The hate matrix of online gaming

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The word that the extreme right use to describe the political radicalisation of newcomers to their worldview is “red pilling”. The metaphor comes from to the techno-dystopian film The Matrix. But its modern cultural usages refers to a radical political conversion or awakening, where individuals wake up to the truth around them. In more intense cases, red pilling refers the radicalisation of individuals into the “alt-right”, into extremist beliefs which normalise contempt and hatred against minorities, women and the “left”, and legitimates forms of symbolic and physical violence against them.

Much of this discourse takes place online, especially in closed communications systems such as Discord. The rise of the alt-right is also closely connected with online sci-fi and gaming, including, most notoriously, the ugliness of “Gamergate”.

This year the Project Whispers project released a data set of over 9 million messages from alt-right agents on the Discord server on the Steam website. Steam hosts PC games, including hundreds of single-shooter scenarios, including many based on quasi–right wing fantasies such as Freedom Fighters, “an intense third-person action game set in an alternate history New York during the invasion of a foreign superpower”, and Call of Russia, where players take on Vladimir Putin’s muscular persona to protect the “Motherland” from invading “furries” (a subculture, including many gay and trans people, who dress up as animals).

Steam’s linked Discord chatrooms enable players to discuss game-playing and, as is increasingly apparent, have become a hotbed for extreme-right groups glorifying violence and looking for new recruits. Many of them are preparing for what they see as an upcoming “boogaloo” or race-based civil war in the United States. These growing “boogaloo” movements, or cells, often refer to their “red pilling” as part of their realisation that they need to “accelerate” societal disintegration so that a new awakening and new society can emerge.

The dump of the Discord messages offers researchers a unique window into understanding this dark world of “red pilling” of individuals into extremist beliefs, which normalises contempt and hatred against out-groups, and legitimises symbolic and physical violence against them.


One way of approaching this troubling phenomenon is by analysing the specific forms of language used by far-right actors. In examining the communications of far-right extremists from the Discord server, we could see that far-right agents speak in certain, distinct ways, both amongst themselves as they develop and affirm their solidarity networks, and as they reach out to members of the wider community to recruit them to their cause.

Becoming a part of a radicalised milieu means first being initiated into an ever-changing lexicon of mocking-cynical or ironic in-jokes and shibboleths: self-designations such as “1488ers”, “Deus vult”, the “Pepe the Frog” image and more, as well as mocking terms for enemies such as “social justice warriors”, “soyboys”, “dindus” and “cultural Marxists”.

This use of humour has two functions. First, it allows extreme ideas to be simultaneously spoken while remaining publicly retractable: “it’s only a joke; don’t be such an SJW!” or the like. Secondly, it nevertheless introduces newcomers into discriminatory jokes about Jews, Muslims, women and other hate targets. This humour allows for the gradual normalisation of more extreme forms of objectivising language, a process of what might be called “mock it ‘‘til you make it’.”

The second layer of red pilling language involves what is called “violence-framing” language. Violence-framing makes extreme hatred “make sense”, despite basic norms civility and peaceful resolution of social conflict. Its forms are:

  • Conspiracism: the idea that the world, behind the scenes, is being run by nefarious, criminal, super-powerful plutocrats, socialists, secret societies, Jews …
  • Forbidden fruit-ism: that the conspirators are in possession of enviable material, political and profoundly criminal prerogatives, including sexual prerogatives over women and minors, as we see so virulently in the QAnon delusion;
  • The deeply cynical stance that all noble-sounding, universal ideals are lies, and instruments in the hands of enemies to disempower honest, decent people;
  • The pan-polemical idea that the meaning of life, beneath the false veneer of social ideals and laws, is struggle or war, a “hard truth” to be grimly embraced, against all sentimentalism (“being a snowflake”);
  • The Manichaean stance that, looked at clearly, the world is divided into friends and enemies, a hard “either/or” in which compromise is misguided;
  • The scornful, quasi-elitist view that ordinary people, who are not radicalised, are fools or dupes.
Finally, at the heart of the radicalising onion, are “violence-mobilising” ideas. Their acceptance, in conjunction with (and often as inferences from) the violence-framing ideas, directly license actual violence against others.

We can detect different categories of violence mobilising ideas and language. The first type consists of hate-filled dehumanisation of enemies and outgroups. The language depicts empowered elites as predators (such as wolves, tigers, foxes) to be violently destroyed. Vulnerable out-groups like immigrants, the disabled or welfare recipients are depicted as parasites, to be despised for their vulnerability, since they are an unproductive drain on the wealth produced by honest, productive people. But the most dangerous violence-framing dehumanisation – as in the Nazis’ genocidal treatment of the Jews – positions outsiders as unclean, poisonous or contagious pathogens who must be urgently excised from the community, or even exterminated.

The second form of violence-motivating language is apocalypticism: the view that the situation is, beneath the surface and beyond all nuances, so dire that a failure to act, as soon as possible, will be catastrophic. At this point, not acting violently is what “makes no sense” to red-pilled individuals and seems unforgivably weak.

Online gamers, often young single men, in a virtual environment saturated with apocalyptic narratives of (civil) war, conspiracies and invasion, in which shooters are invited to mercilessly slay hosts of dehumanised foes, has been specifically targeted by extreme-right agents for a reason. If we are to prevent the next lone gunman from emerging from gaming platforms such as Steam, or indeed many such gamers taking to the streets to act out the narratives they have been playing out online, the need to understand how this radicalisation works, using what language, is urgent.


This article is part of a year long series examining extremism and technology also available at the Global Network on Extremism and Technology, of which the Lowy Institute is a core partner. This piece draws on ideas developed in conjunction with Dr Imogen Richards and Associate Professor Geoff Boucher for a research grant proposal on understanding and preventing right wing online radicalisation.
 
  • The pan-polemical idea that the meaning of life, beneath the false veneer of social ideals and laws, is struggle or war, a “hard truth” to be grimly embraced, against all sentimentalism (“being a snowflake”);

Have they never watched a nature documentary? Do they not understand how life functions?

  • The Manichaean stance that, looked at clearly, the world is divided into friends and enemies, a hard “either/or” in which compromise is misguided

Says the people calling everyone Nazis. Aren't they claiming that it's not good enough to not be a racist these days, you have to be actively anti-racist?
 
Steam hosts PC games, including hundreds of single-shooter scenarios, including many based on quasi–right wing fantasies such as Freedom Fighters, “an intense third-person action game set in an alternate history New York during the invasion of a foreign superpower”
ah yes, the well known and loved alt-right fantasy released so very recently in... 2003
 
Have they never watched a nature documentary? Do they not understand how life functions?
Mutualism is a common trait in nature. All the examples of different species cooperating (bees and pollen producing plants, birds eating the ticks off ungulates' backs, etc) aside: cooperation within species is among the most valuable traits we see. By mass: there's more ant than human in this world. The greatest leap in evolutionary history is (arguably) mankind's ability to cooperate to the extent that we can teach our children lessons of the past and utilize those to make life easier for the next generation. War really isn't the norm in human civilization. Our norm is doing what it takes to survive and trying to be left the fuck alone while making incremental improvements on the daily grind.
 
  • The Manichaean stance that, looked at clearly, the world is divided into friends and enemies, a hard “either/or” in which compromise is misguided;
carl-schmitt-quote-lbx0j1s.jpg
 
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My taxes went to giving grants to an organisation that explains what furries are.

The world we live in.

Where'd you find that piece btw? I'm going through the publication section on the website, and I can't find anything under that article title.
 
  • Conspiracism: the idea that the world, behind the scenes, is being run by nefarious, criminal, super-powerful plutocrats, socialists, secret societies, Jews …
It is. Anyone who believes the current world order is only what it appears to be at face value and nothing more is retarded.
  • Forbidden fruit-ism: that the conspirators are in possession of enviable material, political and profoundly criminal prerogatives, including sexual prerogatives over women and minors, as we see so virulently in the QAnon delusion;
They are. The only delusional part of QAnon is that they think it's an issue of 'sides' and that their 'side' is trying to stop it.
  • The deeply cynical stance that all noble-sounding, universal ideals are lies, and instruments in the hands of enemies to disempower honest, decent people;
Most of them. Holding onto valiancy or pride in today's world will get your face pushed into the dirt. Even when you use those ideals to stand against tyranny you're probably going to get blackbagged. Stand against the world order if you want, just don't expect to live.
  • The pan-polemical idea that the meaning of life, beneath the false veneer of social ideals and laws, is struggle or war, a “hard truth” to be grimly embraced, against all sentimentalism (“being a snowflake”);
Purely subjective. Conflict is what defines the current landscape and it will only end with either one big final conflict or extinction. Sentimentality has its place in the world, but putting all value in the sentimental leads to an objectively worthless impact on the world.
  • The Manichaean stance that, looked at clearly, the world is divided into friends and enemies, a hard “either/or” in which compromise is misguided;
I hope one day we can all live in peace, but there is no politicised person left in the world who doesn't hold this view. The hypocrisy is just oozing through the screen when this whole fucking article is about the 'alt-right' boogeymen and why they're an enemy.
  • The scornful, quasi-elitist view that ordinary people, who are not radicalised, are fools or dupes.
Ordinary people who suckle at the teet of woke journalism like this are all fools and dupes. Being aware of that isn't exactly a 'radical' view.

That's 5.5/6 people. Although people who identify as 'alt-right' (or any type of 'right' or 'left') are fucking morons, the list provided is my new checklist for how sound-minded someone is. These views are the exact opposite of 'radicalised'.

EDIT: Grammar, formatting, clarification, you know, the usual.
 
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  • The scornful, quasi-elitist view that ordinary people, who are not radicalised, are fools or dupes.
That's literally what I've seen in anarchist street propaganda. Slogans like 'The system works because you work'.

Sure, the so-called alt-right may hold that view but it's Anarchist propaganda being put up on the streets that's openly expressing it.
 
ah yes, the well known and loved alt-right fantasy released so very recently in... 2003
That plot reminded me more of Homefront (yeah, I know that game came out in 2011), where you play as a resistance member who fights against North Korean-occupied U.S. Government (originally it was supposed to be Chinese but it was changed because of the fear of backlash and the lack of fear of a nation the U.S. depends so much upon and which didn't appear as much of an immediate threat). I also learned about its predecessor Frontlines, and can't help but feel that a lot of it is very relevant to today's climate. of, course, that could just be me over-worrying
By 2024, a global energy crisis and a worldwide avian influenza outbreak plague the world. As supplies of oil and natural gas wane and alternative energy like solar power, bio-fuel and nuclear energy still insufficient to replace oil completely, diplomatic relationships between the East and West are strained, causing two new alliances to be formed, the Western Coalition, an evolution of NATO, and the Red Star Alliance, an evolution of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization. Red Star launches a surprise attack on the Western Coalition in retaliation to proof of the Coalition supporting a coup d'état in the oil-rich Red Star member nation Turkmenistan in 2021. As the last oil fields in the Caspian Sea start to go dry, the countries move to secure what resources are left, leading to several small outbreaks that turn quickly into full-scale war.
 
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How long until game journalists start following these idiots and start publishing articles saying violent games cause mass shootings? They seemed like they were starting to go that way a few years ago, but then Trump denounced game violence and that kind of took the wind out of their sails. But Biden hates video game violence too, and if he wins they might feel enabled to start acting like faggots again.
 
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