CORRECTED-FEATURE-Indian girl gamers fight keyboard warriors and online abuse

(Corrects spelling of gamer's name in par 1)

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India leads the world in esports

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Women make strides in $1.5-billion industry

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But risk daily abuse and win lower prizes

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As girl gaming rises, tech wins women workers

By Vidhi Doshi

HYDERABAD, May 15 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - When Sonali Singh was little, she would beg then brawl with her brother for a turn on his video games. Her mother would broker peace by handing Singh a story book.

"It's our Indian culture. Girls don't play games," Singh said.

Fast forward to adulthood and Singh now works remotely as a software engineer for a big U.S. university, adding an extra 50-60% to her already high earnings playing video games by night.

Singh's success comes as India's $1.5-billion-dollar gaming industry grows rapidly and opens up - slowly - to a generation of women and girls who play, earn and even date via video games.

But female players say they face a barrage of abuse when they talk to fellow gamers online, with rape threats a daily hazard.

Add to that abuse the vastly lower prizes offered in female tournaments, and gamers and industry experts say the eplaying field is far from fair, despite all the gains made.

"Women are carving out a space for themselves in an industry that has traditionally been dominated by men," said Salone Sehgal, founding general partner of Lumikai, a gaming-focused venture capital fund.

According to a recent report released by Lumikai, 43% of India's 507 million gamers are female - the first year they have counted players by gender.

With 27.3% of India's 1.4 billion population aged between 15 and 29, its gaming population is growing by 12% a year.

Cheap access to smartphones and the internet has brought mobile games to India's masses and now their appetite is huge. Indians consumed more mobile games last year than players in any other country, notching up a combined 15 billion downloads.

That has unlocked new revenue opportunities for female gamers, particularly in the competitive esports world, experts say.

Esports - which gained huge new popularity during COVID-19 lockdown - refers to competitive gaming, where players train, win sponsorship deals and play in global tournaments.

The percentage of female players in competitive esports has risen from 12% in 2020 to 22% in 2022, according to the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry.

INCOME STREAMS

After decades of campaigning for recognition as a mainstream sport, India's gaming industry last year broke away from other online games such as poker, which is banned in some states that want to crack down on gambling.