Oxygen Esports Launches As New England’s First Multi-Title Esports Organization

Image credit: Oxygen Esports

OxygenEsports, has acquired rosters from Team Reciprocity and will be competing in five esports, which is a professional sports organization that has originated from New England.

The organization is the consequence of a merger between VR organization Helix eSports and esports analytics organization Team Genji.

In Rainbow Six Siege, Hearthstone, Rocket League, Fortnite, and Magic the Gathering, the company must compete: Arena. Launched simultaneously with the new Rainbow Six North American League, Oxygen Esports will be one of eight participants of the league’s new top-flight US division.

Oxygen Esports has also been able to win a spot in the Rocket League Championship Series by purchasing the rosters from Team Reciprocity. Both Team Reciprocity’s Rocket League and Rainbow Six rosters have been very good, offering Oxygen Esports an opportunity to participate immediately in strong titles.

Murphy Vandervelde, Co-founder of Helix eSports, spoke on the venture in a release: “We are beyond excited to breathe new life into New England’s esports scene and build on the region’s winning heritage with our championship teams. OXG will create the path-to-pro for all of New England esports. We cannot wait to leverage our chain of Helix eSports centers, including our soon-to-be-opened Patriot Place location, to create a hub for content, social and competitive environments across New England’s amateur esports scene.”

The company also focuses on the geolocalisation phenomenon. Although the Overwatch League and Call of Duty League pushed towards this pattern, numerous organizations such as the Pittsburgh Knights have discovered that achievement is binding on a city itself. For Oxygen Esports, New England ought to be assured.

Adam Morrison, Co-founder & General Manager of Oxygen Esports, added: “Our fans have a lot to look forward to with the rosters we are rolling out on the field, future talent that we will be signing, as well as the engaging and inclusive community we plan to build across the amateur scene in New England.”