The small studio behind the upcoming first-person exploration game Gone Homesay theyāre pulling their game from the next big PAX show because of their rising discomfort with the showās organizers.
PAX is the thrice-annual gaming convention that has become the most popular gaming-centric showcase of new big-publisher and indie games in the U.S. Everyone from Nintendo and Ubisoft to the smallest indie developers regularly show their new works at the Seattle, Boston and, soon, Australia-based events to tens of thousands of gamers. Gone Home was accepted to the āIndie Megaboothā earlier this month, which is a showfloor area dedicated to indie games.
The objectionable behavior Gaynor cites includes the āDickwolvesā debacle of 2010, Mike Krahulikās more recent statements that were exclusionary toward transgender people, as well as a number of other controversial statements and stances. The expo itself, however, has had a number ofinclusive panels in the pastāand itās also banned booth babes.
https://lastchance.cc/pax-surveys-alternatives-to-its-booth-babe-ban-5549684%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
Itās the more questionable incidents that came together to make The Fullbright Company uncomfortable operating with Penny Arcade. Gaynor writes:
We believe that peopleās opinions and actions on social issues and business ethics are important. We believe that agreeing to pay the organizers of PAX over $1,000 for booth space, and to present our game on their showfloor for four days, provides explicit support for and tacit approval of their publicly demonstrated positions on these subjects. And we have finally come to the conclusion that we cannot support Jerry, Mike, and their organization by participating in this event.
We know that this will do them no harm; thatās not the point. Another developer will take our slot at the Megabooth; they wonāt lose any ticket sales; we wonāt hurt their feelings. If anything, weāre hurting ourselvesā our ability to reach new fans who might not have heard of Gone Home, to connect with players, sell stuff, meet with press and video crews, and so on.
But this is not something that weāre doing for practical reasons.
We are a four-person team. Two of us are women and one of us is gay. Gone Home deals in part with LGBT issues. This stuff is important to us, on a lot of different levels. And Penny Arcade is not an entity that we feel welcomed by or comfortable operating alongside.
Weāve contacted Penny Arcade for comment on the situation and will update this post if we hear back. Incidentally, Mike Krahulik has just posted a blog in which he laments the current controversy, apologizing over his recent tweets about sex and gender.
āIām very good at being a jerk,ā Krahulik wrote. āItās sort if my superpower. When it comes to Penny Arcade it has served me well but itās not okay when I make a bunch of people who are already marginalized feel like shit.ā
He said he is not the ābigotā others have made him out to be. āI hate lots of people itās true. But Iāve never hated anyone for their sexual orientation or their gender situation.ā He added: āI donāt want to be the reason people donāt go to PAX or donāt support Childās Play or donāt watch the shows on PATV.ā Heās promising, going forward, heāll be keeping quiet about topics like these. He did not address the Fullbright Companyās move, but if and when Penny Arcade does, weāll update this story.