When David Beckham and Thierry Henry moved to play for football teams in Los Angeles and New York, they were given entry to America as elite athletes.
Now immigration officials have granted the same status to Danny Le, a slight young man from Canada who is extremely good at the fantasy computer game League of Legends.
Mr Le, 20, is the first computer game player to be recognised as a professional athlete by the US Citizenship and Immigration Services. Known to fans as “Shipthur”, which means “shifter”, Mr Le plays for Team Coast in the North America League of Legends Championship Series. Matches feature teams of five fighting to their opponent’s base, massacring armies of robot minions and striving to capture the opposing team’s orb.
Streamed online, matches can gain audiences of more than 1.7 million people, more than many Major League Baseball games. And like many sports, the commentary can seem baffling to outsiders.
“You had virus double kills, an incredible baron steal and turtles going wild,” one of the pundits said after a particularly exciting match between TSM and Vulcan.
Players earn about $25,000 (£16,000) a year but they also earn a significant amount from sponsorship and the channel that streams their games. Winnings can reach $1 million.
Seventy million play the game worldwide and the pressure at the top can be intense. One player quit last month, declaring on Twitter that the elite level was not for him and he wished to spend more time with his family.
Jeptha Evans, 46, an immigration lawyer from San Francisco who helped Mr Le to obtain his visa, said that he would normally have sought to gain a visa for outstanding talent and notoriety, the kind usually acquired by writers and artists. “But it requires recognition by governing bodies and awards. It’s difficult for these computer game players, who are 18 or 19 years old,” he said.
Instead, Mr Evans arranged for the gaming league to be recognised as a major sports league, as it has clear rules and at least six teams with combined revenues of more than $10 million.
He said that Mr Le, who now lives in a large house in Las Vegas with the rest of the Team Coast squad, was the first of many foreign signings he now expects to gain visas as professional sportsmen.
How to Win at Rock, Paper, Scissors
In the game Rock, Paper, Scissors, two opponents randomly toss out hand gestures, and each one wins, loses or draws with equal probability. It's supposed to be a game of pure luck, not skill - and indeed, if humans were able to be perfectly random, no one could gain an upper hand over anyone else.
There's one problem with that reasoning: Humans are terrible at being random.
Our pathetic attempts to appear uncalculating are, in fact, highly predictable. A couple of recent studies have provided insights into the patterns by which people tend to play Rock, Paper, Scissors (and why). Abide by them, and you'll be riding shotgun and eating the bigger half of the cookie for the rest of your life.
According to Graham Walker, veteran player and five time organizer of the Rock, Paper Scissors World Championships, there are two paths to victory in RPS: Eliminating one of your opponent's options - for example, influencing her not to play Paper - and forcing her to make a predictable move. In both cases, Walker wrote on the website of the World RPS Society, "the key is that it has to be done without them realizing that you are manipulating them."
Rookies rock
Those two overarching strategies can be translated into executable moves, starting with the opening one. Expert players have observed that inexperienced ones tend to lead with Rock. Walker speculates that this may be because they view the move as strong and forceful. Either way, remember the mantra "Rock is for rookies," and simply throw Paper at the outset of a game to earn an easy first victory.
"Rock is for rookies" should be kept in mind against more experienced players, too. They won't lead with Rock - it's too obvious - so use Scissors against them. This throw will either beat Paper or tie with itself.
Double trouble
If your opponent makes the same move twice in a row, they almost certainly won't make that move a third time. "People hate being predictable and the perceived hallmark of predictability is to come out with the same throw three times in row," Walker wrote. [Why Aren't We Smarter?]
With that option eliminated, you're guaranteed either a victory or a stalemate in the next round. If you see a "two-Scissor run," for example, your opponent's next move will be either Rock or Paper. If you throw Paper, then, you'll either beat Rock or play to a draw.
Mind tricks
Like a Jedi, you can use the power of suggestion to influence your opponent's next move. When discussing a game, for example, gesture over and over again with the move that you want your opponent to play next. "Believe it or not, when people are not paying attention their subconscious mind will often accept your 'suggestion,'" Walker wrote.
This trick may work because of humans' tendency to imitate one another's actions. A recent study on decision-making in Rock, Paper, Scissors, published in the July 2011 issue of the Proceedings of the Royal Society B, found that players often imitate their opponents' last moves. Human mimicry seems to be involuntary.
Announcing your next move before a round starts also seems to be an effective mind trick, though it'll only work once. If you say you're going with Paper, for example, your opponent thinks you won't, Walker explained. Subconsciously, they'll shy away from Scissors (which beats Paper), and choose Rock or Paper instead. When you do end up throwing Paper, you'll score a victory or a tie.
Don't call it a come back
According to Walker, your opponent will often try to come back from a loss or tie by throwing the move that would have beaten his last one. If he lost using Rock, for example, he'll likely follow up by throwing Paper. Knowing this, you can decide what move to follow with yourself.
Interestingly, monkeys show the same behavioral pattern. In a study detailed in the May 2011 issue of the journal Neuron, researchers at Yale found that rhesus monkeys trained to play Rock, Paper, Scissors tended to react to a loss by playing the move that would have won in the previous round. This suggests monkeys, like humans, are capable of analyzing past results and imagining a different outcome, the researchers said.
Humans can take the logic one step further, by imagining what their opponents might be imagining.
Low blow
There's one more ploy to fall back on - that is, if you're willing to sacrifice your honor and integrity for a victory. "When you suggest a game with someone, make no mention of the number of rounds you are going to play. Play the first match and if you win, take it is as a win. If you lose, without missing a beat start playing the 'next' round on the assumption that it was a best two out of three. No doubt you will hear protests from your opponent but stay firm and remind them that 'no one plays best of one,'" Walker wrote. A low blow, but a smart one.
Had no idea so much strategy was possible in Rock, Paper, Scissors? The rules of the game itself may be simple, but the human mind is not.