Brad Wardell's site for talking about the customization of Windows.
Published on September 30, 2014 By Frogboy In PC Gaming

Last week I wrote about the Escalation of #GamerGate. I recommended that advocates of #GamerGate come up with a set of objectives while momentum was in their favor.

A Recap

For the uninitiated, #GamerGate is a schism that has formed between the enthusiast gaming press and core gamers. The schism was largely the result of the gaming media allowing their platforms to be utilized by the more radical elements within their ranks to denigrate core gamers as “dead” and “nerds” and “misogynists” in response to a handful of gamers targeting an outspoken feminist game developer who they believed had received unmerited coverage due to her personal relationships with the gaming press.

#Gamergate was coined by Adam Baldwin in response to the gaming media’s aggressive stance towards gamers who expressed their concerns regarding what they believed to be inappropriate collusion between developers and journalists and now represents those who passionately want to see changes in the way the gaming media approaches its subjects.

Jack Thompson II

The situation reminds me of when activist lawyer, Jack Thompson argued against violence in video gamesBack then, the enthusiast gaming press and core gamers ridiculed Thompson’s arguments and at times, targeted him with substantial harassment. Eventually his movement petered out and everything went back to normal.

This time, the crusade against core gaming is being led by self-identified “social justice” activists who believe that video games are inherently hostile to women, minorities, etc.  Core gamers have reacted the same as they did in 2003 with open ridicule and at times, substantial harassment of their foes.  However, this time, the enthusiast press decided to brand core gamers as “misogynists” on the basis that the targets of ridicule and harassment are feminists instead of a male lawyer.

Many core gamers believe that the reason the gaming media has been backing this agenda is because unlike in 2003, they are in bed with the other side financially, politically and sometimes literally. Meanwhile, some in the enthusiast press think that the vocal elements #gamergate are just a bunch of misogynistic lunatics.

What do you want out of this?

I suggested that the #GamerGate advocates come up with 5 objectives to rally around.  With a week of reflection, I’m not sure that’s really a good idea as it would likely just splinter those who support #Gamergate into smaller factions.Nevertheless, a lot of interesting suggestions were made. 

Below are some representations of the objectives people believe #gamergate should have

  • Insist on a full disclosure of relationships (Financial, personal, or otherwise) between the developer/publisher and journalist/publication.
  • Fair and professional representation of all sides during debate (Including twitter and other social media directly related to a journalists writing persona) without censorship of opposing opinions. Where disagreement over facts is present both sides should be represented with relevant proof where available.
  • Fact checking of all articles. Do not report on issues like harassment and bomb threats without first checking the story is real, then also read into all parties involved and relay histories of similar incidents if a pattern is present.
  • Proper representation of gaming's diverse multi-cultural elements. Don't blame 'straight, white, males' for everything. It's extremely unprofessional and deeply offensive.
  • A full apology from all involved in Twitter campaigns, 'gamers are dead' articles, and other anti-GG attacks.
  • A end to journalist collusion in regards to the omission of stories that do not fit in with ideology
  • Report on what games are like, not what they are lacking in terms of perceived social justice.

  • Quit censoring topics based on your personal political biases. If you have a stated policy, stick to that. Don’t pull the rug out because your ideology is losing the debate.

  • Those sites that published articles attacking gamers should publish an editorial apologizing for those attacks.

  • Stop game sites from injecting a political agenda into content, especially things like reviews or interviews. Opinion pieces are fine as long as they are clearly marked as opinion and the comments left open so that respectful, dissenting points of can be heard.

  • Game sites should abandon articles that character assassinate individuals or groups that are related to the gaming industry.

  • The practice of blackballing developers for the kind of games they make, their political opinion or something they might have said needs to stop, everyone should be given a fair chance.

  • Game Sites should have an ethics policy which is easy to find and which clearly lays out policies regarding journalistic standards.

  • Game sites should post a complete renunciation of the claim that Gamergate was "based in misogyny and harassment".

  • Cut off all ties with Silverstring media as well as Patreon support for those who work with/use it.

  • Force the removal of the most egregious actors in the gaming press.

  • Game Magazines and sites need a stated, public policy regarding how they define a conflict of interest. For instance, a conflict of interest is may be defined as any romantic, sexual, or platonic relationship; additionally, any economic relationships through services such as Patreon or Kickstarter.

  • Censorship is not acceptable. We expect to be able to discuss our grievances with your websites openly, so long as the conversation is polite and respectful.

  • All news articles must meet the Ms. Walters standards- at MINIMUM two reasonably unbiased sources, with at least one from both sides, must be present. If two sources cannot be found, this must be clearly stated in the article.

  • If your website believes in advocating for a political cause, be open about it.

  • Full disclosure on relationship of journalist and game developer. IE Patreon, Kick Starter, Friend, Lover, Roommate, where did you get the game, etc.

This is by no means a comprehensive list.

Reality vs. Fantasy

A lot of the objectives, demands and hopes I read are fantasy. Demands without leverage are just a form of groveling.  Only objectives that the #gamergate proponents can enforce are, in my opinion, realistic.

I’m friends with a lot of people in the gaming media. I know they’re good people. They’re also honest, trustworthy and full of integrity. They are also convinced that #gamergate is a thinly veiled front to attack women in gaming.  I think they’re wrong. Terribly wrong. But they will not be convinced otherwise. 

I’m also friends with a lot of game developers. And most of them have been horrified by what they see as the self-destruction of the enthusiast press when it comes to their relationship with their most loyal supporters.  Most game developers I’ve talked to about this issue cannot fathom why the gaming press would be attacking their own readership. 

As one fairly well known game developer said to me last week, “What’s really odd is that some of these guys forget that when Cracked or whatever gets back to their usual beat, the gaming press still has to live with these guys [the hard core gamers that make up a large % of the daily page views of these game sites]”.

What I’d like to see the gaming media do

I’m just an old game developer. So I might as well wish for it to rain donuts.   Mind you, I cringe even reading the below points because I hate preachiness and anything that seems coercive. That said, I think the below points would be helpful to them.

  1. Professionalism. Create a policy based on the Society of Professional Journalists. Have your writers and freelancers read it and sign it before accepting work from them. This would cover disclosures of excessive personal or financial relationships between the writer and the subject.
  2. Transparency and Fairness. Create a mission statement for your site and put it in the about area. This would be useful both for readers and those who would submit content to your magazine/site.
  3. Self-Enforcement. Encourage your editors to be on the look out for writers who are trying to pass their political agenda as “news”. Don’t let your platform be used to advocate some cause that deviates from the general mission of site.
  4. House Cleaning. Discourage or eliminate moderators/editors who allow personal political biases to determine what topics are allowed on your forums/website. (For example if you have a policy against topics that might encourage “harassment of game developers” then make sure it’s enforced equally and not just game developers who you politically agree with.)

What I’d like to see #Gamergate do

  1. Vigilance. Support and encourage those maintaining vigilance, providing constructive criticism and doing due diligence on how games are covered.
  2. Resistance. Continue to resist those who would wrongly believe inclusion means one group has to “die”. This means using various channels to disseminate information.  Don’t allow your hobby to be turned into “Hobby+”
  3. Inclusiveness. Vigorously discourage any repeat of the August 28 “Gamers are dead” series of articles by vigorously reminding the media that you’re not going anywhere. Gamers want everyone to play games. Support journalists who support actual inclusiveness – you want more people playing games not just “the correct” people.
  4. Support. Actively support and defend those who are being marginalized for purely political reasons.

 

Natural Allies

As a reminder: The gaming media’s natural purpose is to be the advocate of the gamer. The media is supposed to be the watchdog making sure we game developers aren’t screwing over gamers. I feel like we’re in this bizarro situation where the game developers are the ones having to defend gamers from the media. It’s backwards. Stop it.

Gamers, by definition, want to play games. They want games to be reviewed based on how fun the reviewer thinks the game will be to their audience. They don’t care what the reviewer’s personal political hang ups are. Game sites aren't supposed to be a therapy couch for narcissism.  I have lots of opinions on life too but I don’t inject them into my games. Maybe it’s easier for me to keep my whacko views out of my games because the financial punishment would be swift and unmistakable. Either way, knock it off. 

What’s next

I don’t think #gamergate will be going away any time soon.  Given the general unpleasantness of the whole affair, I think editors and journalists in general will be more self-aware of their relationships and take more care in what gets published in the future.  Only time will tell.


Comments (Page 1)
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on Sep 30, 2014

Excellent piece Brad.  The Jack Thompson example is a great one to bring up as it highlights the disparity between their actions then wrt violence in medium and their actions now wrt sexism in the medium, which coincidentally many of them have links to.  The steam curators thing which was implemented recently is very illuminating for how gamers trust certain youtubers or personalties to critique games with Totalbiscuit having 230K followers to Kotakus 28K.  A single individual who is open about his biases and potential conflicts of interest who produces content for his customers - gamers - is trusted so much more than a site that smears gamers in order to drive clicks for their customers - the advertisers.

Gamers are a vocal group - often this is bad, but in many ways it can be good.  We try to hold devs and publishers to account for bad ports, lacklustre sequels, uninspired gameplay etc.  I hope we maintain the vigil here too, rewarding the media that plays ball, and support the developers that speak out for us too.  Some publishers no doubt make good use of unethical media, but I'm sure many (more?) are just as miffed as gamers as nepotism and money speaks louder than good games with them.  Cleaning house of the dodgy middlemen (not the good ones) screwing us over is good for gamers and developers.

on Sep 30, 2014

Gamingmedia attacking their MOST loyal supporters, the hardcore/serious gamer, is fantastic!

It will mean that the hardcore/serious gamer will STOP reading the corrupted gamingmedia which will suffer and may die. It's rightful retribution for those editors who allowed the "Gamers are dead!" articles.

 

In the end, the hardcore/serious gamer will go to Let's Plays and trusted community figures like The Cynical Brit and Angry Joe.

on Sep 30, 2014

You should add opposition to misogyny to this.   Don't let the trolls hijack things, they're good at this.

 

The reason those game journos believe this, is because that is also happening.   I think it's necessary to disown those folks as part of the message given how they're being used as a hammer against the legitimate complaints.

 

Ultimately though, the journos are the low-hanging fruit- if gamers really want to make change, they have to follow the money- and attack the devs that do shady things.  If they try to punish reviewers for their review scores, don't buy their game (or at least wait for a Steam Sale so they're punished some)   Tom Chick has been punished by certain developers/publishers for his review scores.

 

The downside to this is often game companies get the wrong message when their games don't sell, they'll blame piracy. 

on Sep 30, 2014

The solution is simple. Just boycott the publications that trash their readership. Hitting them financially is the only way to motivate change

 

on Sep 30, 2014

For crowd-based platforms to replace journalists. Power to the people!

on Sep 30, 2014

 

Never heard of #gamersgate until now...

However, I have a decent enough reason: I've given up on anything truthful/honest coming from game reviewers and journalists a long time ago. Any bad review and developers cut them off from future prerelease reviews.

 

on Oct 01, 2014

Me neither. But careful, this is not GamersGate (the on-line store), this is #Gamergate.

on Oct 01, 2014

hedetet

For crowd-based platforms to replace journalists. Power to the people!

Yeah, cause this wouldn't be a disaster.  

Just look at how the metacritic brigades descend upon any site that gives a poor review to the flavor of the month game.  Imagine some large official version of a crowd-based system, rather than just an aggregate site with a larger readership.  It'd be nothing but a targeting system for 15 year old anger over the lack of validation of their favorite games.  

In reality we have "power to the people" already.  It's places like this, and the comments/forums sections of our other favorite game communities.  It's the smaller sub-reddits on games (as opposed to /r/gaming, which is a cesspool) for example.  There are plenty of places to find like-minded people and get their opinions of games as a substitute to the fact that the gaming media largely sucks.  I haven't read a game review as a decision point in years.  I read them for entertainment or as marketing puff pieces for games I'm excited about.  

If I want an actual opinion on a game, I go to places other than any of the big review sites. 

on Oct 01, 2014

Kantok


Quoting hedetet,

For crowd-based platforms to replace journalists. Power to the people!



Yeah, cause this wouldn't be a disaster.  

Just look at how the metacritic brigades descend upon any site that gives a poor review to the flavor of the month game.  Imagine some large official version of a crowd-based system, rather than just an aggregate site with a larger readership.  It'd be nothing but a targeting system for 15 year old anger over the lack of validation of their favorite games.  

In reality we have "power to the people" already.  It's places like this, and the comments/forums sections of our other favorite game communities.  It's the smaller sub-reddits on games (as opposed to /r/gaming, which is a cesspool) for example.  There are plenty of places to find like-minded people and get their opinions of games as a substitute to the fact that the gaming media largely sucks.  I haven't read a game review as a decision point in years.  I read them for entertainment or as marketing puff pieces for games I'm excited about.  

If I want an actual opinion on a game, I go to places other than any of the big review sites. 

 

I agree that seeking the opinion of like-minded people is what people want in essence. So why not, for instance, correlate user reviews on Steam with their game library and bring those who are close to yours to the fore? Not everyone has the time or desire to crawl through forums and learn what each user is like, if they overstate / understate things, etc.

on Oct 01, 2014

hedetet

I agree that seeking the opinion of like-minded people is what people want in essence. So why not, for instance, correlate user reviews on Steam with their game library and bring those who are close to yours to the fore? Not everyone has the time or desire to crawl through forums and learn what each user is like, if they overstate / understate things, etc.

NVM,.. I misread your response.  I'm a dope. 

on Oct 02, 2014

Actually no sir that is incorrect.  With all due respect there is a method to the madness with these people in the industry.  Very big changes are coming soon. The Journos stated gamers are dead for a reason even if that reason is an utter fallacy.  I know this all seems absolutely crazy and in so many ways it is but if the corruption scandal had not happened things would inevitably have turned out much worse for us much later.

 

If anyone is still confused about the actions of anti-GamerGate versus #GamerGate then read this (blogged) public report by TFYC on the state of the indie games industry.  It's simple enough so anyone can understand.  For the rest, well, connect the dots.  Only way this can be fixed is with a business solution.

on Oct 02, 2014

I think a lot of gamers are going to die in the zombie apocolypse.

on Oct 03, 2014

It's amazing seeing how similar the trolls are on both sides.

 

 

on Oct 03, 2014

Gamers would know to do headshots, etc.  They'll be the next ones that survive the zombie apocalypse right behind survivalists.

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