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Zellsis "becoming a surgeon is easier" Ted talk

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#1
CurryCooker

Rant to put into perspective how hard becoming a surgeon is. I am a fan of Zellis but he made a really dumb statement. Also pardon my grammar, my english is bad. i mean no disrespect as I can tell he is just really ignorant about this which is not his fault but I hope he can grow from this and have a greater appreciation for health services in general. Literally getting into a majority of any of the health service jobs is harder and its not close. This includes nurses as well btw, becoming a nurse is harder as well. Finally before i start my rant, I agree they should be paid a lot and I am not discounting a pros struggle but he needs to get a better understanding of this topic. Not just him, but most people do not have the slightest clue how hard it is and I will give you a rough idea of how hard it is. My explanation leaves out a lot of information as well but I will just simplify it all.

TDLR: hard to get into med school, hard when you are finally in med school cause everyone's dummy smart, getting into surgeon residency is hard, being in surgeon residency is hard, nothing is a guarantee as you can fail out of your program + you leave with debt. Being a pro is less stressful and easier. If he said "Maintaining a job as a doctor is easier than maintaining a pro job cause the pro scene is more volatile", I would probably agree there BUT becoming a surgeon is sooooooooo much harder than becoming a pro its not relatively close. becoming a doctor is hard, if half these pros could they would but they cant (its true dont be mad). barrier to entry into the pro scene is not as high as in the medical scene. You have more opportunity to become a pro than to become a doctor cause you need such elevated credentials + requirements to get into med school + get into a hyper-competitive surgeon residency program. Also disrespectful to tell a doctor/surgeon that their path was essentially "guaranteed". maintaining a pro job is probably harder however this is debatable in some aspects.

Actual facts I will present

bro his comparison to a surgeon was actually really bad. I understand the point he is making BUT he is talking about the requirements for a profession he has 0 knowledge about. Let me put into perspective how hard becoming a surgeon is. In general to even get into a good med school you need to be in the top percentile of applications which is already fucking hard cause its not just grades that matter. You need 100s of hours of experience which includes clinical, volunteering, shadowing, extracurriculars + a crazy good gpa, good references, a great MCAT (which is hard cause the mcat is fucking hard test). Again this is a general requirements as some med schools can be different and getting in with a lower GPA or lower hours is possible but you need to make it by having a great foundation in the other application parts which I mentioned.

getting into med school is really fucking hard, and i simplified the requirements. When you enter med school, you enter a pool of hyper-intelligent people who are already smart, hyper motivated, and hyper active in this field of study. The barrier to get into med school is crazy but then to become a surgeon which is a specialization requires you to fight for a preferred slot against the smartest bunch of people you will interacted with up until med school. Like i need you to think about, imagine if you were competing against 100 of your schools valedictorians or someone who works harder than that in order to get into your program + get into your preferred residency. Then you need to maintain a certain level of marks against those said smart people which is hard again cause med school is not a guaranteed success + work you have to put in to be at the top of a class filled with crazy intelligent people who eat, sleep and breathe med school.

So you do countless hours in your undergrad (yes your 4 years of med school is considered an undergrad, at least thats what i was told). And getting into a surgeon program is not a guarantee because only the smartest people in your class get into their preferred choice + actually doing your specialization/residency for becoming a surgeon is fucking hard. YOU are not guaranteed a surgeon job just cause you get into med school. Becoming a pro in valorant is significantly easier, and there is no argument to be made in this aspect. LIKE YOU ARE NOT GUARANTEED ANYTHING IF YOU GET INTO MED SCHOOL, THE DROP OUT RATE IS BETWEEN 15-20%. THEN THE PEOPLE WHO REMAIN ARE THE HYPERMOTIVATED AND HYPER SMART PEOPLE WHO WORK THEIR ASS OFF FOR THEIR PROGRAM. The difficulty in becoming a surgeon can not be described unless you actually lived through it, I am an aspiring doctor and I can only give you a rough idea. Every doctor i have talked to has told me that their time in med school was fucking hard and that residency is not a pre-determined outcome + all this information in this post.

Also someones gonna make the arguement "well at least you get paid in residency".... bro you literally get paid below minimum wage based on the hours you work. Like the amount you make obvs differs but in general you work more hours and get paid less if you did the math. A pro can practice like 8hrs a day and still have time to another job, you do not have the same luxury when you are doing your residency. Also the amount of debt you have after med school literally can take decades to pay even with a super high salary. Imagine your debt from undergrad then debt from med school. being a pro is less stressful and less risky. You have less to worry about imo. If you fail med school you literally get 100s of thousands of dollars in debt without a degree + years of wasted time. If you fail to become a pro at least you have other options without the large debt. Failing med school means a large debt to pay off unless you're rich. If you market yourself well, stream + youtube + other side gigs, which is hard, but all this is still a pretty easy alternative to med school.

Now i would agree that remaining a pro is harder than maintaining your job as a doctor cause when youre a doctor you're pretty much smooth sailing unless some crazy shit happens. Staying a pro is harder than staying a doctor but becoming a pro vs becoming a doctor is not comparable at all. Like at all. So pro val/pros in any video game should be paid a lot because they also generate that much revenue for the esport they are in. becoming a pro is hard, being a pro is hard, staying as a pro is hard so I hope they get their bread. I think they should be paid a shit ton and I do not really care about them making more than some doctors. Yes a lot of people assume you go into med because you make a lot but 90% of people do not stay/do med school for that purpose. TBH you could do a trade school and be really well off without the med school debt, you do med cause you genuinely want to help people NOT just cause of the money. I would say doctors and nurses should be paid more but them making less than pro valorant players is not a problem in my opinion. These matters are just separate issues. If you want to compare incomes then compare incomes between pros in different pro scenes, unfair to compare pros to doctors IMO.

Thank you for reading my ted talk, love you zellsis. No hate cause being a pro seems hard but I would talk to a doctor and get their perspective to understand why its hard and how disrespectful your comments are to the people who became doctors. Telling them that becoming a surgeon was basically a "guarantee" is really disrespectful to them and how hard they worked to serve the community. YES doctors serve the community, its not just money-hungry dick head. You will meet some people like that but in general they want to help people, you just become desensitized cause dealing with death/sickness/injuries all day is mentally hard so being emotionally detached from patients helps keep you sane (in some cases).

#2
LimeScar
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someone ask chat to make this shorter thx

#4
CurryCooker
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read tldr

#7
kitsuneHP
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still very big

#3
Netero
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I heard some open heart surgeries literally takes 30 hours and you can't take breaks. Like they just stand there for that long while doing some of the most complex and precise shit and 1 mistake can end the patient's life.

#11
LifeIsALie
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for that matter, being part of any pure science field is a trillion times harder than being a good video game player

#18
Shuaaa
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Way too many pros get gassed up by their twitch chat. It's honestly hard for me to say as a fan that I can think of most esports players as being anywhere as close to professional athletes.

#5
Zephyros
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fax

#6
CurryCooker
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read tldr if you think I wrote too much, again no hate to any pro as I respect them and what they do for the community but this notion that being a pro is harder than being a doctor needs to be discussed. I regret the "if you would then you could" part but that's more of a light roast/banter. I am not being that serious when i wrote that. Love you all, have a good day. If you disagree then write in chat and I am happy for my opinion to change even if I wrote that its not debatable. Its not debatable but if there a person who became a surgeon and then became a pro, who said becoming a pro was harder then I will change my mind lol.

#8
kitsuneHP
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becoming a surgeon is wayy harder than becoming a pro. but job security is way less in pro scene(doesn't necessarily mean its a bad career, just can't stop the grind or someone else will fill ur place) than in being a surgeon. another thing is that you can never stop learning the game you have to keep updating yourself which isnt that demanded in being a doctor

#22
CurryCooker
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that isnt factually correct tho. Like as a doctor you have to stay on top of actual literature that is out. However changes are not as volatile as in valorant so from that aspect I can understand. Also the work you do as a pro is not relatively that hard if you were to compare it to most jobs. Like Unles you are a IGL/head coach who has to analyze the maps, agents and vod review then sure you have a bust schedule. But the average pro does not do more work than is required from a typical job. The notion that they do not stop learning = more demanding, does not make sense. regardless of your job you have to always be learning, its not just a "oh i finished my education so I'm done now". Who ever thinks this is out of touch from reality.

#9
Er3ngenes1s
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As a med student, i wholeheartedly agree with this fact. Anyone with the right mind wouldn't be saying stupid shit like this lol

#10
LifeIsALie
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zellsis is just mad coping lmao, becoming either a surgeon or a physicist/mathematicians is a trillion times harder and takes far more hard work and skill than becoming a pro, and moreover, these jobs actually contribute to humanity's progress unlike being a video game player

#19
Shuaaa
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Wdym.

What if, someday, cNed's valorant skills will determine the fate of humanity.

And the agent he must do so on is....raze

#20
donut2612
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gg we lost

#58
1cameh
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"contribute to humanity's progress"
Disagree. We have no concept of the impact esports pros have on society. How many young children have they inspired to take their lives into their own hands? How many people have they impacted by playing, or appearing on camera, or making a crazy play on LAN?

This black and white thinking of "muh, it doesn't directly do anything for society" is just a classic way of putting down any job that isn't directly humanitarian

#12
r3zyl
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I'm in med school in Italy, and from my point of view he's not totally wrong. Maybe I'm biased cause in Italy is not THAT hard to become a surgeon (mostly because a lot of surgery specializations such as general surgery aren't very evaluated, unfortunately). Probably in the US is way harder, but just talking about numbers, there are less than 200 players in tier 1 in the whole World, so it's a way lower percentage of people who become pros. Also there are other factors such as nepotism, that we all know that is a thing in esport (also in hospitals lol, but I think it has a smaller impact), and the fact that if you're not super talented you have to start playing at a very young age. Now, I'm not saying becoming a surgeon is easy, cause I know it's not and I know what I'm talking about, but seeing this from another point of view he's not totally wrong.
(Sorry for my grammar)

#25
CurryCooker
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I agree on the point that there is scarce job pool for pros but he simply said becoming a pro valorant player, not a top of the line pro player. Becoming a pro is not that hard. But also this is a purely hypothetical argument. I could say that if the pro players for any game worked as hard as a residency student, I do not think becoming a pro would be all that difficult. I am not saying that they do not work hard but there are levels to this. Becoming the top percentage in any field is extremely hard, do not just assume pro valorant is harder because its so publicised. Also i would say being a pro in valorant is soooo much easier than being a pro in csgo for example. But that's another topic. Pro valorant players get it relatively easier.

#57
jvccampos12
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I have a few point to consider. People usually don't get as much support to become a pro player as they would if they chose to study for med school. If a 18 year old decides to go pro, he probably won't get any support from his family and friends, and without it he won't be able to dedicate himself as much as he would as a resident student.I think that's what Zellsis meant when he said you can take a blueprint to become a surgeon. Although the path is hard, it is much clearer and socially accepted.

I also think Zellsis meant becoming a top pro valorant player (Tier 1 player). Tier 2 is dying and most pros there don't make much money. Riot also only consider Tier 1 players as Pro. So, with all due respect, i can see his point, you have to become one of the best 30 players in NA to be a real pro player. You'll probably have to do that without any financial support from your family, you only have 10 years to even try, and if you didn't start as a kid, chances are you won't be able to become one even if you dedicate yourself fully. It's a harsh path. Both are hard, and both should be respected.

#13
beaver_man
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We get it bro you went to med school

#28
CurryCooker
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bro if the only thing you got out of that was that I went to med school then you need to become more educated. Its not about elitism or being a doctor as a flex, its about having proper respect for the people who spend a large portion of their lives helping others.

#14
ash_knuckles
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.

#15
yungbasel
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Didn't see what zellsis said, but if someone compares valorant to being a surgeon. I don't think they're being serious, chill

#16
cartixuzi
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we powerscaling jobs

#17
ionlyHave1Zuni
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Do u think valorant pro player mogs a lawyer

#21
OddGodCupcake18
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Lawyers are bums tbh FNS clears

#27
widepeepofrosty
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brutal mog unfortunately

#29
CurryCooker
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we should not compare jobs in general, if you do then know what you are talking about. NOW obvs this is hypocritical cause idk much about being a pro besides the view things I've heard other pros describe on stream BUT I tried to keep my analysis more emphasized on the doctor side.

#45
cartixuzi
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both jobs are extremely hard and its just cringe af to see ppl compare them on which one is more depressing lol. both jobs can't be compared at all for multiple reasons but ppl will do it anyways

#23
j3bx5597
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not sure why this would even be contestable by any reasonable pro, but ig good job breaking this down

#31
CurryCooker
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thank you sir, I also did not mention the hard af tests you take in med school and the 100+ hours you work a week which would put any pro to shame IMO.

#32
Danny
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I mean most pro players work 10-12 hours a day

neither job really has work life balance

#24
Asuna_Yuuki
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How delusion and egotistical do you have to be to say something like this

The average esports pro is super lazy and overpaid
Actually one of the easiest jobs

Surgeons work 100000000000x harder and are NEEDED for society to function

#33
CurryCooker
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to be fair, being a pro is hard. So i do think describing them as lazy or overpaid is fair. Also if they generate millions in revenue for the esports they should be paid fairly. But I agree that being a surgeon is harder lol.

#36
Ballsamolee
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becoming at that pro level is hard, but working as a pro player is one of the easiest jobs out there

#26
cboomer
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zellsis is low iq

#30
Danny
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being a pro player is an easier job than being a surgeon

but becoming a surgeon is easier than becoming a valorant pro, just because of supply and demand.

Only the top 0.0001% of valorant players can ever become a pro, whereas around 15% of med students make it through school

#34
CurryCooker
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yeh I can understand this point but you are also assuming the path in becoming a pro is linear. I would say in general, the work you put into becoming a pro will eventually allow you to prove yourself. But like you are doing such a linear comparison without taking into consideration that because the barrier to becoming a pro is sooo low, that literally anyone can compete with you. So obvs the percentage goes down but imagine if they put in a criteria which required you put in a certain number of accomplishments, work hours, and other factors. The people being able to apply to become a pro would then flip this notion. Only a few people have the resume currently to become a pro based on past events and if this is what is taken into consideration then you are not competing aginst that many people. TO get any job you need a resume, if you do not then work for it. Like wtf is this weird notion that because the barrier to entry is lower that also means that the job is harder to get? BUT because there is essentially such a low barrier to entry you are literally competing with a majority of nobodies. SO this comparison again does not make sense.

You can not say the barrier to becoming a pro is harder if the requirements to becoming a pro is also vague. Like what are the actual requirements to become a pro?? Demon1 was a nobody before EG, how did he get a shot over anyone else? IF you say that its harder because its so vague then this is a circular argument. Realistically you are not competing with that many people if you have already proved yourself to a degree, its why you do not see many upsets unless its from already established pros/potentially unknown superstars. YOU will get progress if you put in the work or you get scouted like Demon1. BUT regardless you are not really competing with that many qualified people. also we need to establish what are the requirements to becoming a pro cause we cant keep being so vague about it.

#35
Danny
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You are competing with MUCH more people to become a pro than you are to become a surgeon, and there are MUCH more positions to become a surgeon

Anyone decently smart with a good work ethic can become a surgeon. It's a career path that is well respected in society as reliable.

Not everybody can become a pro. All it takes is being born with a low natural talent and slow reaction time and you will NEVER become a pro.

There are hundreds of thousands of surgeons around the world, and 180 franchise valorant players in the world.

Becoming a pro is significantly more difficult than becoming a surgeon

#37
CurryCooker
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but you are also competing against such a large pool of unqualified people. Like wtf? Also the rosters get shuffled so much that getting an opportunity becomes easier as well.

Also do not oversimplify the "Anyone decently smart with a good work ethic can become a surgeon", that's simply not true. You need to be exceptionally smart and/or have an exceptional work ethic.

Yes also obvs not everyone can become a pro but that goes for any job that requires you to be an elite. LIKE YOU NEED A RESUME. Only a small portion of pros have a resume to apply and thus you are not competing against that many people. In comparison, that can not be said about becoming a surgeon. Here ill give you more numbers. Millions of people apply to get into med school every year, only a small percentage get in, then out of the small percentage you have an even smaller percentage getting into a specialization. Like this comparison makes no sense.

You are not competing with that many qualified people to become a pro, sure becoming qualified may be hard but that is again the same for literally anything. To become qualified to become a doctor it literally starts in highschool, then 4-5 year of undergrad then 4 year of med school then 3+ years of residency. You quite literally spend more time trying to become a doctor then becoming a pro.

#40
Danny
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It’s harder to become qualified as a pro than it is to become qualified as a surgeon, it’s harder to get a position as a pro than it is to get a position as a surgeon, and it’s harder to stay a pro than it is to stay a surgeon

I’m 100% confident that I (3.9 unweighted GPA, 1450 SAT) could become a surgeon, but I know for a fact that I could never become a pro player

Being a surgeon is difficult, but not as statistically impossible as becoming a pro

#42
CurryCooker
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Here lets break this down again. I will compare a ivy league to becoming a pro top player in north america. Getting into an IVY league is harder than becoming a pro player. Hard to believe, but you fail to understand that being smart is not enough to get in. The barrier of entry is sooo high to become a surgeon at a top school that its not comparable. I can give you all the data and specification to become a surgeon in an IVY league. But let me ask you, what are the actual qualification to become a pro, how hard is it to get those qualifications, how many people have those qualifications, and how many people are you competing against with a similar qualifications.

The standard to get into an IVY league is already stupidly high, to get that qualification is also really hard, to then have to do this multiple times in order to be eligible to become a surgeon in an Ivy League is as you described it "statistically impossible'. You are competing with such a larger pool of people to become a surgeon with a similar qualification because they give you a rough idea of what is required that the likelihood a person actually becoming a surgeon at these schools is literally close to 0. Like think about how many people start on the road to get into an IVY league, how many people get accepted into the undergrad? How many people then accepted into the med program, how many people then get accepted into the residency program of their choice. Like the competition to become a surgeon is sooooo much higher than becoming a pro that its actually not a debate if you broke it down.

Again I am making an over simplification of the processes. Its not comparable at all. There is no real hard qualification to become a pro, which makes it accessible to more people. The same can not be said about surgeons, its not accessible to everyone, and only a few cohort of people in the 8 IVY leagues can graduate every year from the millions who dream of becoming a surgeon.

#44
Danny
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  1. you don't need to get into an ivy league or get into a top school to become a surgeon

  2. getting into an ivy league is easier than becoming a pro player

let's look at the numbers, and compare the precursor to becoming a Valorant pro, to your "precursor" to becoming a surgeon (even though only 8% of students accepted to grad schools went to an ivy league)

In order to become a pro player, you must be a radiant. There are only ever 2,500 radiants in THE WORLD at any time.

There are 8 ivy leagues, which each admit around 2,000 students a year, for a total admittance number of 16,000 ivy league students a year

It is more competitive to be a radiant than to get into an ivy league, and you DON'T need to go into an ivy league to become a surgeon

#47
LimeScar
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i think u cooked him here

#48
Semen-1
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This is true but comparing radiant to ivy league is absolutely absurd, first of all you have to take player base into account in a percentage view, the only people that are really competing for radiant are immortal 1's and above, which account for 2% of the player base (this is a generous scope). This compared to the university admissions, where approximately 5 million applied, and of which 500,000 applied to ivy leagues (10%). This is also not account any legacy students, which makes it disproportionately easier to get into an ivy league.

TLDR: ivy league to radiant is a really shitty comparison, ivy league is way way way harder to achieve.

#49
Danny
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It’s not “just immortals competing for radiant”, they have to rank up from diamond/ascendnt every act

Also, once again, there are less radiants than ivy league admits

Also finally, you don’t need to be in an ivy league to become a surgeon

#51
Semen-1
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It is just immortals competing for radiants at the end of act (this data was from last episode and end of act) so thats false. Also 'there are less radiants than ivy league admits' doesn't matter, you have to look at the competition as I stated above, there are much more admission towards ivy league than ranks immortal and above so proportionally, its much harder.

'you don’t need to be in an ivy league to become a surgeon' I wasn't talking about becoming a surgeon but rather your statement saying radiant is harder than ivy league but if you do want to become a surgeon, it is still harder than radiant. Once again, you need your respective stats to be very high and especially in America, you have to show you really want this job by committing to workplace shadowing and perhaps even research.

Talking from an Australian perspective, you must complete residency for 3 years and then take on the respective tests, interviews to specialise and become a surgeon. If you want to talk about places then oce has 500 radiants, but only around 50 doctors specialise successfully in surgery.

#52
DeluluGavin
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to be 'qualified' as a surgeon, you go through being a med student, intern, resident(sometimes even up to 7 years), a fellow, and finally being able to practice their specialty as 'attending'. It can take up to 10+ years with enormous money needed to buy books, school fees, rent, etc.
but yes i guess for you and your daddy zellsis, being a professional gamer is harder. I hope when you need surgery, zellsis is there to take care of you because that is how delusional zellsis's take is.

#61
CurryCooker
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I was comparing franching to an IVY league which is a fair comparison. Anyway here's what I wrote and tell me what you think:

let me ask you, what are the actual qualifications to become a pro, how hard is it to get those qualifications, how many people have those qualifications, and how many people are you competing against with similar qualifications?

If you think about it like this and I did a break down on the IVY League med schools for example to have a comparable example to the franchise teams You would see that its much harder on the surgeon side. just cause you have more people trying to become a pro does not mean all of them have comparable resumes. I would say you are competing against a smaller pool of pros for a spot as not many people have the qualifications to become on in franchising. Getting these qualifications is hard but manageable.

Again, just because a lot of people want to do something does not mean its a hard things IF the barrier of entry is low. Like whats the actual barrier? Having fast reflexes or amazing reaction times is not a rare thing, that a pretty average thing for most teenagers and if you do not have it, its not the end of the world. Most in game leaders have below average (in comparisons to their pro counter parts) reaction time and reflexes but they still compete. FNS literally said that what differentiated a pro from an amateur is their in game awareness, not their reflexes. Like you do not need crazy good aim in valorant, its need to be great but not amazing. The barrier to entry into medicine is soo much higher than being a pro gamer. Like you LOTS of money, so you go into debt, you dedicate more of your life to become a doctor then you would trying to become a gamer. Like your journey literally starts in highschool.

Also the "I’m 100% confident that I (3.9 unweighted GPA, 1450 SAT) could become a surgeon, but I know for a fact that I could never become a pro player". You are so out of touched with reality its insane. You understand that your marks are a dime a dozen for most applicants applying into an ivy league? You need stellar extracurriculars with your marks. Having good marks is not enough. Also just cause you can apply to go into an IVY League does not mean you can go. Would you be able to pay for the tuition? Would you be able to pay for the price to finish med school? No, unless you are rich. Thus you will go into debt. The actual barrier to entry into medicine is more than just being smart and work ethic. Literally, everyone in an IVY league and any med school has that, you would not be any different. So then you need more than that to actually get into an IVY league med school. Like how are you so out of touch with reality that you believe, simply having good grades is enough to get you into an IVY league. lol. Like highschool is a walk in the park, do not compare good grades in highschool as a determinant for success in medschool. The differences between highschool and just undergrad is crazy too btw.

EVEN if you do not go to an IVY League, could you pay for the tuition prices all the way through med school and dedicate 10+ years of your life to becoming a surgeon. This is my point as well. People assume that because sooo many people try to become a pro that its harder than becoming a surgeon. But there is such a low barrier for entry that legit anyone can try to become a pro gamer. But this can not be said about surgeons. Not anyone can try to become a surgeon. You need to be qualified. Out of all the people in the scene only a few are actually qualified to become pros. The competition to become a surgeon is way greater. You are literally competing with more people who are as/more qualified than you through out your journey. Where as in the pro scene, a way smaller portion of people are actually qualified to join a franchising team thus you are not actually competing against that many people in comparison to to the competition in med school.

#38
SAMPV6
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I agree with you, odd to hear my son speak like this... I will have a word with him tonight.

Only thing I'd argue against is the fact that a lot less people can become a tier 1 pro than a surgeon, but that's simply due to limited slots, the rest of your point still stands and it is a hell of a lot harder to become a surgeon.

#39
Vortax
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"Being a small twitch streamer is harder than your 9-5" type beat

#41
geospliced
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Great evaluation of the topic on hand. I agree with you, and I also think we should have a greater appeciation for public service workers in general.

#43
CurryCooker
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final thoughts after reading some of the replies:

let me ask you, what are the actual qualifications to become a pro, how hard is it to get those qualifications, how many people have those qualifications, and how many people are you competing against with similar qualifications?

If you think about it like this and I did a break down on the IVY League med schools for example to have a comparable example to the franchise teams You would see that its much harder on the surgeon side. just cause you have more people trying to become a pro does not mean all of them have comparable resumes. I would say you are competing against a smaller pool of pros for a spot as not many people have the qualifications to become on in franchising. Getting these qualifications is hard but manageable.

What i said in previous comments about IVY leagues if I were to compare them to franchising;

The standard to get into an IVY league is already stupidly high, to get that qualification is also really hard, to then have to do this multiple times in order to be eligible to become a surgeon in an Ivy League is as you described it "statistically impossible'. You are competing with such a larger pool of people to become a surgeon with a similar qualification because they give you a rough idea of what is required and the likelihood a person actually becoming a surgeon at these schools is literally close to 0 if you take into account the process from highschool to your preferred residency. Like think about how many people start on the road to get into an IVY league, how many people get accepted into the undergrad? How many people then accepted into the med program, how many people then get accepted into the residency program of their choice. Like the competition to become a surgeon is sooooo much higher than becoming a pro that its actually not a debate if you broke it down further.

#46
oofington
3
Frags
+

Surgeon as an occupation could be argued to be much harder than being a pro player. There is one specific reason for this: lives are on the line. If you mess up ONE surgery, you have to live with the guilt of endangering/causing someone to lose their life. On top of that, your surgeon qualifications will have a high chance of being revoked. If you make a mistake in VALORANT, no biggie. Of course, if you repeatedly do so you may lose your job but that’s the same for every job. The two jobs are both respectable. However, the scale between health services and esports is too great of a difference to make a justifiable comparison.

#50
DeluluGavin
3
Frags
+

well i always knew zellsis was immature and braindead but this now it is painful to even try to understand how his brain works. It needs to be studied because how can one person be so delusional.

  • anyone defending his claim is as stupid as zellsis because who in the right mind overlook the hardwork AND money needed to be qualified (to be 'qualified' you need around 10 years or more, going through med student, intern, resident, fellow, and attending) and say being qualified pro gamer is harder?
#55
CurryCooker
0
Frags
+

ignoring the insults. This is my point as well. People assume that because sooo many people try to become a pro that its harder than becoming a surgeon. But there is such a low barrier for entry that legit anyone can try to become a pro gamer. But this can not be said about surgeons. Not anyone can try to become a surgeon. You need to be qualified. Out of all the people in the scene only a few are actually qualified to become pros. The competition to become a surgeon is way greater. You are literally competing with more people who are as/more qualified than you through out your journey. Where as in the pro scene, a way smaller portion of people are actually qualified to join a franchising team thus you are not actually competing against that many people in comparison to to the competition in med school.

#59
fatdaddy
0
Frags
+

Literally 30 people in all of NA are Tier 1 valorant players. 30 people in all of North America. Statistically speaking, he's not wrong.

#62
Ballsamolee
0
Frags
+

becoming a pro player is harder, but the job itself is definitely the easiest once you are there.

#60
Corny
0
Frags
+

nuh uh

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