Disaster Man ‘team-killed and virtually teabagged’ female journalist during shocking in-game rampage - boom headshot

https://archive.fo/1amzR

A developer’s career is under threat today after he ‘virtually teabagged’ a female journalist during a demonstration of a video game.

The unnamed man was showing off a demo of his game at the conference Pax East when he killed the woman and then squatted up and down on her dead body.

This is known as ‘teabagging’ for its similarity to a sex act in which a man places his testicles into another person’s mouth.

Although this incident took place in-game, a complaint has been made to the man’s employer which could have disastrous consequences for his future.

The virtual teabag scandal was highlighted by Mike Futter, a games journalist, who tweeted: ‘Friendly tip for devs showcasing games: don’t intentionally team-kill a journalist and then teabag them… especially if she’s a woman.’

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The journalist who suffered this simulated sex act appears to be Amanda Farough, a self-professed feminist who once worked for Mic.

She tweeted: ‘I said out loud, in my headset, “And this is why I hate playing these kinds of games”. Thanks for the demo.’

‘Now, granted he thought I was his “dev buddy” by accident, but holy shit was that a mistake,’ she added.

‘No PR around. Just dudes showing me a game and rolling the dice on being rude.’

Farough then said she would be writing to the developer who made the game, although she declined to shame the person on Twitter.

‘No one is naming names publicly,’ she said.

‘This is being handled privately and gently. It was an issue of professionalism and nothing more. The hubbub was a PSA and reminder that this is unprofessional behaviour. That’s it.’

In the sensitive and politically correct gaming industry, a complaint like this could be enough to get the man fired.

‘I hope the fact that you didn’t take their shit totally shattered their weekend,’ one of Farough’s Twitter followers wrote.

‘I hope it did. Hubris soaked frat boys,’ she responded.
 
Ah, another Twitter "literally who" being outraged because they suck at vidya and got griefed.
In the sensitive and politically correct gaming industry, a complaint like this could be enough to get the man fired.
I'm going to go out on a limb and say if this is how the dev team treats each other his boss will probably laugh this off.
 
Amazing that everyday people have been getting teabagged in video games for years, but nobody has yet thought to abuse their positions of power to get people fired. Thank goodness this female game journalist was here to show us the proper way to react to such a situation.
 
Ah, another Twitter "literally who" being outraged because they suck at vidya and got griefed.
I'm going to go out on a limb and say if this is how the dev team treats each other his boss will probably laugh this off.
Hypothetical "bad publicity" is a nasty thing, because even though no one except a few shrill harpies actually cares about this shit (lol look at those twitter metrics, with a platform-favored POV to boot), they have enough readership and a systematized echo chamber to help make it look like a big deal. People on the ground will be better informed, but there's know way of knowing if management is plugged in enough to ignore the fuss.
That being said, this shouldn't make enough of a splash to get the poor guy fired or docked, but it will mean less teamkilling and tbagging at expos- which is a net loss for everyone involved. It's the little stuff that hurts.
 
Hypothetical "bad publicity" is a nasty thing, because even though no one except a few shrill harpies actually cares about this shit (lol look at those twitter metrics, with a platform-favored POV to boot), they have enough readership and a systematized echo chamber to help make it look like a big deal. People on the ground will know better, but there's know way of knowing if management is plugged in or not.
That being said, this shouldn't make enough of a splash to get the poor guy fired or docked, but it will mean less teamkilling and tbagging at expos- which is a net loss for everyone involved. It's the little stuff that hurts.
It's potential "bad publicity" but at the same time now quite a few people will want to know which game this was, and any publicity is good publicity in that regard.
 
Hypothetical "bad publicity" is a nasty thing, because even though no one except a few shrill harpies actually cares about this shit (lol look at those twitter metrics, with a platform-favored POV to boot), they have enough readership and a systematized echo chamber to help make it look like a big deal. People on the ground will be better informed, but there's know way of knowing if management is plugged in enough to ignore the fuss.
That being said, this shouldn't make enough of a splash to get the poor guy fired or docked, but it will mean less teamkilling and tbagging at expos- which is a net loss for everyone involved. It's the little stuff that hurts.

The gaming press' "do as we say or we'll libel you to our audience" shtick has been working less and less as time goes on. Publishers are keenly aware that their customer base doesn't overlap much with people who take gaming journalists seriously, to the point that several publishers have openly admitted to blacklisting certain publications with no one but the butthurt journalists really caring. I strongly doubt this storm in a teacup will have any effect beyond giving the dev and his boss something to joke about around the water cooler.
 
Me, after reading headline: "Who would do be stupid enough to do that in this day and age?"

Me, after reading article: "Oh. He thought it was his bro, and that he was just fucking around with a buddy. And she knew this."

Fucking hell, stop being such a killjoy stereotype. And learn how to get good at vidya instead of including getting your ass kicked as part of your sexual harassment complaint.
 
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