Or you're playing a game you enjoy for money.
Dont be an elitist douche.
I just figure if you're going to invest so much time into a game, you might as well pick one that's somewhat balanced and where skill matters more than what weapon you pick.
Although I will admit the game itself isn't all that important for competitive play, the key part is devs actually backing their game and the tournaments finding capable casters, otherwise there is no competitive scene and the game sorta dies(looking at you Hi-Rez).
well i rather watch competitive FPS than boring **** like league of legends.
but different strokes for different folks.
league of legends isn't bad... I just can't play it because my eyes are not good enough to keep staring at the small health bars on the creeps to get last hit...
I got old people eyes..
lol it's not THAT bad, you should stop playing those ARAMs though, you still gotta learn2rift. If it seriously bothers you, you should try jungling, all you got ta do is walk in and make plays , no minons to take your CS. Run AD mark runes on all your pages to help you farm better, and take the AD masteries as well. Since you're not level 30 you shouldn't even have to worry about farming because everyone is still terrible at it, just focus on learning how to snowball by out-trading, roaming, etc.
But about CoD, the weak PC competitive scene is because games like TF2 and Counterstrike have been more suited for competitive play, whereas competitive CoD play on PC has been dying since CoD4. It's mostly because the game is no longer catered to what the PC community is looking for, even though there have been attempts like with the great shoutcasting tool in BO2. CoD has been outclassed for many years now on PC by other shooters, in both casual and competitive play. This doesn't exist on console though, so CoD has developed quite a unique competitive scene there. It still is an unrivaled scene on console, with Battlefield mostly for casual play and pub-stomping at most.