Have you heard that most video gamers are
now adult women—not teenage boys in the
basement?
A new study says so.
Feminist tech writers are have seized on the
study as proof that the video industry has
fallen behind the times: too many games, they
say, perpetuate a culture of sexism and misogyny.
Well, has the gentle sex really taken over
video games?
And are games rife with sexism?
 That’s coming up next on the Factual Feminist.
When I took a look at the Entertainment Software
Association study, I was a little surprised
to find that yours truly, the Factual Feminist
herself, counted as a gamer.
I do not recall playing a video game since
Pac-Man in a bar in Cambridge, Mass—in 1980.
The study counted anyone who plays, however
occasionally, simple smartphone games like
Bejeweled or Angry Birds.
I don’t fault the researchers for their
findings.
It’s great that the world of games is expanding
and there are more women creating and playing
games.
But a distinction is in order.
There are casual game players—and there
are hard-core gamers for whom highly complex,
competitive video games are a primary life
passion.
Adult women are not a key demographic here.
Consider just one typical data sample: Researchers
at UCLA have been studying the pastimes of
college freshmen for more than 40 years.
For incoming freshmen, 65 percent of girls
but fewer than 19 percent of boys said they
played no video games at all in a typical
week.
Among hardcore gamers who play more than 20
hours a week, the ratio of boys to girls is
7 to 1.
This huge gender gap has persisted since the
researchers first started asking about video
games in the mid-1990s—and it looks like
it’s here to stay.
But are video games rife with sexism?
Do they promote a culture of misogyny and
violence that must be dismantled?
 My answer is no.
As I looked into the literature on gaming,
I discovered that gamers make a lot of people
nervous.
Not only are most of them male—but the games
they like tend to be action-packed, competitive,
and often violent.
And they like to play them—a lot.
Gamers have long faced disapproval from moms
and teachers and—above all—researchers
and politicians—concernocrats—both liberal
and conservative.
For years, games such as Grand Theft Auto
and Call of Duty were said to cause violence,
even though no one was able to establish a
clear correlation.
Those concerns died down when Psychological
Bulletin published a major article in 2010
declaring the video game scare “much ado
about nothing.”
One graph showed that as video games have
surged in popularity, youth crime has plummeted.
But now, gamers are dealing with a new army
of critics: gender activists and hipsters
with degrees in cultural studies.
These critics are concerned that gaming is
a largely hetero-patriachal capitalist pursuit.
 Why isn’t gaming more inclusive?
Why must there always be male heroes?
Why are the few females always portrayed as
either Damsels in distress or sex objects?
These critics have made some useful points
about “sexist tropes and narratives.”
But they ignore the fact that the world of
gaming has become more inclusive.
There are games that fit a vast array of preferences,
and games with responsibly proportioned and
appropriately garbed female protagonists.
Yet the video game gender police have become
harsh and intolerant.
Many of them want more than more women on
both sides of the video screen—they want
the male video game culture to end.
Male gamers, as a group, do evince a strong
a preference for games with male heroes and
sexy women.
Could that be because they are—male?
There is no evidence that these games are
making males racist, misogynist, or homophobic.
In fact, all the data we have suggests that
millennial males—born and raised in video
game nation—are far less prone to these
prejudices than previous generations.
Imagine if a group of gender critics attacked
women-centered shows like Oprah or The View,
or women’s magazines, for privileging the
female perspective and treating men like “the
other.”
The fans might be tempted to tell them to
bug off—and find their own shows.
That is what many gamers did.
And most did it with logic and evidence and
humor.
But recently two feminist critics received
and publicized email death threats.
No one knows who sent them.
The millions of gamers must include a few
sociopaths, if it was indeed gamers who sent
the threats.
But many of the new culture critics seized
on the emails as a sure sign of patriarchal
pathology at the heart of gamer culture.
According to one academic pontificator, “What
we are seeing is the end of gamers and the
viciousness that accompanies the death of
an identity."
Well, I have spent the last few weeks talking
to gamers, reading about them, looking at
all the data.
I don’t see pathology or imminent death.
What I see is a lively, smart, creative subculture
consisting mostly of tech-savvy guys from
all over the world—but also including a
small but distinct group of very cool women.
If you love games, they don’t really care
about your age, race, ethnicity, gender, or
sexual preference.
They just want to game.
My suggestion to their critics: Stand Down.
What do you think of the controversy over
video games?
Let us know in the comments section.
If you appreciate these videos, please show
your support by subscribing to the series!
And follow me on Twitter.
Thank you for watching the Factual Feminist.
