K-pop powerhouse BTS didn’t get one, star footballer Son Heung-min did: South Korea grants limited exemptions
from military service and for the first time eSports players can earn one.
For South Korean men, winning gold in any sport at the Asian Games opening on Saturday in Hangzhou comes with
an automatic exemption from 18 months in the army.
This year eSports is a medal event for the first time, meaning South Korea’s top players including team captain Lee
“Faker” Sang-hyeok have double the incentive.
Typically granted to elite athletes or classical musicians on the basis of promoting national prestige, the exemptions
are highly sought after.
Fewer than 100 exemptions for “arts and sports” were handed out last year, official statistics show.
They are also controversial.
South Korean skipper and Spurs striker Son avoided full military service after the national football team won gold at
the 2018 Asian Games. But despite generating billions for the economy and helping propel K-pop to a global
audience, megastars BTS were not deemed eligible.
Two members, Jin and J-Hope, are currently serving in the military and another, SUGA, was due to enlist on Friday
, according to their agency HYBE.
When the country was mulling military exemptions for K-pop stars, specifically so that BTS’ progress would not be
interrupted, about 33 percent of the public opposed the idea, according to a 2022 Gallup survey.
With eSports debuting as an Asian Games medal event and South Korea a powerhouse, the debate has roared back to
the fore. National team coach Kim Jeong-gyun brushed away questions on it, saying “a sense of duty” of representing
South Korea will be the only motivation for the players.
But experts say military service exemptions are a “very important issue” for the young athletes. “Currently, all
professional eSports players are male who begin playing in their late teens,” Choi Eun-kyoung, a professor at
Hanshin University, told AFP.
“The benefit of exemptions from military service is important because it can be another huge motivation booster for
players apart from the pride of representing their country.”
ESports will be contested at the Games in EA Sports FC, PUBG Mobile, Arena of Valor, Dota 2, League of Legends,
Dream Three Kingdoms 2 and Street Fighter V.
South Korea is often recognised as the country where eSports, or professional gaming, started.
Easy access to high-speed Internet and the emergence of “PC bangs” — Internet cafes — in the 1990s fostered a social
gaming culture among South Korean youths that quickly grew to a massive global community of gamers.
“If Athens is the birthplace of the Olympics, the birthplace of eSports is Seoul,” said Kang Do-kyung, a professional
gamer-turned-professor at Shingu College.