24-hour gaming marathon raising funds for sick kids in Alberta - Action News
Home WebMail Sunday, November 24, 2024, 09:36 AM | Calgary | -14.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Calgary

24-hour gaming marathon raising funds for sick kids in Alberta

One gamer says he probably wont play video games for a month, after entering a 24-hour marathon to raise funds for Alberta childrens hospitals.

More than $100K already raised for southern Alberta hospitals

A 24-hour video game marathon in Calgary got underway Saturday morning. Gamers in the province are raising thousands for children's hospitals. (CBC)

They may be playing games, but it's serious stuff for hundreds of gamers in Alberta who are aiming to raisethousands for children's hospitalswith a 24-hour gaming marathon that began Saturday.

Calgary is represented by about 50 gamers brought together by Extra Life Calgary Guild.

Theorganizer says funds raised go to children's hospitals in the community.

"All proceeds stay locally, 100-percent of the funds raised go to our children's hospital and the Alberta Children's Hospital Foundation then picks where the money goes in terms of priority and that sort of thing," said Lexi Wolkowski.

Lexi Wolkowski is an organizer with the gaming marathon in Calgary. She says the funds stay in local communities. (CBC)

It's not all fun and games though, says one gamer.

"The first 10 hours is really fun, I'm playing lots of games ... then the second 10 hours you're going 'I'm doing this for charity,'" said Jeff Clemens.

Gamer Jeff Clemens says he may not touch a video game for a month, after entering a 24-hour gaming marathon in Calgary to raise funds for children's hospitals. (CBC)

"And the last four hours you're going 'this is for the kids, I'm not going to play video games for at least another month,'" he said.

Organizers say they have raised more than $100,000 for sick children in Calgary.

In Edmonton, gamers have raised about $150,000 to double operating rooms in the Stollery Children's Hospital from 5 to ten, organizers say.

For Calgary gamer Clemens though, it's less a competition and more an opportunity to use his skills for a good cause.

"There's a little bit of negative stigma around it sometimes and this is a chance to really say these video games are positive because we're going to raise a lot of money for these kids," Clemens said.

The marathon wraps Sunday morning.