More than 70 recipients of The Game Awards’ Future Class are calling for a statement to be read at next week’s The Game Awards, on their behalf, in solidarity with Palestinians in Gaza, amid the ongoing Israel-Hamas war.

    • @woelkchen
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      81 year ago

      eh… stick to games

      So games portraying war in the middle east should be banned from the awards?

      • @[email protected]
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        1 year ago

        No, only games that suck should be banned. Portray whatever you want, just don’t get involved in current politics ideally. I consider every game to be an alternate reality, even if it mentions recent events.

        • @woelkchen
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          11 year ago

          Imagine the statements being an alternate reality to your head canon.

    • @[email protected]
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      51 year ago

      I miss back when games weren’t so political all the time. Give me back my BioShock, Fallout, Metal Gear, quit producing political garbage!!!

    • @kaffiene
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      11 year ago

      Don’t wanna think about innocent men women and children been murdered. M’uh gaaaammmez!

      • @[email protected]
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        11 year ago

        It’s just not the medium for it. I read plenty of news, and I really don’t need a rehash of all that in everything I’m interested in.

        If I want news, I’ll watch/read news. If I want games, I’ll play games and follow gaming news. It’s possible to stay informed without current events being constantly shoved in your face.

        I get wanting to raise awareness, but there really isn’t a lot of overlap between current events and video games. Some games portray current events, or at least something similar to current events, but the focus in a gaming event should be the game, not the current events.

        • @kaffiene
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          31 year ago

          Everything is political. You dont like it - fine. Doesn’t change the facts thou

            • @[email protected]
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              41 year ago

              Imagine people in Palestine hearing you say that we should wait for the relevant time and place to talk about them. Is that relevant time before or after grandma gets vaporized by the IDF?

              • @[email protected]
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                1 year ago

                The relevant time and place is in front of people with power to actually make changes. Protest in front of government buildings (or even in them), meet with representatives, run for office, etc.

                Reading an open letter at a gaming event isn’t going to do anything, your time is better spent elsewhere.

                • @[email protected]
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                  1 year ago

                  Your pleas aren’t going to melt the hearts of representatives or make them see reason. They don’t actually care about people. They only care about getting votes and bribes, so the only way to change their minds is to influence one of those.

                  • @[email protected]
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                    11 year ago

                    And neither of those will happen at games events with an open letter.

                    The goal for something like the Gaza conflict is to change public opinion. You do that by being very visible and getting on the news consistently enough for people to decide to look more into it. The protest at government buildings isn’t intended to change policy makers’ minds directly, it’s to get media attention in a place that has symbolic significance to viewers, and that change in viewer opinion is what policy makers care about.

                    At the same time, meet with reps in their offices to discuss mutually beneficial options. For something like Gaza, that means getting humanitarian aid to Gaza, which doesn’t require the politician to flip on their support for Israel, but still shows a shift toward supporting Palestinians. As public opinion starts to change, push for ceasefires to establish humanitarian aid corridors, peace talks, etc. None or that requires the rep to abandon support for Israel, you’re just pushing for peace.

                    Imo, that’s how you get change. Open letters that most people will ignore do nothing but rile up people who have already formed an opinion on one side or the other.

              • @[email protected]
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                -41 year ago

                interesting that u choose to empathize with gazian grandma getting “vaporized” but israeli grandma being kidnapped and murdered or worse, is fine and unmentionable.

                some might call that hypocrite

                • @[email protected]
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                  1 year ago

                  The IDF kills orders of magnitudes more Palestinians than Hamas kills Israelis. It’s not hypocritical to be more upset about ten innocent dead people on one side than I am about one innocent dead person on the other. Hamas is a terrorist organization, and the IDF even more so.

                  • @[email protected]
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                    1 year ago

                    that’s a shallow and the woke approach I see people keep repeating. u don’t really care for Palestinians as much as u care to make yourself look humanitarian.

                    calling idf a terrorist organization not only make u sound clueless but also reduce the severity of real terrorist organizations, like hamas, isis, and the like.

        • @[email protected]
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          11 year ago

          The whole point of using this venue to spread awareness is to keep it in your field of view. The human rights abuses and genocide are ongoing, they don’t stop when you turn off the news and start playing a video game. We should be acutely aware of that, and demand that our politicians stop doing business with terrorists.

          You shouldn’t be pissed at the people keeping you aware of it, you should be pissed that what they’re talking about is happening in the first place.

          • @[email protected]
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            1 year ago

            No, the whole point is virtue signaling. It’s an open letter, so it’s not a request for humanitarian aid funding or anything like that, and it’s highly unlikely to effect any kind of change.

            It’s all part of this culture war nonsense. Just let a video game event be about video games. We don’t need to insert politics and global events everywhere.

            And I am mad about the Palestine situation. I hate Hamas for attacking Innocents in Israel and kicking of this whole mess. I hate Israel for killing so many civilians in their attempts to root out Hamas. I hate that Palestinians don’t have a stable country to call home. But an letter at a gaming event isn’t going to change any of that.

            • @kaffiene
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              21 year ago

              Protest is OK just don’t bother anyone too much. Got it. All the major changes in history required a similarly meek and quiet approach.

              • @[email protected]
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                1 year ago

                That’s not what I’m saying at all.

                This isn’t a protest, it’s an open letter, and it’s at a games event. Most people will ignore it, and those that don’t will likely forget it happened five minutes later. It’s not going to reach anyone in a position of power to change anything, so it’s merely virtue signaling since media orgs will report on it after the fact.

                If you want to protest, do it in public. Organize at state/province and national capitols, organize at universities, wear Palestinian clothes in public, fly flags, etc. Asking a games event organizer to read an open letter will do absolutely nothing, but maybe some virtue signaling for whatever political party uses the same talking points. If you want real change, be noisy in public, run for office, etc, open letters do nothing.

                • @[email protected]
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                  31 year ago

                  We all just read an article about it, so this is obviously the most impactful and public place these people could have possibly gone to protest…

                  • @[email protected]
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                    11 year ago

                    We’re only talking about it because:

                    • the article has a provocative heading
                    • someone bothered to post it
                    • Lemmy skews hard toward lefties who support Palestine

                    Most people outside lemmy would never hear about it.

                    They would’ve had much more impact had they organized a protest outside the event (or at a local government building for that matter) and attracted media attention. That would’ve reached a much broader audience, and an audience who is looking to be informed about current, non-gaming events.