🐱 The Elder Scrolls Online: What In-Game Pride Parade Means To Players

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The Elder Scrolls Online community banded together this year to hold a Pride Parade in-game, organised by streamer Loctavian, all while raising money for The Trevor Project, an LGBTQ+ suicide prevention and crisis intervention charity. So far, the community has pooled together almost $6,200.

"When I first started playing, I was still deeply in the closet," August Parker told TheGamer. "Queer content had been in the single-player games, but given the dearth of it in the overall MMO space, I wasn't expecting much. So when I came across a quest to save a male Khajiit's life partner in Reaper's March and it was treated as normally as any of the other NPC couples in the game, I cried."

ESO has cultivated an inclusive community with hundreds showing up for the in-game Pride Parades. Bethesda even went as far as to spotlight the streams holding these events so it's no wonder that the servers began to chug. "The word I kept using last night was 'amazing' because I was truly speechless at the turnout," Seth Halltold TheGamer. "I know there are a lot of LGBTQIA+ that play the game, but to see so many of us at the same place at the same time—I could feel the love through the monitor."

Players showed up en masse in colourful costumes, proudly conjuring rainbows and walking through cities together, showcasing what a safe space the community can be. "As an ESO player who identifies as non-binary, it meant so much to me to be a part of these Pride celebrations," Fenntold TheGamer. "I've honestly never felt so lucky and happy to be a part of The Elder Scrolls Online Community."

Another player who partook in the parades, Sable, added, "I feel overjoyed and proud. My guild, Prismatic Defenders, helped me come out as a trans woman last year, so it felt fitting that I got to spend my first Pride event as an out trans woman with them. I teared up seeing all the people marching in the Auridon Pride Parade."

Parker also talked about what the Pride Parade means outside of the game, "With the rise in bigoted rhetoric and violence against the queer community, particularly trans people, it's more important than ever for the queer community to stand up in the face of that hatred and be our true selves. Standing together in solidarity is important not just for ourselves, but for all those still in the closet because they feel afraid or are unsafe to leave it. They need to know they're not alone, that there is a safe community for them even in the face of hatred and bigotry.

"That's one reason why the in-game Pride Parade is so important. For people who can't go to a Pride Parade in person, it gives them a safe place to do that, to express themselves through outfits and fashion, through emotes and mementoes, that maybe they can't in reality. I know that was important to me once."
 
It was a player organized event. Not one made by Zenimax.
If true, I approve, mostly. I don't mind it as long as they do it themselves and don't coerce/bribe others into joining in.

It's hard for me to tell that it's really player run though because the featured stream thing sounds kind of like an endorsement, and I don't know how "hard" it is to get those for literally any other activity in the game.

On MATI last week Null said OSRS moderators are forced to make their pride events officially unofficial and unannounced to stop people from attending in white robes, so it's not like there isn't precedent for unofficial pride events being somewhat company backed even if they can't say so in an official news posting. Makes it kind of hard for me to know when to believe that something is organic from the user side and when is it the company trying to have their cake and eat it too.
 
On MATI last week Null said OSRS moderators are forced to make their pride events officially unofficial and unannounced to stop people from attending in white robes, so it's not like there isn't precedent for unofficial pride events being somewhat company backed even if they can't say so in an official news posting. Makes it kind of hard for me to know when to believe that something is organic from the user side and when is it the company trying to have their cake and eat it too.
They had no problem very publicly announcing their support in RS3 by an actual ingame event and even joining a player organized parade ingame with moderator accounts:

Screenshot_20220627-114112_Brave.jpgScreenshot_20220627-113450_Brave.jpg

Also, does Null play Runescape or was it just news that hit his plate?
 
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Also, does Null play Runescape or was it just news that hit his plate?
I can't remember for sure, but I think he has enough familiarity with it to be amused at what it's become but he isn't autistic enough to be playing it in current year. He mostly found it funny that the mods have been reduced to parading around the world as giant demons to avoid getting KKKed (well, the demons are so the players can find them, the sudden unannounced parade was to avoid the white robes). Not even rainbow demons, they just chose a big creature.

Which now that I think about it... Is making gays into demons really that much better than letting the KKK into your pride event?

:thinking:
 
If true, I approve, mostly. I don't mind it as long as they do it themselves and don't coerce/bribe others into joining in.

It's hard for me to tell that it's really player run though because the featured stream thing sounds kind of like an endorsement, and I don't know how "hard" it is to get those for literally any other activity in the game.

On MATI last week Null said OSRS moderators are forced to make their pride events officially unofficial and unannounced to stop people from attending in white robes, so it's not like there isn't precedent for unofficial pride events being somewhat company backed even if they can't say so in an official news posting. Makes it kind of hard for me to know when to believe that something is organic from the user side and when is it the company trying to have their cake and eat it too.
Ever since the WoW funeral raid (2005-2006 IIRC) I assumed any in-game event was at the very least attended by in-game mods to avoid another situation like that.
 
The virgin ESO vs the chad Guild Wars 2
GW2 is full of rainbow nonsense too. There's two reoccurring lesbians that have domestic disputes at the start of every episode, and the ending of the latest expansion has everyone invited to their wedding.

The new expansion has pretty blatant stuff:
In one of the new expansion areas, New Kaineng, a character literally introduces themselves like this " Hi, its your favourite non-binary engineer".​
In the expansion story, one of the bad groups are nationalists that want regulated immigration. Of course your enlightened progressive faction comes in a forces diversity upon them.​
First "Strike Mission" (Boss Encounter), has a character literally spout the communist rhetoric , and argue against a strawman of libertarians.​
If your character is a Human Noble, one of the lesbians calls you a bourgeoise.​
I probably missed a bunch of stuff, but I refuse to go through that again.
 
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