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posted by janrinok on Wednesday November 23 2016, @04:35AM   Printer-friendly
from the perhaps-men-don't-like-losing-to-a-woman dept.

On Monday the e-sports industry awards take place in London to applaud the top players in the business but not one female player has been nominated.

Competitive gaming, also known as Electronic Sports or e-sports, is growing at an incredible pace. In 2016, revenues from e-sports are predicted by professional services firm Deloitte to rise by 25% to $500m (£406m). Its regular global audience will likely top 150 million people.

Unlike in traditional sport, physical advantages in e-sports are non-existent yet the most popular games are still overwhelmingly played by men.

Recent research by the Pew Center shows men and women are equally likely to say they play video games but men are twice as likely to consider themselves "gamers". It is when gaming becomes competitive that the number of women playing drops dramatically.

Steph Harvey is one of the most successful gamers in the world. She says that the number of women in e-sports is as low as 5% and the main reason is the stereotype attached to gamers. "It's still a 'boy's club' so as a woman you're automatically judged for being different," she says.

Online abuse has been prevalent in the gaming community for years and even led to a misogynistic hate campaign.

Steph has even received online rape threats in the past: "The way I get harassed is about what they would do to my body, about why I don't deserve to be there because I use my sexuality - it's all extremely graphic."

[...] Julia Kiran is the leader of Team Secret, which in October became the top female team in the world. She thinks this reflects a common attitude: "It's always felt that female teams are not a real scene. Male players see us as a side game that doesn't count."

One of the solutions has been the creation of female teams and female-only tournaments.


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  • (Score: 3, Informative) by mcgrew on Wednesday November 23 2016, @05:16PM

    by mcgrew (701) <publish@mcgrewbooks.com> on Wednesday November 23 2016, @05:16PM (#431937) Homepage Journal

    Gender isn't assigned or decided. If you have no Y chromosome, you're female. A very small number of people have an extra X or Y chromosome, I'm not sure about them. But anyone with an X and a Y is male, anyone with two Xes is female. If you have an X and a Y and think you're female, that doesn't make you female any more than the schizophrenic who thinks he's Napoleon really is Napoleon.

    As to which rest room a transexual should use, that's an entirely different question. I certainly wouldn't want a woman who thinks she's a man using the same rest room as my (grown) daughters.

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  • (Score: 2) by Gaaark on Wednesday November 23 2016, @08:43PM

    by Gaaark (41) on Wednesday November 23 2016, @08:43PM (#432082) Journal

    Dog, it used to be sooooo easy:
    1. Balls and dick: male
    2. No balls but a dick: eunich (or Andy Dick)
    3. No balls, no dick: female

    Now, it's all whoa, dude, i'm a female male with male and female body parts and if you go to look at porn on the internet, you have to be careful cause you might be looking at females with dicks or the like and.....

    It used to be sooooo easy to look at porn on the net. 8}

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