Pittsburgh LAN Coalition

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Pittsburgh LAN Coalition
Company typePrivate
IndustryVideo games
Founded2003 (2003)[1]
Headquarters,
Area served
North America
Websitepittco.org

The Pittsburgh LAN Coalition, Inc. (Pittco) is a video gaming organization which holds LAN parties in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA.

Pittco history

Pittco was established in December 2003 by several of well-established, smaller LAN parties looking to combine efforts to hold a very large LAN party in the greater Pittsburgh area. Following Iron Storm 1, the first event with 120 attendees, the organization decided to continue and hold semi-yearly events.[1]

Since its establishment, all of its founding member organizations have dissolved, except one (ThinkComputers.org, which no longer holds events).

To date, its largest confirmed event attendance was Iron Storm 8, with "more than 160 people" attending.[2] Iron Storm 13 was said to have brought more than 180 attendees.

The Pittco logo has changed many times since the organization's inception. Originally, Pittco used an image of the city of Pittsburgh with "Pittsburgh LAN Coalition" on top of it.[3] The logo eventually changed to the modern one, bearing three pentagons in yellow, blue, and gray to the left of "Pittco". The pentagons reference the "Three Rivers" for which Pittsburgh is known. Its positioning is also a vague reference to the logo of the Pittsburgh Steelers professional American football team, which features three stars to the right of "Steelers".

Pittco.org with several atomic molecule signs around it
Pittco logo, 2005
Three pentagons in yellow, blue, and gray with a gray Pittco text next to it, plastic looking with waves
Pittco logo, 2007
Three pentagons in yellow, blue, and gray with a gray Pittco text next to it, flattened
Pittco logo, 2008-2016
A more modern approach to the traditional pentagon logo, with black borders
Pittco logo, 2016-Present

More recent use of the logo shows a drop shadow behind it, but the official logo remains without it.

Event details

The name of Pittco's primary event was originally Iron Storm. The name comes from Pittsburgh's notability as a former steel mill center.[4] At its events, Pittco held tournaments for various new and old games, most often featuring Counter-Strike: Source, the Unreal Tournament series, Quake 3, the Call of Duty series, and the StarCraft series. Attendees often organize unofficial tournaments for games. Popular console tournaments also include the Halo series, the Call of Duty series, the Street Fighter series, and Super Smash Bros. Brawl. Iron Storm 8 was the first event that to feature a console game (Halo 3) as featured event, with prizes being given out.[2]

Pittco has also held two smaller events, Lite and PURE. Pittco Lite was so named because a sudden venue conflict for the scheduled Iron Storm 5 caused a last-minute change of location, and approximately half of the registrants were unable to be contacted less than a week before IS5. PURE was so named because it was a "return to classic LAN gaming, without sponsors and with minimal Internet".[citation needed]

There were also many side games and tournaments, called "jackass events" by many attendees. These were meant as time-passers to allow attendees to keep busy while waiting for their game to start.

Jackass Tournaments

  • Karaoke
  • Rap Battle
  • Human-powered drag racing
  • Red Bull chug
  • Red Bull relay
  • Ice head (who can hold their head underwater the longest in the cooler full of ice water)
  • Musical chairs
  • "Bring me a" go-for contests
  • Clamato mini-games
  • Frozen T-shirt (break a frozen shirt from its ice ball and put it on the fastest)
  • Vertical/Horizontal Can Stacking

Starting in 2015, Pittco began holding it No Sleep series of events, starting with Revival, followed by Insomnia, Delirium and ending with Restless. All three of those events brought approximately 80 people. No major tournaments were held, but we more focused on a community building atmosphere.

Running since 2011, Pittco has also held its twice-annual suddenLAN series. A more intimate LAN party inspired by the LAN party of the past. With 20-30 people in attendance, the venue is usually more intimate and, according to Pittco's website, is "inspired by the LAN parties held in your parent's basement."

Past Events

Iron Storm is held semi-annually, generally in March and in August.

2004-2009, Pittco of Old

Iron Storm 1

Iron Storm 2

  • July 31 - Aug 1, 2004 - 115 attendees,[1] held

Iron Storm 3

  • March 5–6, 2005 - 115 attendees, held at the Ross Township Community Center

Iron Storm 4

  • August 6–7, 2005 - 105 attendees,[5] held at the Ross Township Community Center

Pittco Lite

  • March 4–5, 2006 - 76 attendees + staff, held at the Beechview Holiday Inn Select; a sudden venue conflict for the scheduled Iron Storm 5 caused a last-minute change of location, and approximately half of the registrants were unable to be contacted

Iron Storm 5

  • August 12–13, 2006 - 136 attendees, held at the Castle Shannon Fire Hall

Iron Storm 6

  • March 17–18, 2007 - 141 attendees, held at the Castle Shannon Fire Hall

Iron Storm 7

  • August 11–12, 2007 - 139 attendees, held at the Castle Shannon Fire Hall

Iron Storm 8

Iron Storm 9

  • August 17–18, 2008 - ~100 attendees, held at the Castle Shannon Fire Hall; attendees gave conflicting reports as to why the attendance was significantly lower than previous events; most reports involve a less visible on-line advertising campaign

Iron Storm 10

  • March 21–22, 2009 - 145 attendees, held at the Castle Shannon Fire Hall.

2010-2012, Pittco Modern

Iron Storm 11

  • March 26–28, 2010 - ~100 attendees, held at the Castle Shannon Fire Hall.

Iron Storm PURE

Iron Storm 12

  • March 4–6, 2011 - 156 attendees, 31 sponsors,[7] held at the Castle Shannon Fire Hall.

RetroLAN

  • August 13–14, 2011 - 35 attendees, 3 sponsors (estimated), held at the Castle Shannon Fire Hall.

Iron Storm 13

  • April 20–22, 2012 - 180 attendees, held at the Castle Shannon Fire Hall. Largest event as of April 2012.

2014-2018 - No Sleep

Pittco Presents: Revival

Pittco Presents: Insomnia

Pittco Presents: Delirium

Pittco Presents: Restless

External links

References

  1. ^ a b c d "What is Pittco?". Pittsburgh LAN Coalition. Archived from the original on 27 July 2011. Retrieved 2 April 2011.
  2. ^ a b c "160 gamers attend Pittco's Iron Storm 8 LAN party". Pittsburgh LAN Coalition. Archived from the original on 4 July 2008.
  3. ^ "Pittco early logo". Archived from the original on 18 December 2004. Retrieved 20 January 2017.
  4. ^ Hoerr, John P. (1988). And the wolf finally came: the decline of the American steel industry. Univ of Pittsburgh Press. p. 1. ISBN 978-0-8229-5398-2. Retrieved 7 September 2010.
  5. ^ "Iron Storm 4 State of the Party Address". Pittsburgh LAN Coalition. 9 August 2005. Archived from the original on 11 December 2005. Retrieved 2 April 2011.
  6. ^ "IRON STORM PURE concludes, Pittco joins Alienware Arena". Pittsburgh LAN Coalition. 22 August 2010. Archived from the original on 28 September 2011. Retrieved 2 April 2011.
  7. ^ "State of the LAN: Iron Storm XII". Pittsburgh LAN Coalition. 8 March 2011. Archived from the original on 27 July 2011. Retrieved 2 April 2011.
  8. ^ "Iron Storm 3 Blows Steel City Gamers Away". www.tomshardware.co.uk. Archived from the original on 2008-06-07.