NBA fans watching via Microsoft Teams Together Mode are projected on video screens during an earlier scrimmage game. (Screengrab via NBA on YouTube)

The NBA returned to action on Thursday and brought along virtual fans in an experience powered by Microsoft Teams. Some fans who missed that the tech-enabled future had arrived early thanks to coronavirus were left wondering how to get into the digital seats.

The NBA is inviting around 320 fans per game to fill the virtual stands — which are 17-foot-tall video boards that ring the court. It’s up to each team to decide how to select those fans for games played in NBA’s “bubble” in Orlando, Fla.

According to The Wall Street Journal, designated home teams get to choose most of the fans. Participants will need a device with a camera and a microphone. The Milwaukee Bucks, for instance, are inviting “super-pumped” fans who form a noisy section known as the Clutch Crew in their home arena.

Using Microsoft Teams Together Mode, fans are “seated” in each of the 10 sections surrounding the court and a moderator is assigned to each section. While it might be tough to score a free invite, the wrong conduct would make it easy to get kicked out.

The WSJ reported that moderators can hear fans and see what they’re doing and anything that crosses the line into obscene or offensive language or behavior could lead to a virtual ejection. That fan would be replaced by another fan in a virtual overflow room. Fans who leave their seat during play are also replaced by someone from this pool, and when they return they have to wait to be placed back in the crowd.

The Oklahoma City Thunder told the newspaper that fans are encouraged to cheer and chant, but waving such things as towels and balloon thundersticks is “a bit of a challenge” because the background-setting tool in Teams often distorts anything around a person’s silhouette.

The NBA shared more about all of its broadcast enhancements in a new YouTube video:

Fans tweeting during Thursday’s action seemed to be both baffled and impressed by where the sports viewing experience had come in just a few short months.
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