<p>So sophomore year I started a clan on my xbox 360. Right now this may seem like a joke but I'm actually serious about this. The clan is pretty much a huge organization now.</p>
<p>The clan now has 500+ active members with teams on 10+ games located on the xbox 360 and ps3. We also are active on a few browser games. The clan has a website (partly created by me, I only know basic html) that has an active forum and small but growing community. It has inspired t-shirts and other merchandise I have sold, videos, and even a original song produced by a team member. I have spent a lot of time building this clan, establishing new branches, recruiting new members, and all the countless other things a leader/head needs to take care of.</p>
<p>I’d put it on your college apps. It’s not as if it’s just playing video games - it sounds like you’ve done a lot of management work, which demonstrates leadership and organizational abilities. Plus, it’s pretty unique.</p>
<p>Yeah, I read the title and was ready to blast a “NO” at you, but you make a very good case for it. Add it, though you better have other major activities, too.</p>
<p>Be sure to highlight the skills or traits that are relevant to doing well in college and life: leadership, technology savvy, communication – whatever you think is special about this.</p>
<p>You might want to add that more revenue is generated in the video gaming industry than in films and that you are interested in further developing these cutting edge micro-marketing cells that, when duplicated, further expand this growing 21st century market.</p>
<p>You should totally spend a sentence or too getting totally lost in the technical details of playing the game. Be it camping, farming, pking, noob tubing, whatever the vice, throw around some words they’ll never understand and make it abundantly clear that they’re missing out.</p>
<p>Oh, yeah, talk about your responsibility… and organizational skills too… or something.</p>