netflix mockumentary would assume, there are lots of laughs listed here. But wherever Vandal took a really serious-minded large faculty incident and manufactured it a silly tale, Gamers does the opposite: It truly is a smart and heartfelt character piece that drapes alone in the inherent silliness of adolescent players who bought too significantly money and fame at too young an age.

Creamcheese (Misha Brooks) to begin with arrives off like a juvenile douche. He is an arrogant and boastful League of Legends pro who, we immediately discover, hasn’t at any time managed to essentially bring a championship property with his workforce, Fugitive Gaming. But he’s also lived that familiar authentic-entire world esports success story of getting his staff acquired by a main company figure in legacy pro sports.

So though Creamcheese may perhaps not be an real winner, he talks and carries himself like one. That unearned chutzpah is challenged when Nathan Resnick (Stephen Schneider), the NBA group proprietor who also pays Fugitive’s bills, privately courts an emerging League phenom who calls himself Organizm (Da’Jour Jones).

Da’Jour Jones’ understated performance as Organizm is an important piece of his arc throughout the 10-episode time.
Credit: Lara Solanki / Paramount+

The tranquil and withdrawn 17-calendar year-outdated from Philadelphia is speedily signed to Fugitive’s roster, and Nathan forces team mentor and co-founder Kyle Braxton (Ely Henry) into forgoing education

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