nayuan01 said:
When I think of gamergate I think of the recent death threats to Anita Srkeesian, I think of the numerous vocal gamers who cry foul of her criticism on sexism and misogyny in the gaming industry. I base this definition on the coverage garnered by the media on Anita's particular situation and the assessment of such actions by the media as being part of the "gamergate" movement.
Based on what your saying, it seemsthat my definition is different from yours.
Thanks for the reply
Indeed, we seem to have some very different definitions of what Gamergate is.
At this point I would question why we have come to these different understandings.
Gamergate as I know it started following three events which followed in quick succession:
1) The revelation that indie-game dev Zoe Quinn had slept around with something in the ballpark of 5 different men who were all tied to the gaming journalism business, in order to garner PR for her game Depression Quest.
- gamers were upset over this because they felt that this was unfair to other indie-devs, and that it skewed the indie-game marked by hyping up a game that many felt just wasn't that good
- this wasn't the first time gaming journos had been caught taking bribes for good reviews, indeed this resentment has been brewing for years, but it became special because of what happened next:
2) the subsequent mass-bannings of gamers talking on various forums and comments sections about the above
- think streisand effect: People talked about this on social media and the news of Quinn's actions as well as the supposed cover-up spread like wild-fire
3) the mass posting of articles on various gaming websites declaring that gamers and gamer culture was dead/evil/hateful/what have you
- this brought mainstream (relative to the internet gaming communities) attention to the above two events, but where the narrative spun was one focusing on the fact that some gamers were harrasing Zoe Quinn... without mentioning why, questioning whether Quinn might have done something that could explain these 'attacks' and so on - as well as using Anita Sarkesian another example
- thus a lot of gamers suddenly wondered why so many gaming journalists were suddenly saying that they were all scum
- it also shifted the public debate far away from journalism ethics, and instead onto misogyny and toxic online behavior, effectively drowning out anyone trying to talk about the very same corrupt journalists
Now, I have no doubt that Quinn, Sarkesian and all the other women that the gaming journalists use to hide behind have received threats - though I do question whether many of these threats actually have anything to do with gamergate, since people talking shit online isn't exactly anything new and nothing actually comes of any of them.
Fun fact: None of the anti-gamergate feminists who've said to have to recieved threats have so far actually been hurt - while gamergate supporters have been mailed stuff... like a syringe full of unknown fluid, or a knife along with a note to kill yourself.
I also have no doubt that 99% of all gamers who support gamergate will - if asked - strongly distance themselves and deny any such threatening behavior.
The gaming journalists of course make no such distinction: If they did, they would also ultimately have to answer to the corruption question because it would mean that suddenly not all gamers are that bad which would end the story - and they do not want that.
That's what I've been seeing for the last two months: Mainstream media picked up on this, using the gaming sites as sources, so of course they spread the same narrative - talking only about misogyny - and thus we're here today.
I just want to be able to play video games - and I want to see the gaming journalists who's articles I read to see what games I should buy not be influenced by who their friends are, who they've had sex with, or who's bought them the most swag at press events.
This is what gamergate is about to me.
Does this seem unreasonable?
EDIT:
Nayu - One more thing: I do not hold any kind of grudge or hard feelings against you for your opinions on gamergate. You've said where you got your information from, so its no wonder that your opinions are shaped the way they are.
The only thing I ask of you is that you are open to seeing things from different persepectives - not everything you've been told from the gaming media websites are unbiased facts.