🐱 Making gaming great again

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With pop culture increasingly a political battlefield, Marzena Zukowska asks Carolyn Petit of Feminist Frequency how the left can leverage the momentum of video gaming


Marzena Zukowska: What sparked your interest in gaming, and how has that evolved throughout your career?

Carolyn Petit:
Like for a lot of young people growing up in the United States in the 1980s, video games were an inescapable phenomenon. They were even more of an escape for me. I didn’t know the word transgender when I was growing up because no one talked about it. Every attempt I made to challenge the accepted boundaries for the gender box I had been assigned was met with tremendous disapproval. Games offered an opportunity to enter a world and be successful and heroic. It was a welcome reprieve from the ‘real’ world, in which I felt very much like a misfit or failure.

Fast forward many years. In 2010, now a trans woman, I joined the staff of Gamespot magazine. I didn’t intend to become a feminist critic but I couldn’t escape the expectations and limitations of being a trans woman in that space. In my first few weeks on the job, I saw many angry comments from readers. Their logic was that women on gaming sites should be chosen for their desirability to the core male demographic. By hiring a woman such as myself – who clearly was not hired so that guys who come to the site would find her ‘hot’ – Gamespot had essentially ‘betrayed’ their customer base.

As time went on, I would pepper my reviews with commentary on the sexist portrayals of women in games. Invariably, those criticisms were met with outrage from readers, who had learned to feel entitlement to that space and disdain for women who dared to venture into it. I realised then the extent to which video games were influencing and reinforcing a broader culture of misogyny.


MZ: ‘Gamergate’ was a defining moment for the video game industry. What exactly happened? Were you expecting it?

CP:
Gamergate was a large-scale, semi-organised, violent temper tantrum designed to silence women, feminists, queer people and anyone who may have been critical of more toxic aspects of gaming culture. The fire was set off when the ex-boyfriend of game developer Zoë Quinn published a document on the internet that falsely accused Zoë of trading sex for a positive review of their game Depression Quest. The accusation was completely false and easy to disprove, but that didn’t matter.

The rallying cry for Gamergate became: ‘It’s about ethics in gaming journalism.’ However, anyone who experienced the rage of Gamergate knows that was a cloak for a hatred and maliciousness that existed long before the term was invented. Two years earlier, Anita Sarkeesian’s kickstarter for the video series Tropes versus Women in Video Games was flooded with monstrous harassment. The idea of a woman bringing feminist analysis to games was deeply threatening.

MZ: What has been the legacy of Gamergate?

Part of it is, to some degree, having Donald Trump in office. Steve Bannon, who became the White House chief strategist, fuelled the fires of Gamergate. He hired Milo Yiannopoulos as ‘tech editor’ for the far-right website Breitbart, where Yiannopoulos wrote antifeminist pieces, including attacking Sarkeesian. Breitbart linked that ideology to broader right-wing politics. It is not a big leap from the anger of the entitled gaming fanboy to the anger of the entitled white American screaming, ‘Make America Great Again!’

Gamergate served as a kind of wake-up call telling us that all these young men who constantly play video games are absorbing toxic beliefs and taking them into the wider world as political convictions and interactions with women online and offline. We can no longer treat comic books, video games and blockbuster movies as if the ideologies in them don’t matter. The way that pop culture has become a battlefield on which we collectively are hashing out who we are as a country here in the United States – what we stand for, what we believe in – that too is a legacy of Gamergate.

MZ: Would you agree that the left has been asleep at the wheel in acknowledging the power of video games – something that the alt-right has clearly recognised for a long time?

CP:
As evil as Steve Bannon is, he is tactically smart. He was aware of the ways gamers’ discontent could be harnessed to work in support of Donald Trump. I don’t think we, on the left, have yet figured out how we fight that war. Making sure that younger generations, as they start growing up and consuming comics, movies, video games, are routinely required to empathise with people who don’t look like them, or whose experiences are not the same as theirs – with queer or trans people, for example – is a crucial piece of the puzzle.

I want to be very clear that I do not believe that pop media is going to save us. Marvel or Disney are not going to save us. We, as progressives, have to make our own art. We have to fight our own culture battles. We cannot put our trust, hope or faith in multibillion- dollar international corporations – but nor can we say that representation within those spaces doesn’t matter.

MZ: The games industry recently had its own #MeToo moment. How is Feminist Frequency responding?

CP:
Last year, a number of women and non-binary people simultaneously came forward with stories of the harassment, abuse or, in some cases, rape they had suffered at the hands of powerful, privileged men in the video game industry. Sarkeesian, my colleague, knew that Feminist Frequency had taken steps to tackle this issue, and to do what we can to dismantle the systems that allow this kind of abuse to take place.

In 2020, we will be launching a games and online harassment hotline, a 24/7 resource for anyone who experiences harassment – be it as a player in an online gaming environment or as an employee in the games industry – can reach out to for emotional support and help finding other resources they may need. There’s also a male ally resources and education initiative, which is designed to help men in the games industry go from being bystanders who are complicit in any abuse or harassment that’s taking place to actively intervening and helping change the system.

MZ: Reflecting on the past decade, and seeing these shifts in the gaming industry, what will it take to ‘queer’ the gaming industry?

CP:
The past decade has been a time of growing pains, strife and struggle around video games – what they are for, and who they belong to. But it has also been a decade of tremendous growth for queer representation. There have always been smaller creators on the margins making more radical games that cater to queer and trans people, or to people of colour. Some, like Dream Daddy, get mainstream crossover appeal. So queering the industry is about bringing more visibility to indie developers like Robert Yang, who makes games exploring gay male sexuality, or Brianna Lei, who made the visual novel Butterfly Soup about young queer love.

It’s also about larger studios like Blizzardincorporating queer and trans identity into their games in ways that humanise those characters, rather than using them as a source of ridicule. Or platforms like Games Done Quick that allow participants to include pronouns next to their names. It shows they are committed to normalising trans identity. They are willing to endure the hostility that a move like that is going to generate, which is a deeply unfortunate but inevitable outcome of pushing for the changes we’re fighting for.

But I’m also very wary of companies that simply want to win PR points by saying, ‘Oh, this character is queer’, but not really doing the work to explore what that means or asking players to relate to that character in the way we are asked to identify with straight characters. That’s why it’s so important that queer and trans people are part of the studios creating the games that we play and the critical apparatus at games websites and magazines. That’s how we get titles like The Last of Us: Left Behind, where one of the main characters is queer.

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So, when The Last of Us 2 finally drops and becomes the vidya equivalent of Heaven's Gate, do you think this troon is going to join the 41%?

Also, I'm surprised Feminist Frequency hasn't filed for bankruptcy yet.

I'm not, think of all the fresh unemployment checks they have to siphon right now...
 
It's been six fucking years. Yeah I had fun sperging like a fucking lunatic during that summer of 2014; but it's been six fucking years.

It’s also about larger studios like Blizzardincorporating queer and trans identity into their games in ways that humanise those characters, rather than using them as a source of ridicule. Or platforms like Games Done Quick that allow participants to include pronouns next to their names. It shows they are committed to normalising trans identity. They are willing to endure the hostility that a move like that is going to generate, which is a deeply unfortunate but inevitable outcome of pushing for the changes we’re fighting for.

Nothing says equality like getting to gun down faggots in the name of... ... ... what's Overwatch do again? Oppress the rights of minority robots or something? You really don't want to bring up GDQ and trannies; Proto Magical Girl and the horrible male pattern baldness of its "female" attendees will get you laughed at.

But maybe, just maybe, you shouldn't see your mission to queer something. That's one (of many) reasons you get push-back. Your propaganda, shoe-horning, and other bull-shit is obvious. If you could make something without the subtlety of a 10 pound sledgehammer to the fucking head, maybe people wouldn't mind. But instead, you want to show up, yell "I'm here! I'm queer! Get used to it!" while being one of the most obnoxious fucking people around. Show up, shut the fuck up about your identity crisis and be useful... and don't try to get others to play along with your larp.
 
Choice quotes:
how the left can leverage the momentum of video gaming
What momentum? Besides the industry getting fucked by Corona it had disastrous title launches the last two years.
Like for a lot of young people growing up in the United States in the 1980s, video games were an inescapable phenomenon. They were even more of an escape for me. I didn’t know the word transgender when I was growing up because no one talked about it.
Likely because it wasn't manufactured yet to appeal to insane people.
didn’t intend to become a feminist critic but I couldn’t escape the expectations and limitations of being a trans woman in that space.
Pretty much throwing trans under the bus as being perpetual killjoys that speak on the same topics.
Their logic was that women on gaming sites should be chosen for their desirability to the core male demographic.
More likely she was shit at games and reviewed games based on politics rather than quality.
sexist portrayals of women in games. Invariably, those criticisms were met with outrage from readers, who had learned to feel entitlement to that space and disdain for women who dared to venture into it
Or maybe they want to know how games are and don't like games being punished for thought crime?
Part of it is, to some degree, having Donald Trump in office.
Literally GG made Trump president, you can't make this shit up.
MZ: Would you agree that the left has been asleep at the wheel in acknowledging the power of video games – something that the alt-right has clearly recognised for a long time?
After talking about how it tried to make leftist politics in games the immediately swerve and argue that the right started the conflict.
We, as progressives, have to make our own art.
Doing it by taking established art and subverting it.
There’s also a male ally resources and education initiative, which is designed to help men in the games industry go from being bystanders who are complicit in any abuse or harassment that’s taking place to actively intervening and helping change the system.
WE ARE REACHING LEVEL OF CUCK NOT SEEN BEFORE!
It’s also about larger studios like Blizzardincorporating queer and trans identity into their games in ways that humanise those characters
This is after saying they can't trust corporations.
That’s how we get titles like The Last of Us: Left Behind, where one of the main characters is queer.
You forgot how the character was made a queer against the wishes of the author (a woman) by a man who's probably a pedo.

Can someone post the meme image of the Feminist Frequency crew art image getting drawn like they actually look like in real life?
 
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