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Hot tub streams, Mass Effect butts, tanks, and other things that required Caps Lock this year.
Two of the biggest videogame controversies I was aware of as a kid were A) the existence of violent games and B) whether or not it was OK for my friend to always tank rush me in Command & Conquer. Both remain unresolved to this day, but there are far bigger disputes to become entangled in now: 2021 was dotted with scandals and insults and protests, and even a congressional hearing.
The gravity of modern gaming discourse can make the arguments of the past feel pretty quaint, but the year also contained a minor dispute over butts and a big argument about tanks, so I wouldn’t say that things have gotten gloomier on the whole. There’s just more of everything.
(While we’re back on the topic of tanks: One or two C&C tank rushes are fine, but it’s not fun if you do it every time. The same goes for spamming fireballs at me in Street Fighter 2 when you know I don’t know how to counter that, man. You know who you are.)
Here are the most controversial decisions, incidents, and tank designs of 2021:
When it comes to Activision, the Mr. Burns principle of immunity seems to come into play, whereby minor controversies are crowded out by bigger ones and effectively neutralized. Case in point, New Zealand being mad made me forget all about everyone being mad when Activision promoted Call of Duty: Vanguard by inviting conflict photojournalists to capture «the epic intimacy of World War 2» in the game. And Activision Blizzard’s other problems, detailed in an entry below, overshadowed everything else.
The big hack turned out to be a brief squall, at least for now. We learned that Twitch had a «do not ban» list (it’s more mundane than it sounds), and got a look at how much money top streamers make from ad revenue and subscriptions. Not the most shocking stuff, and Twitch says that no passwords were exposed.
Regarding hot tubs and earlicking, Twitch will surely continue to struggle to decide what is and isn’t appropriate on its platform, as every social media platform does. After hot tub streams, earlicking ASMR in yoga pants, and calling people «cracker,» though, trying to guess what’s next feels impossible. Some kind of viral dance, maybe?
There was the thing where people said New World was bricking RTX 3090s, but this didn’t seem to be a widespread problem. Some observers also declared that New World is busted because it’s «client authoritative,» suggesting a foundational flaw in the code, but Amazon says that’s not true.
New World has been buggy, and the servers were a mess at the start, but that’s pretty typical MMO stuff. Final Fantasy 14 is so popular right now that they stopped selling it. All things considered, the absence of mounts being one of the bigger controversies during an MMO launch is a sign that it’s doing just fine.
Plans to auction off Stalker 2 NFTs were completely abandoned a day after they were announced. Discord also walked back NFT plans after a negative reaction. Ubisoft went ahead with its plans, however, and added NFT collectibles to Tom Clancy’s Breakpoint. It’s hard to imagine anyone caring about any kind of collectible in Breakpoint, but there you go: NFTs are in mainstream games.
I’m with Wes: It all sounds like a bunch of bullshit to me.
Activision Blizzard fired over 20 employees as a result of new HR investigations, and says it disciplined over 20 more. CEO Bobby Kotick took a symbolic pay cut, the head of HR was replaced, and Blizzard president J Allen Brack stepped down, replaced by Jen Oneal and Mike Ybarra. A few months lanter, however, Oneal resigned, reportedly because she felt she’d been «tokenized, marginalized, and discriminated against.»
The California lawsuit hit a snag when the agency that filed it objected to an $18 million settlement agreement between Activision Blizzard and a federal agency that had been running a similar investigation. It was similar in part because two of the same lawyers had been involved in both investigations, which could be a problem for California’s case. The lawsuit is ongoing, though, and a private lawyer also recently started laying the groundwork for a class action.
Some current Activision Blizzard employees are considering unionizing with the Communications Workers of America.
Steam’s «anything goes» policy is firmly an «almost anything goes» policy now. Clearly, Valve doesn’t want to get into the regulated business of hosting pornographic imagery of real people, and it doesn’t want crypto speculators to involve its platform in their schemes. Only Valve’s schemes are allowed!
Epic Games CEO Tim Sweeney said in response to Steam’s cryptocurrency trading ban that the Epic Games Store will «welcome games that make use of blockchain tech,» but I’m not convinced there’s any real contrast between Steam and Epic on the matter. Not many «blockchain games» exist as more than ideas, and none of the games that got the boot from Steam have shown up on the Epic Games Store as far as I can tell.
DICE responded with some big patches—big enough that you suspect they were preparing them before launch—and said that it’ll consider bringing back some of the elements fans are missing, like the original-style scoreboard. People briefly got mad about some Santa skins for some reason, but otherwise, the hate train seems to be slowing down for now. When the next one comes out, I fully expect people to say that it sucks because it’s not enough like Battlefield 2042—it’s just tradition.
I guess most people agreed that, yeah, aiming the camera at Miranda’s butt while she was having a heart-to-heart with Shepard was a bit much, at least if you’re playing Mass Effect for more than butts. Still, a modder who once removed butt shots from the original version of Mass Effect 2 returned them to the Legendary Edition version. Someone had to.
Robinhood’s pause on GameStop purchases got scrutiny during a congressional hearing, and a class action lawsuit was filed. The SEC released some guidance about disclosures, but no new regulation has been created.
Multiple films about the incident are in the works. At the time of writing, GameStop shares are trading at $150. The company’s executives have made a lot of money by selling off shares. The company is currently working on some kind of NFT thing.
In October, the exact same thing happened again.
If we’re judging the significance of a controversy by how far a person will go to prove themselves right, violating the UK’s Official Secrets Act certainly puts War Thunder tank accuracy among 2021’s most controversial videogame things.
Tyler has spent over 1,200 hours playing Rocket League, and slightly fewer nitpicking the PC Gamer style guide. His primary news beat is game stores: Steam, Epic, and whatever launcher squeezes into our taskbars next.
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