Cherry Hill East’s Valorant and Valkyrie Valorant e-sport teams went undefeated this year as they won the State Finals at Stockton University on May 18 as the end to their season playing in the Garden State Esports league. This is the second year that the Valorant team took home the title of state champion.
Valorant is one of six games and six teams that students can play on through the e-sports club. Club advisor Maria Han described the game as having an attacking side and a defending side and being played in 12 rounds.
“Playing on this e-sports team, I was able to make so many friends and we were all able to bond together,” said Sandy Nguyen, president of the club and a member of the Valkyrie Valorant team. “Through E-ports, I was able to have that aspect of making friends where you can meet in person, and also the competitiveness of playing for your school. That is something that you can’t have when you’re playing for yourself.”
This is the first year that the school has offered a Valkyrie Valorant team and the second year that the Garden State Esports has offered a Valkyrie League designed for female, female-identifying and gender-nonconforming students. This year’s Valorant Valkyrie Varsity team consisted of players Mikee Alvarez, Rinnah Segovia, Kaylie Doong, Sophia Gabriel, Sandy Nguyen, Kayley Phan, and Lillian Tan.
For Alvarez, being able to play on the Valkyrie team was something she has enjoyed a lot since the gaming community can be a bit harsher for girls. She described some of hardships she has faced because of her gender.
“I think we’ve all been in situations where because our voice is higher pitched, they associate us with femininity,” said Alvarez. ” … You’ll get yelled at just because you’re a girl playing the game. I think that has gotten better, but I think it’s been a bigger issue in years past, where just because you’re a girl playing this game, or because you play worse it’s automatically because ‘you’re a girl playing the game.’ It’s not because you’re having a bad day, it’s because you are a girl.”
Although some members were initially hesitant to join, they have found that joining the e-sports team has been a lot of fun and that it allowed them to find people who also want to play the game competitively and regularly with other people. Rather than playing by themselves with and against random strangers across the country, being on an e-sports team has allowed the players to have a consistent group to level up with.
Valkyrie Valorant team members gave a shout out to Kayley Phan, who plays on both the Valorant and Valkyrie Valorant varsity teams.
“She’s like our MVP, she knows a lot about the game and is probably the highest ranked in the game system,” said Nguyen. She shared that Phan had also made notes and provided strategies for the team to help them improve.
Both teams were recognized at the recent Cherry Hill Council meeting as well as the Cherry Hill Board of Education meeting.