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Festivals for gamers: how LAN parties have changed

Valentin Oberholzer
12.10.2023
Translation: Patrik Stainbrook

LAN parties have been a thing for around 30 years – in Switzerland too. A lot has happened from the first Netgame in 1995 to this year’s Switzerlan.

From Quake to Valorant. From null modem cables to Wi-Fi. From niche interest into the spotlight: LAN parties in 2023 are very different to ones 30 years ago. More professional. Much bigger. More competitive. Let us gaze into the past and chart the evolution of LAN parties in Switzerland.

The history of LAN parties begins in the early 1990s. Online games only run via slow and shaky dial-up connections. Your only other options for playing against someone are either split-screen or a cabled connection. So for tournaments and shared gaming fun, players set up their PCs at a friend’s house or at a venue and connect devices to each other directly. And so, the first few privately organised LAN parties are born around the world.

From basements to halls

One of the first public gaming events in Switzerland takes place on 19 March, 1995, in the function hall of the Don Camillo restaurant in Berne. A shattering 180 gamers take part in the Doom tournament Doomsday.

Spurred on by positive feedback, organisers André «Rayden» Christen and Oliver «Sinclair» Eigenberger organise the Netgame Convention for 18 participants the same year. The first of over 50 Netgame LANs (as of 2023) and the first public LAN party in Switzerland. Soon Netgame takes place several times a year and other organisers quickly set up their own LAN parties.

Early on, first-person shooters prove the most popular LAN games: at first Doom and Duke Nukem 3D are among the biggest tournament games, followed by Quake and Unreal Tournament. But racing games like Need for Speed are also popular with their multiplayer features. With Command & Conquer, and later Age of Empires, Age of Mythology and Starcraft, real-time strategy games also enjoy great popularity.

The LAN party goldmine

Setting up a LAN party takes time. It can take half a day for all the connections to be established and any problems to be rectified. But the beige computer cases and hefty CRT monitors aren’t only used for gaming.

The golden age and the decline

The Return of the LAN Party

2014 also marks the birth of Switzerlan. At first, Berne’s Exhibition Centre has room for around 200 gamers. But in the following years, Switzerlan grows to over 2,000 available seats and becomes an annual highlight for many Swiss gamers. At times it’s the largest LAN party in the German-speaking world, with attendees from Germany, France, Austria and Italy.

At the same time, dozens of private and smaller public LANs take place across Switzerland every year. They’re called Butterlan, Lock & Load, Isle of LAN, Eevent, Odyssey, Le-LAN or Turicane. Some sell 20 tickets, some 200 – there’s something for every taste and (almost) every region. But what they all share is the passion, dedication and creativity of organisers – practically all of them run LANs in their free time.

Changes in the LAN world: demands and performance increase

The gaming market has been growing steadily since the mid-noughties. Video games have moved into the mainstream and demand for LAN parties has increased. Even in Switzerland.

Events are getting bigger, organisers are raising ticket prices and paying out more prize money in return. Growing events have to meet increasing demands. A stable, high-performance internet connection is a basic requirement. Hot meals are often expected and Securitas provides, well, security. Escape routes are labelled, sponsors provide financial support, rule books are written for tournaments.

Not only demands on events have changed, the main activities have too. New games have emerged in tournament form. The Starcrafts and Dooms of yesterday are now League of Legends, Overwatch and Rocket League. Niche tournaments are still run for older games, out of nostalgia. The exchange of warez has disappeared completely; after all, you’ll find copies of every game or movie under the sun on various dubious websites today.

What has stayed the same since 1995?

In the conversations I have with LAN visitors and organisers, one common trait always emerges: all of them continue attending LANs – not because of the games, but because of the people. LAN acquaintances become good friends, and now and then romantic relationships develop. After all, every PC dragged to a LAN party also has a human being attached to it. And in the end, they’ll be at least as interesting as anything a sparkly LED box will ever come up with.


Switzerlan will be held in parallel with Herofest in Berne from 12-15 October 12. Digitec will also be attending Herofest. Here’s what you can expect at our booth and on the big Playground stage:

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My retreats have names like Middle Earth, Skyrim and Azeroth. If I have to part from them due to IRL commitments, their epic soundtracks accompany me through everyday life, to a LAN party or to my D&D session.


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