Youth gaming becomes a real esports pipeline.
XP League teaches kids how to compete. Agent Academy adds coaching, creator access, college esports guidance, pro-team evaluation, brand experiences, and the network serious families are looking for.
This is not kids chasing prize money. It is structured development before the pro level.
XP League stays the base. Agent opens the next level.
The partnership works because it does not replace the local franchise. It gives families a reason to stay longer, spend more, and see a credible next step beyond weekly league play.
XP League
Beginner players, teamwork, communication, sportsmanship, local league play, and seasonal competition.
Agent Academy
Coaching, VOD review, tournament prep, creator access, college guidance, pro evaluation, brand events, and showcases.
College + Pro Pathways
Top performers can move toward college programs, outside esports teams, creator opportunities, or Agent representation when it fits.
The business is the bridge between youth demand, college esports, pro teams, creators, and brands.
The Academy gives families a reason to upgrade.
Most youth gaming programs stop at league play. Agent Academy puts a high-level esports team and brand on the program, giving families a credible path toward college esports, pro-team evaluation, and the network around the sport.
Player development
Coaching, VOD reviews, tournament preparation, mental performance, nutrition, and wellness.
Pros and creators
Kids get around creators and pro players they look up to through sessions, events, and virtual coaching.
College and pro teams
Agent can help families understand college esports, pro-team tryouts, recruiting, showcases, and where each player actually fits.
Gear and events
Academy creates sponsor moments, peripheral access, product drops, camps, and local events for families.
The network matters: franchise operators, sports-agent relationships, creators, and brand partners can all plug into the program.
Memberships, camps, events, expansion.
The first location proves demand. The model gets stronger when the Academy is treated as an upgrade layer, not a replacement for the existing XP League business.
XP League membership remains the entry point for families that want local structure and seasonal competition.
Agent Academy adds coaching, review, training plans, creator access, and tournament preparation.
Small-group training, showcases, advanced review, college guidance, and priority pro evaluation.
Example location model. Pricing and split can be finalized with the franchise operator.
One location proves it. Licensing scales it.
Agent does not need to open facilities across the country. The Academy can sit inside existing XP League locations as a co-branded, licensed development program.
Conservative first-location target if the pilot fills, camps run, and events become recurring.
Multiple Texas or regional locations can make Academy meaningful without needing a huge team.
The upside becomes real when the program is licensed across operators and powered by Agent curriculum.
What Agent gets
Grassroots access without opening facilities, brand exposure to families, content opportunities, coaching revenue, and a scalable youth development layer.
What XP League gets
A premium upgrade product, stronger retention, higher monthly revenue per family, camps, showcases, brand events, and a professional network attached to the local franchise.
Texas pilot first. Licensed expansion after.
Start small enough to control quality, but structured enough to prove the license model. Burleson becomes the first official Agent Academy training center for Texas.
Build the program
Sign partnership terms, finalize curriculum, create branding, pricing, and parent-facing materials.
Launch the cohort
Start with 15-20 players, weekly development, creator access, and measurable progress tracking.
Run events
Monthly youth competitions, virtual coaching, brand gear moments, showcases, and talent identification days.
Prove expansion
Host a Texas Agent Academy Championship and decide which additional XP League locations can license the model.
The questions are predictable.
This should feel practical to parents, useful to XP League, and valuable to Agent. That only works if the Academy is structured, measurable, and easy to explain.
Agent already understands competitive talent, content, sponsors, creators, and the broader esports network. Academy brings that access to families earlier.
XP League is the base. Agent Academy creates a premium path for families that want more than weekly play: coaching, showcases, camps, and career education.
Monthly Academy fees, Elite upgrades, summer camps, boot camps, youth showcases, merch, local sponsors, and licensing to more locations.
No. These are kids developing toward college esports, pro-team opportunities, content, and long-term pathways. Prize money is not the business model.
Academy turns fans into the pipeline.
The esports team creates visibility. The Academy converts that visibility into families, players, camps, events, recurring revenue, college pathways, pro-team opportunities, and brand access.
Launch Texas. Prove the program. License the model.
This gives Agent and XP League a grassroots development system that is bigger than one location and built to grow youth esports around families.