Law Times

April 15, 2019

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LAW TIMES 10 COVERING ONTARIO'S LEGAL SCENE | APRIL 15, 2019 www.lawtimesnews.com BY MICHAEL MCKIERNAN For Law Times L ike many 21 st -century law students, Evan Kubes and Josh Marcus' limited down- time featured a strong dose of consoles and controllers. "We probably spent a bit too much time playing video games," admits Kubes of their shared time at the University of Windsor's faculty of law between 2013 and 2016. But the experience appears to have paid off in the long term for the pair, who recently found- ed Marcus Kubes Management Group, the first full-service law firm and management agency dedicated exclusively to eSports and content creators. When they weren't putting their thumbs to work on the latest release, Kubes and Marcus liked to spend their time spit-balling far-fetched business concepts with their entrepreneurially minded friends at Windsor Law. "One would throw out an idea, and the rest us would come up with all of the reasons why it would fail," Marcus explains. But when Kubes approached him last year with the beginnings of a business case for MKM, Mar- cus couldn't find a way to shoot it down. "This was something that would allow us to stay in the legal field and leverage that ex- perience, while working in an area that we both love and found fascinating," Marcus says. "It made a lot of sense to me, and everyone I talked to about it kept validating the idea." If there was a barrier, it was the progress he had already made as a litigation associate at a prestigious insurance defence firm in Toronto. "I had the support of my family and friends, which helped, and finally, we made the move and left our cushy jobs," Marcus says. "It was the right time, and I'm glad we did it." Kubes' initial research had revealed a burgeoning global in- dustry that contributes billions of dollars per year to Canada's GDP annually, and rising, ac- cording to the Entertainment Software Association of Can- ada. In its recent report on video gaming in Canada, the associ- ation estimated the industry's value to the economy in 2017 as $3.7 billion, up more than 60 per cent since 2013, when the total was pegged at $2.3 billion. "What struck me most was that the business model ap- peared very similar to more traditional sports," Kubes says. "You've got players, teams and sponsors, all interacting in vari- ous ways." Critically, the eSports indus- try seemed to him underserved by the Canadian legal market, with only a few lawyers profess- ing to practise in the area, even as the country played host to high-profile events such as The International Dota 2 Cham- pionships. The tournament, which brought together some of the world's top performers in the multi-player online game, had a total prize purse of $25 million to share among the participating teams, including $11 million for the winners. "The people I spoke to in the space were telling me they had to go to the U.S. to get a lawyer who focused on eSports," Kubes says. "So, we saw a good opportun- ity to get into the area and help to build the infrastructure and regulatory framework for the community in Canada. "The idea was that, when it gets to the point where it's main- stream, we'll be there," he adds. But Kubes says the whirlwind pace of the firm's first few months of existence, during which they have been contacted by more than 200 potential clients connected to Canada's eSports industry, sug- gests he may have underestimated its level of maturity. "We thought we might be sitting around for a while in our dark office, waiting for things to explode, but it hasn't happened that way," he says. Jonathan MacKenzie, a cor- porate commercial lawyer with Toronto firm Aluvion PC, has been watching the growth of the eSports industry with interest over the last few years. "With the entertainment landscape the way it is and the trend for cord-cutting, money has poured into eSports, which tends to be an indicator of things to come," he says. "In Asia, they have a very well-established and large mar- ket, with mainstream sponsors and huge attendances at events. It hasn't quite caught on to that extent here yet, but it generally seems to be on the uptick," adds MacKenzie, who puts the slower North American development down in part to major brands' unfamiliarity with the field and its demographics. "Those first few relationships and deals can be difficult, because there's not an established process," he says. But the unique nature of the eSports environment creates its own difficulties for potential sponsors, according to Kubes. In addition to its legal services branch, MKM also offers agency services for eSports players, as well as a consultancy for newcom- ers looking to enter the business. "Unlike traditional sports, it's a very 'authentic' industry, which means that everything needs to be done in a way that's accepted by the community. Any time you bring in a sponsor, that needs to be taken into con- sideration," he explains. Still, Gary Daniel, counsel to intellectual property law bou- tique Deeth Williams Wall in Toronto, says the parallels be- tween eSports and its more es- tablished athletic counterparts, such as basketball and hockey, are striking. "Even though you have a new paradigm, in most respects, it's very similar. In tradition- al sports, you see people act- ing for athletes, franchises and leagues, and it's the same thing in eSports," he says. The most significant area in which eSports differ lies in the proprietary nature of the "play- ing fields" on which the contests take place, Daniel notes. "Because particular games are owned by someone, it's going to be harder for rival or break- away leagues to emerge," he says. Indeed, the Overwatch League, based around a popular first-person shooter game, has already seen one of its first in- tellectual property disputes after the game developers reported- ly asked one team to drop any reference to "Toronto" from its name, in favour of another that had purchased naming rights. Allan Oziel, founder of To- ronto business and technology law firm Oziel Law, predicts that, as the industry matures, open- source games could rise in pop- Evan Kubes says that, before he co- founded his firm, the Canadians he spoke to 'were telling me they had to go to the U.S. to get a lawyer who focused on eSports.' Duo launches eSports law firm "It would certainly be interesting to see the creation of a league that is based on more open-source games." Allan Oziel FOCUS See Idea, page 12 CanadianLawyerMag.com Fresh Canadian legal news and analysis available on any device. 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