The Times Australia
Google AI
The Times World News

.

The gaming audience is 'queerer than ever' – so how are game creators responding?

  • Written by Xavier Ho, Lecturer in Interaction Design, Monash University
The gaming audience is 'queerer than ever' – so how are game creators responding?

Mainstream games are embracing openly queer characters – and so are many of their players and fans.

The Last of Us, the prestige HBO adaptation of the critically lauded game, has been celebrated (and review-bombed)[1] for delivering a strong narrative featuring prominent LGBTQIA+ cast and characters.

In Left Behind[2], the seventh episode, the show transported us to the time the younger protagonist, Ellie, spent with her childhood friend and love interest, Riley. We also saw in the third episode, Long, Long Time, how Bill and his longtime partner Frank navigated their final moments together.

Since The Last of Us aired, it saw more than 22 million US domestic views[3] within 12 days of its opening. The data suggests that there is a very large TV audience with a healthy appetite for authentic and purposeful LGBTQIA+ representation.

The interesting thing is that much of this queer representation in The Last of Us TV adaptation is lifted directly from the plot of the video game, asking whether there is a similar appetite for LGBTQIA+ representation and stories in the gaming world.

This in turn raises the question: is the gaming audience becoming more inclusive?

Read more: Review bombing is about power, politics and revenge - but it's not about art[4]

The growing market for queer games

Queer Games Bundle 2022[5] along with its Pay What You Can Edition[6] raised more than US$216,000 for 431 queer creators. Indeed, there is a steadily growing market for queer games.

Queer games makers are resisting against public malice against the community. In February 2023, the Trans Witches are Witches[7] bundle, which started in opposition to JK Rowling’s horrifying anti-transgender tirade, raised US$215,893 for 56 queer creators.

In 2022, we found that 90% of queer games are free or “pay what you want”[8].

This analysis was on itch.io[9], a platform where independent creators can distribute or sell their games. In March 2022, it hosted 2,499 LGBT and LGBTQIA tagged queer games. One year later, that number has risen to more than 3,376, a 35% increase. However, the ratio of free games remains.

Pride at Play

To explore more about queer games – games made by queer makers for queer folks – we curated an exhibition called Pride at Play[10].

Pride at Play’s selection was through an open submission whereby anyone in the world can submit their queer games. We focused on games made in Oceania and the Asia-Pacific region, reflecting the ongoing cultural and legal challenges LGBTQIA+ folks are facing in these regions.

As part of the curatorial process, we interviewed all exhibiting developers. Our interviews were akin to casual conversations, and we talked to 20 different queer designers from Australia, New Zealand, Japan, Malaysia and more.

We asked each person about their background, motivations, queer experiences, their communities, target audiences, and what it means for them to play with pride.

Queerer than ever

Hayley Gordon and Vee Hendro, who founded the game studio Storybrewers Roleplaying[11] in Gadigal (Sydney) were among the folks we interviewed. We asked who their target audience were, and they were convinced they have connected with them.

“It’s queerer than ever. Our market, indie roleplaying games, just gets queerer every year,” they observed.

Younger people in roleplaying are more open about their queerness as well. Games that are going into the indie space specifically are more open, and I wouldn’t be surprised if there’s reflections in the mainstream too.

A box copy of Our Mundane Supernatural Life standing behind a series of cards and markers.
Our Mundane Supernatural Life. Storybrewers Roleplaying

“I feel like I’m doing some kind of retroactive rewriting of history,” said Thomas Barrer at the Ōtautahi (Christchurch) studio Fnife Games[12], who makes Small Town Emo[13], “by making the kind of game I would have liked to see as a kid and have it work on a Game Boy”.

Ferguson and Ken sharing a milkshake both holding their straws looking at each other
Ferguson and Ken sharing a milkshake in Small Town Emo. Fnife Games

“Right now I have a vision of the world being more individual,” said Ignacio Bustos, lead developer at the Argentinian studio Team Spicy Bubble[14] that created the multi-awardwinning game Queer and Chill[15].

In Argentina we have a lot of young people. We’ve put value in the industry as a studio, with all those ideas of diversity and inclusion. And there are things we want to appreciate and make a place for.

“If itch.io didn’t exist, I wouldn’t even be in gamedev at all. itch.io is where I first found small games at a scale that I could make myself,” responded npckc[16], a Japan-based solo game designer who created Mima and Nina’s Chocolate Workshop[17].

It’s provided a space for my weird free games. It’s given me the confidence to release paid games after people donated for my free ones. It’s helped me meet other small game devs who’ve become friends who support me and whom I support as we all make our own things.

There are three chocolates on the table, white, milk, and dark, and a wooden spoon and a spatula. The game asks you to choose a chocolate.
Making a Valentine’s Day chocolate in Mima and Nina’s Choclate Workshop. npckc

Queer games have the potential to touch on everyday endearing moments of who we are as humans.

References

  1. ^ celebrated (and review-bombed) (theconversation.com)
  2. ^ Left Behind (www.vulture.com)
  3. ^ more than 22 million US domestic views (nordic.ign.com)
  4. ^ Review bombing is about power, politics and revenge - but it's not about art (theconversation.com)
  5. ^ Queer Games Bundle 2022 (itch.io)
  6. ^ Pay What You Can Edition (itch.io)
  7. ^ Trans Witches are Witches (itch.io)
  8. ^ 90% of queer games are free or “pay what you want” (bridges.monash.edu)
  9. ^ itch.io (itch.io)
  10. ^ Pride at Play (prideatplay.org)
  11. ^ Storybrewers Roleplaying (storybrewersroleplaying.com)
  12. ^ Fnife Games (fnifegames.com)
  13. ^ Small Town Emo (fnifegames.com)
  14. ^ Team Spicy Bubble (spicybubble.com)
  15. ^ Queer and Chill (spicybubble.com)
  16. ^ npckc (npckc.itch.io)
  17. ^ Mima and Nina’s Chocolate Workshop (npckc.itch.io)

Read more https://theconversation.com/the-gaming-audience-is-queerer-than-ever-so-how-are-game-creators-responding-199598

Times Magazine

Shark launches SteamSpot - the shortcut for everyday floor mess

Shark introduces the Shark SteamSpot Steam Mop, a lightweight steam mop designed to make everyda...

Game Together, Stay Together: Logitech G Reveals Gaming Couples Enjoy Higher Relationship Satisfaction

With Valentine’s Day right around the corner, many lovebirds across Australia are planning for the m...

AI threatens to eat business software – and it could change the way we work

In recent weeks, a range of large “software-as-a-service” companies, including Salesforce[1], Se...

Worried AI means you won’t get a job when you graduate? Here’s what the research says

The head of the International Monetary Fund, Kristalina Georgieva, has warned[1] young people ...

How Managed IT Support Improves Security, Uptime, And Productivity

Managed IT support is a comprehensive, subscription model approach to running and protecting your ...

AI is failing ‘Humanity’s Last Exam’. So what does that mean for machine intelligence?

How do you translate ancient Palmyrene script from a Roman tombstone? How many paired tendons ...

The Times Features

Small, realistic increases in physical activity shown to significantly reduce risk of early death

Just Five Minutes More a Day Could Prevent Thousands of Deaths, Landmark Study Finds Small, rea...

WITH ONE GLOBAL RESORTS FEATURING ON SCREEN THIS SEASON

As Married At First Sight returns to Australian screens in 2026, viewers are once again getting a ...

Marketers: Forget the Black Box. If You Aren't Moving the Needle, What Are You Doing?

Two years ago, I entered the digital marketing space with the mindset of an engineering student ...

Extreme weather growing threat to Australian businesses in storm and fire season

  Australian small businesses are being hit harder than ever by costly disruptions...

Join Macca’s in supporting Clean Up Australia Day

McDonald’s Australia is once again rolling up its sleeves for Clean Up Australia Day, marking 36...

IFTAR Turns Up The Heat With The Return of Ramadan Nights From 18 February

Iftar returns to IFTAR, with the Western Sydney favourite opening after dark for Ramadan  IFTA...

What causes depression? What we know, don’t know and suspect

Depression is a complex and deeply personal experience. While almost everyone has periods of s...

5 Cool Ways to Transform Your Interior in 2026

We are at the end of the great Australian summer, and this is the perfect time to start thinking a...

What First-Time Buyers Must Know About Mortgages and Home Ownership

The reality is, owning a home isn’t for everyone. It’s a personal lifestyle decision rather than a...