Esports Is No Longer Just Gaming. It’s a Physical Performance Space.

Esports has rapidly evolved into a global competitive ecosystem. What was once bedroom gaming is now professionalized: teams, leagues, sponsorships, training schedules, and audiences in the hundreds of millions.

The global esports market is now valued in the billions of dollars, and competitive gaming sits inside a wider gaming economy approaching $200 billion worldwide. This scale matters — because with growth comes a new reality:

Esports is physical. And bodies are paying the price.


How Many Esports Players Get Injured?

Unlike traditional sports, esports injuries are rarely dramatic. They don’t happen in one moment. They build quietly.

Across multiple international studies, over 70% of esports players report experiencing pain within a single year. Nearly half report pain in any given week.

The most common problem areas are:

  • Wrist, hand, and fingers (repetitive clicking, tapping, gripping)
  • Neck and spine (forward-head posture, long seated sessions)
  • Shoulders and forearms (static tension and micro-movements)
  • Eyes and nervous system (strain, fatigue, reaction overload)

These are classic overuse and repetitive-motion patterns — the same category of injuries seen in surgeons, musicians, and factory workers — now appearing at scale in competitive gaming.

This means tendon irritation, nerve compression, chronic tightness, and coordination breakdowns.

Not season-ending injuries.

Career-shortening ones.


Why Mobile Gaming Changes Everything

Esports is no longer limited to consoles and PCs.

With platforms like Netflix launching FIFA-branded games directly on mobile, competitive gaming is moving into every pocket, every commute, every couch.

Mobile play intensifies three risk factors:

  1. Higher repetition density – rapid thumb and finger actions with minimal rest
  2. Smaller joint ranges – more strain on tendons and nerves
  3. Poorer posture environments – neck flexion, rounded shoulders, unsupported arms

Where traditional gaming already stressed wrists and spines, mobile gaming concentrates load into the fingers, thumbs, elbows, neck, and nervous system.

In other words:

the smallest joints are now doing the biggest work.


The Wellness Gap in Esports

Traditional sports evolved entire ecosystems around recovery, prevention, and performance health.

Esports did not.

Most players:

  • Train without physical screening
  • Ignore early pain signals
  • Lack ergonomic education
  • Have no recovery system
  • Push through nerve and tendon symptoms

Yet the data already shows that the majority of competitive players experience recurring physical discomfort.

The industry has built stadiums, leagues, and broadcast rights.

It has not yet built its wellness infrastructure.


Where Merlins Wellness Steps In

Merlins Wellness exists for this new era of performance.

Not only to help players recover —

but to help them last.

Merlins Wellness is designed to support esports athletes and high-volume gamers through:

  • Repetitive-motion injury prevention
  • Finger, wrist, and forearm resilience training
  • Postural and spinal health systems
  • Neural recovery and reaction preservation
  • Performance longevity programs

From console competitors to mobile-first players, Merlins Wellness focuses on the reality of modern gaming:

Precision sports now live in the hands, the eyes, and the nervous system.

And those systems need training, recovery, and protection.


The Future of Esports Is Not Only Digital. It’s Physical.

As esports continues to scale — and as mobile experiences like Netflix’s FIFA game bring competitive play to billions — the next evolution will not be visual.

It will be biological.

The winners of the future won’t only be the fastest thumbs.

They’ll be the healthiest nervous systems.

The most resilient hands.

The longest-lasting players.

Merlins Wellness exists to help ensure that in the age of endless play…

you can stay in the game.