AWizard
kiwifarms.net
- Joined
- Feb 15, 2023
A month or so late but here's the thread, might as well start with the same question (and answers) and move on from there. So a focus on the female side of it because I'm really curious on how the effect of the mainstreaming of geek culture has affected them compared to their male counterparts, cos I think it's been disastrous for male geeks/outcasts who have been seemingly been funnelled into either trooning out or becoming alt-right reactionaries and potential shooters (or being a shooter and a troon at the same time).
But anything on on the wider scope of geek culture, or what it's become, is also welcome:
Context: From the unfuckable hate nerds article thread, which went in the direction you'd expect it to go here. I'm curious, has the gentrification of geekdom (and the internet), the gamification of relationships and atomisation affected female geeks/outcasts in the same way? Again, mainly asking millennials, since the internet seems to be, in a way, void of older people.
But anything on on the wider scope of geek culture, or what it's become, is also welcome:
Here's a question(that I may repeat for a self-contained thread)for (mainly millennial) femanons, nonas/nonnies, female geeks/nerds/dorks/outcasts and catladies/femcels: Where are you and how are you doing?
Cos like, geek culture becoming mainstream (and other more significant reasons) really fucked up male geeks/outcasts to the point where a large number of them are either trooning out or turning into alt-right reactionaries and potential shooters. I don't really know what happened to their female counterparts, I don't know if it had a similar effect or if it was a non-issue and was actually positive for them. I doubt "Chad" has a harem of "low social status" girls and I don't know if they're just as housebound as their male counterparts.
Context: From the unfuckable hate nerds article thread, which went in the direction you'd expect it to go here. I'm curious, has the gentrification of geekdom (and the internet), the gamification of relationships and atomisation affected female geeks/outcasts in the same way? Again, mainly asking millennials, since the internet seems to be, in a way, void of older people.