Society
Esports help Ukrainian veterans reintegrate into civilian life
As Ukraine confronts the trauma of war, a surprising tool -- competitive gaming -- is offering wounded and weary veterans a pathway back to society, purpose and connection.
![Oleksandr Kostyliev of Ukraine (L) and Finn Andersen of Denmark fist bump before the finals of the World Championship of the 'Half-Life: Counter-Strike' first person shooter computer game, in Antwerp, Belgium, on May 22, 2022. [Kristof Van Accom/Belga/AFP]](/gc6/images/2025/07/02/51040-Ukraine_esports-370_237.webp)
By AFP |
PARIS -- Esports is helping Ukrainian war veterans, who "often feel out of place" when they return from the front line, to reintegrate into society, the director of Ukraine's Esport Commission has told AFP.
Denys Davydov, 43, speaks with authority as he also leads a commission on the development of rehabilitation programs for veterans through esports.
Hundreds of thousands of Ukrainian soldiers have been wounded since Russian President Vladimir Putin launched the invasion in February 2022. President Volodymyr Zelenskyy told US broadcaster NBC in February the figure was close to 380,000.
"Rehabilitation is one of the most pressing and painful issues" in Ukraine and Davydov's program includes both able-bodied and disabled veterans, he said.
![Veterans and civilians with amputated limbs attend a training session of the football team 'Unbreakable' in Kharkiv, on April 21. [Ivan Samoilov/AFP]](/gc6/images/2025/07/02/51041-ua_veterans_2-370_237.webp)
"When soldiers return from war or end up in hospitals, they often feel out of place.
"After years spent on the front lines, they lose the part of socialization associated with everyday civilian life.
"Sport, and especially esports, can help them reintegrate into society."
Esports was particularly effective because it "allows competition regardless of obstacles or distances."
"On one hand, we offer veterans a way to mentally unwind, and on the other, we provide a competitive outlet," Davydov said.
Davydov, who has built up a wealth of sports administration experience primarily in rugby and football, said the second edition of the Ukrainian Veterans Esports Championship was already deep in the planning stage.
He added that esports -- because at a competitive level it requires the technology and know-how to broadcast the video games to a wider audience -- helps develop careers in roles such as broadcast directors, tournament managers or commentators.
Perhaps most important for a country at war, esports can assist in helping veterans rebuild relationships closer to home.
"Veterans start to better understand their children and loved ones, they release built-up aggression and they begin to feel like part of civilian society again," he said.
Esports can facilitate the journey back to playing football and rugby again. said Davydov, who played badminton at a high level in Ukraine.
"Esports is ... especially valuable for veterans who have lost mobility and are undergoing recovery," he said.
"Plus, esports improves reflexes and cognitive skills, which can eventually help them return to playing football or rugby post-rehabilitation."
Visualize future worlds
Davydov, who from 2022 to 2024 was an advisor to the Head of the Territorial Defense of Ukraine, is proud that his country has been at the forefront of the evolution of esports.
He is a flag bearer for more national teams competing, although he said the inaugural esports Olympics slated for Saudi Arabia in 2027 "exists more on paper than in practice" at the moment.
Ukraine, he said, was among the first countries to suggest forming national esports teams and Ukraine officially recognized the discipline even before the International Olympic Committee did.
It has developed fast in Ukraine, and one of the leading professional teams in esports globally is Navi, based in Kyiv.
That kind of success led countries including Italy, Portugal, Belgium, Georgia, Latvia and Malta to nominate Davydov to be president of the European Esports Federation, although he did not get the role.
He is keen to dispel the notion esports is for "couch potatoes" and that it does not encourage its practitioners to take physical exercise.
"Esports is evolving," he said. "It now has its own fitness champions, its own MMA [mixed martial arts] fighters who transitioned from CS:GO [the game "Counter Strike: Global Offensive"] to the ring.
"Some have become marathon runners, and so on."
"In recent years, the esports world has realized that physically fit players perform significantly better than those who are out of shape," he said.
"Every team now has fitness trainers, mandatory physical routines, psychological support, dieticians and proper nutrition."
As an example of the changed mindset, Davydov cited an esports textbook developed in 2022 by the National University of Physical Education and Sport of Ukraine that integrates physical training with the development of esports.
"Esports will become even more 'healthy' in the future," he said. Away from the exercise element, esports enriches those who play them mentally, said Davydov.
"The skills developed through esports, particularly spatial thinking and the ability to visualize future worlds, are extremely valuable."