We're All Gamers Together: Why Harassment Has To Stop

Another piece talking about the harassment of women in tabletop gaming has surfaced on the internet. At least one of the incidents related in that piece has been substantiated as being true, so I am willing to accept that there is more truth in that article. Whether gamers, or geeks in general, want to admit it or not, there are serious issues within our communities with how people act towards women, people of color, and the LGBTQI. We need to knock that off right now. Obviously, this is an opinion piece.

Status
Not open for further replies.

Another piece talking about the harassment of women in tabletop gaming has surfaced on the internet. At least one of the incidents related in that piece has been substantiated as being true, so I am willing to accept that there is more truth in that article. Whether gamers, or geeks in general, want to admit it or not, there are serious issues within our communities with how people act towards women, people of color, and the LGBTQI. We need to knock that off right now. Obviously, this is an opinion piece.
Just as a warning, for those who might be bothered by certain sorts of content, some of the incidents that were relayed to me, the stories that were told, have jarring, uncomfortable occurrences in them. If mentions of rape and unsolicitated physical contact will bother you, you might want to skip the rest of this article. I know reading the emails and PMs from these women bothered me as they came in.

As much as what these women related bothered me, and obviously bothered them as the targets of the harassment, I felt that the fact that it was so uncomfortable was exactly the reason why this current piece needed to be written. We, as a group, need to start looking the people doing this harassment in the eye and telling them that we don’t think it is okay. We need to stop pushing these accounts into the shadows, under the rugs, and pretending that they do not exist. We need to make our communities into better places for everyone, and not just a bunch of men.

I put out a call over my various social media feeds (which was shared a lot), asking for women to share their experiences of harassment in tabletop gaming with me. Anonymity was offered to those who wanted it, and not surprisingly most respondents asked that their names be kept confidential. The reasons for them wanting to be kept anonymous were one of two. First, they were afraid of further harassment within their communities for calling out the bad behavior. They seen how women who tell men to stop get treated in small, closed communities and, for better or worse, they want to continue with their hobbies without additional harassment. The second reason was a bit scarier. Some of these women are professionals, working in tabletop gaming in a number of different capacities, who fear that publicly coming forward would negatively impact their careers within gaming.

I’ll just say that last one again, with emphasis: they were afraid that coming forward about their harassment, or the harassment that they had witnessed, would negatively impact their careers in tabletop gaming.

Because of these reasons, I will be keeping the identities of everyone who asked anonymous. Everyone who spoke with me identified themselves, I am just not identifying them.

One of the common threads through the experiences shared was rape. Most of these women had had characters raped during convention play, online games, or at events at stores. Sometimes the rapes were matter-of-factly introduced into play, others there was a titillating level of graphic detail to the assaults. One women talked about how a regular attendee at a local convention bragged of having a “rape kit” in his car for the women at the convention, and at one point he yelled at her to “find him women to sleep with.” She also talked about the organizers of the convention having a “men only camping retreat” and when she was on the board of the con the only way that she could attend was “nude and wearing a dog collar.” Another woman talked about the GM of her online game suddenly having her character knocked unconscious, taken away on a ship, and then graphically narrated raping her character. All of this occurred on voice chat while using a popular virtual tabletop site.

Another woman told me that her attempts at organizing a couple of women only games for a VTT online convention was met with such vehemence from male gamers that the games were pulled from the schedule of the convention.

People wonder why more and more people think that anti-harassment policies are needed at conventions. After all, even Gen Con has one:
Gen Con: The Best Four Days in Gaming! is dedicated to providing a harassment-free Event experience for everyone, regardless of gender, sexual orientation, disability, physical appearance, body size, race, religion, or affiliation. We do not tolerate harassment of convention participants in any form. Convention participants violating these rules may be sanctioned or expelled without refund at the discretion of show management.

And an Ethics policy:

All of the following constitute grounds for expulsion from the convention without refund:
  • Violating any federal, state, or local laws, facility rules or convention policies
  • Failure to comply with the instructions of Gen Con Event Staff or security personnel
  • Using anything in a threatening or destructive manner against person or property
  • Endangering the safety of oneself or others
  • Threatening, stealing, cheating or harassing others
  • Failure to conduct oneself in a mature manner

The creators of the 13th Age RPG have anti-harassment policies for their organized play because “Nobody shows up for a game with the goal of feeling uncomfortable or unsafe, and sorry that they came. But organized play brings together many different types of people with different expectations and approaches to play. An anti-harassment policy sets ground rules that everyone can recognize and follow, resulting in better games and more fun.” In the policy they outline harassment as “Everyone has the right to a space that is safe from any type of harassment: physical, verbal, emotional, or sexual.”

Honestly, considering the experiences that have been related to me, these sorts of policies should be commonplace for conventions and organized play. I have heard that Paizo is currently drafting an anti-harassment policy for their organized play, and Ad Astra Games has one in place already.

These are some of the more overt things that women have to deal with in their tabletop gaming experiences, and doesn’t go into the more “casual” or systemic harassment and sexism that women deal with at conventions, in online play and at game stores. One of the women talked about women being a subclass in society, and it being more so in gaming communities. “It sucks for a female gamer, going into a store and having that reaction.”

Men are openly commenting on women’s body parts in a sexual manner. Sexual content is added to games because “that’s the kind of stuff that women like.” Crude sexual references and jokes are made.

I’m not saying that there is no place for sexual, or adult themes, in gaming. Just the opposite, in fact. In my personal groups I game with grownups, and we play games that can have adult material in them. We have, however, agreed that content like that is okay in advance, and most of the time we agree that players’ agency over their characters should not be railroaded by the story of the game, or the actions of the GM. There is a huge difference between making awkward sexual comments out of the blue, because you are hoping it will interest a woman gamer, and making awkward sexual comments that people expect in their game. This goes doubly so for games in public spaces, like conventions or stores.

And just because it is okay with your wife, girlfriend or the woman in your gaming group at home, that doesn’t mean that it is okay with all women. If it makes someone at the table uncomfortable, or makes them feel like they are being harassed, just don’t do it, or apologize for having done it.

And, of course, none of them are safe from accusations of being a “fake geek girl,” or being in the store to get something for their husband or boyfriend. Apparently the idea that a woman would want to buy her own dice or miniatures or rule books is alien to some gamers.

As Jon Peterson, author of Playing at the World, points out in an online essay, there have always been gender problems in tabletop gaming. But he also points out that women have been interested in tabletop gaming for a long time. But, just because something has “always been that way,” it does not mean that it has to stay that way. Even in the 1970s TSR Games employees were taken to task by fandom, and female designers, to be more respectful of women gamers and to stop using phrases like “ladygamers.” Sadly, these attitudes that were considered to be outdated back then are still being perpetuated now…in some cases by some of the same people.

My first AD&D group, back in 1979, had a woman for the GM, and about half of the group were women. Most of my groups since then have had women involved in them. We need to be better, as a community, about these things. We need to speak out when we see women being harassed, online or in person, and we need to tell the people who think that doing this is okay that it isn’t. We need to be active in making the change that creates better communities where we don’t have to worry about our friends being harassed because of their gender, or their sexual preferences, or their ethnicity. We have to convince conventions and organized play societies that having anti-harassment policies is a good thing, and enforcing them so that everyone feels welcomed and accepted is a better thing.

Guys, we have to remember that this isn’t about us. This isn’t about our perceptions of what is happening at conventions, during organized play events and in online games. We sit back, listen and ask what we need to do, rather than try to make the discussion about how it “isn’t all men.” We already know that. We need to not take the focus away from what needs to be done.

There are never going to be completely safe spaces, in gaming or outside of it. However, we can make better places where no one has to worry about their body parts being part of the table talk, or their characters being sexually violated. It is the 21st century, and we should be better about this than we are. We need to stop being quiet, stop facilitating harassment, and we need to start making better spaces for ourselves and our fellow gamers. A group, like nerds, that talk so much about being harassed in their youth for being different should really be more sensitive about harassing others. We can, as a group, be better about this, and we need to do it.
 

log in or register to remove this ad

Obryn

Hero
Fear of unwarranted accusation by people with a social justice warrior bent, a feminist agenda, or Munchhausen syndrome. We all stay home in our little "safe spaces," never meet, never socialize, never game because accusation is accepted as fact and it's too big a risk. The accuser becomes the terrorist.
So the secret plan is the total dissolution of society then. You figured me out.
 

log in or register to remove this ad


MechaPilot

Explorer
Fear of unwarranted accusation by people with a social justice warrior bent, a feminist agenda, or Munchhausen syndrome. We all stay home in our little "safe spaces," never meet, never socialize, never game because accusation is accepted as fact and it's too big a risk. The accuser becomes the terrorist.

I see literally no one advocating for that.

Look at what has been suggested: the overall consensus is that the community being aware of and not tolerating harassment and assault is a significant step in the right direction.

Also, and somewhat tangentially. . .

1) the "feminist agenda" is gender equality under the law and that is it. Anyone advocating for special treatment for one gender over another or using claims of sexism to overreact to things like the Joker-Harley slap leaked from the set of Suicide Squad is simply calling him/herself a feminist.

2) SJW is a horribly misnamed term. A just society is one in which everyone has equal rights under the law. Fighting for that ideal is, the last I knew, a good thing. I mean, who wants the law to be bent so that others have more or superior rights than they do? I could easily imagine people trying to dismiss Ghandi and King, if they were alive and active in today's climate, with the SJW term.
 

MadAxe

First Post
Here's food for thought: forget about the fact that many of these sound like Lifetime movies (seriously, an ENTIRE STORE chanting "Old enough to bleed, old enough to breed"?) Here is a response from the company she singled out: http://imgur.com/X1amFDz

Really? A Lifetime movie? I wonder what prompted you to use Lifetime as an example. I don't think I could possibly read anything into that.

Ive see the response from the company she has singled out. Nevermind that it's still within reason she isn't lying and he is. Nevermind that any of the multitude of reasons someone could experience what she experience and maybe not want to give or even have the kind of evidence demanded of her.

Never mind that because her story is not unique. It's being told all the time by other people every day, people being harassed out of stores and conventions. The time for skepticism is over, it's long over. What she describes is happening.

I have worked in game stores and I've seen first hand some of what she described. We didn't put up with that nonsense, but it exists. It will keep existing as long as you have folks denying it exists, claiming there is no problem. Some of the professional women in the industry have reported this exact type of behavior.

I would ask what it would take for you to believe, but I suspect the answer to that is "nothing".

Making the community safe for everyone isn't about "SJW" politics, it's about making the damn hobby friendly to anyone who wants to play it without fear of being harassed out of it. What is wrong with that? Do you need a safe space to be :):):):):):) about other people? Do it in your own damn home.
 

MechaPilot

Explorer
Nothing to substantiate the claims after an entire year has gone by. Weak sauce.

The claim that she received terrorist threats? The free press article states that as fact. Surely, they would have asked to see them. If I were the reporter who wrote the piece, I would have done so.

If you mean the claim that those threats came from Wyrd staff, that really doesn't matter. Terrorist threats, which (again) it is factually reported that she received, are never acceptable.
 

AWizardInDallas

First Post
Also, and somewhat tangentially. . .

1) the "feminist agenda" is gender equality under the law and that is it. Anyone advocating for special treatment for one gender over another or using claims of sexism to overreact to things like the Joker-Harley slap leaked from the set of Suicide Squad is simply calling him/herself a feminist.

2) SJW is a horribly misnamed term. A just society is one in which everyone has equal rights under the law. Fighting for that ideal is, the last I knew, a good thing. I mean, who wants the law to be bent so that others have more or superior rights than they do? I could easily imagine people trying to dismiss Ghandi and King, if they were alive and active in today's climate, with the SJW term.

Disagree entirely with your personal interpretation and/or definitions, but don't care.
 

Mecheon

Sacabambaspis
Disagree entirely with your personal interpretation and/or definitions, but don't care.

Then please kindly share your opinions of these

Because whenever I hear the words "Feminist Agenda" I personally just think "What, the agenda of making men and women equal?" and wonder what you are possibly implying.
 

MechaPilot

Explorer
Disagree entirely with your personal interpretation and/or definitions, but don't care.

And the first part of the post? Where no one has been advocating for the thing you said you feared? Where intolerance of harassment and assault by the community appears to be a response embraced by the community, including those like myself who have experienced harassment?
 


I'm A Banana

Potassium-Rich
Nothing to substantiate the claims after an entire year has gone by. Weak sauce.

You're still fixated on this one example, but it's jut one stick in the fire. Ultimately, no one is going to "convince" anyone about this particular incident because no one was in the room and no one is in their minds and it's all a bunch of he said/she said at this point. So there's little actual discussion to have about it.

AWizardInDallas said:
Fear of unwarranted accusation by people with a social justice warrior bent, a feminist agenda, or Munchhausen syndrome. We all stay home in our little "safe spaces," never meet, never socialize, never game because accusation is accepted as fact and it's too big a risk. The accuser becomes the terrorist.

Again, none of this is particularly relevant. You're a human being, so I'm assuming you also believe that Harassment Is Bad. If harassment is happening at cons, I'm fairly sure you'd agree that that would be a bad thing.

So, again, the fundamental premise: Do you agree that there is harassment at cons? If so, lets move on from whether or not this particular accusation was an example of it, because if you don't dispute that premise then ultimately this particular example doesn't matter because everyone agrees that there is harassment at cons even if this wasn't an example of it.

Once we can explicitly agree that it is a thing that happens, we can maybe have a more productive conversation about what are good things to do with that information.
 

Status
Not open for further replies.

Related Articles

Remove ads

Remove ads

Top