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Controllers over Concerts: Gaming Festivals Beat Likes of Glastonbury for Gen’s Z and Alpha first festival experience of choice

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Gaming festivals are officially overtaking music as the first big cultural milestone outing for Britain’s youth. According to a new study by ESL FACEIT Group, 90% of UK teens say they are more likely to attend a gaming festival, such as DreamHack, before ever setting foot at a traditional music festival like Glastonbury, with 92% of 13-19 year olds actively preferring the prospect of going to a gaming festival experience over a musical one with their friends.

With 94% of Gen Alpha regularly playing video games, up 4% from Gen Z, gaming has become a central social and cultural outlet for young people worldwide*. This new research reveals that it now even surpasses music, with 91% of respondents saying gaming plays a bigger part in their young lives. The survey of 2,000 UK teens aged 13-19 was commissioned to celebrate the announcement of DreamHack Birmingham 2026, taking place in March next year at the prestigious NEC Birmingham venue.

With 43% of young people not allowed to attend their first music festival until the age of 18, more teenagers are experiencing their first ‘festival moment’ at a gaming event than ever before. On average, the study highlighted that teens are allowed to go to a gaming festival at just 14, with nearly half (49%) permitted before their 16th birthday. It’s no surprise then that 94% see attending a gaming festival with friends as a modern rite of passage, and 96% say they want to take part.

The phenomenal rise in interest in these gaming events is linked to the perception of safety: 97% of teens say they feel safer at a gaming festival, and their parents agree – 92% say they’d be more comfortable, and even prefer taking their children to a gaming festival over a music one.

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Gaming stars are the new pop icons: 88% of teenagers say that famous gaming creators and professional esports players are just as important – if not more so – than top music artists. Half (50%) believe they hold equal status among their peers, while 38% place them above pop stars entirely. Their devotion runs deep too, with teens willing to travel up to 152 miles – the distance from Cardiff Castle to Kensington Palace – just to meet or watch their favourite pro gamer or streamer.

 

Top 10 ‘festival’ experiences young people look forward to:

  1. Hands-on gaming and participating in community tournaments – 53%

  2. Seeing celebrities and creators up close and meet & greets – 43%

  3. Watching favourite esports pros compete on stage – 32%

  4. Meeting / making new friends with people from across the country / world – 32%

  5. Sense of community / Finding communities – 23%

  6. Playtesting new and upcoming indie games – 22%

  7. Spending quality time with friends / creating memories with friends – 18%

  8. Being away from home – 11%

  9. Meeting online friends for the first time – 9%

  10. Discovering new talent – 8%

For female UK teenagers, gaming is also now taking centre stage. 84% of girls said gaming plays a bigger role in their daily lives than music, and while 55% have yet to attend a gaming festival, the appetite is clear – 93% would go given the chance. Safety and accessibility are key drivers: 84% believe their parents are more likely to let them attend a gaming festival over a music one, and 93% think their parents would feel more comfortable with that choice. Reflecting this, 95% of female teens say they would personally feel safer at a gaming festival, with 87% even preferring it outright to a music festival.

The research also uncovered why teens are turning to gaming festivals as their go-to social experiences, with music festivals increasingly out of reach. A striking 96% of UK teens believe music festivals are unaffordable for the average teen, who typically has just £197 of their own money, or £200 from their parents, to spend on tickets. As a result, teenagers report attending fewer than two music festivals on average. Teenagers in Wales and Scotland face significant differences in festival affordability. Welsh teens can contribute £142 on average towards tickets, with parents adding £130 – both well below the national average – while Scottish teens can put in £206 and receive £212 from parents. Cost remains a major barrier, with 100% of Welsh and 95% of Scottish teenagers saying music festival tickets are too expensive.

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DreamHack Birmingham tickets start at £39.00 for a 3-day ticket during the first two weeks (will be priced from £59.00 thereafter) compared to over £373 for a single Glastonbury ticket.

Shahin Zarrabi, VP Festivals at ESL FACEIT Group said: “Gaming isn’t part of the culture; it is the culture. DreamHack Birmingham 2026 will be where the UK gaming community comes alive: safe, authentic, unforgettable. No mud-fields, no chasing influencers, no £300 wristbands. Just pure gaming.”

DreamHack Birmingham (March 27 – 29, 2026) will mark the festival’s first time in Birmingham, uniting gaming communities for three days of hands-on gaming, creator meet-ups, esports, cosplay, live entertainment, and playable moments. DreamHack is the world’s leading gaming lifestyle festival, bringing together all gaming communities to celebrate games and internet pop culture.

The post Controllers over Concerts: Gaming Festivals Beat Likes of Glastonbury for Gen’s Z and Alpha first festival experience of choice appeared first on European Gaming Industry News.

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