【Love Conquest】
The Love Conquestvideo game industry continues to be overwhelmingly white, male, and straight, a new study from the International Game Developers Association shows.
SEE ALSO: Game Developer Diversity Is Needed to Further Industry BoomIn a survey published Monday, the International Game Developers Association (IGDA) surveyed 963 people working in the games industry and data from respondents found that when it comes to diversity, 74% of workers are cis males, 61% are white/caucasian/European, and 81% are heterosexual, despite the majority of respondents claiming diversity in game development to be "very important" or "somewhat important" to them.
The survey compiled data based on answers primarily from people who are actively working in video game development or publishing, as well as small percentages of people who have been laid off from games industry jobs and people who are looking to work in the games industry, study the games industry, or are otherwise involved with the games industry.
"The DSS (Developer Satisfaction Survey) should be troubling for every person who loves the creation, business, or play experience of games," wrote IGDA in the introduction to the study. "While the overwhelming majority of game developers recognize the importance of diversity, game development as a profession can still be unwelcoming, with half of survey respondents asserting that they do not believe there is equal treatment of developers, and half of respondents witnessing or experiencing inequity."
Disconnect from audiences
The IGDA survey received the most responses from people born in the United States — with people from the U.S. making up 40% of survey respondents — but the balance of respondents' ethnic identities don't reflect the demographics of the countries they're from.
Of the 963 respondents:
only 1% of survey respondents identified as Black, African American, or African
4% identified as Hispanic or Latinx.
23% identified as female (with 75% of respondents identifying as male)
5% identified as transgender or "other"
19% identified as non-heterosexual
These results reveal a big disparity between the community of developers making games and the audience of gamers playing them.
"The DSS (Developer Satisfaction Survey) should be troubling for every person who loves the creation, business, or play experience of games"
A Pew Research Center study from 2015 shows that 19% of Hispanic people and 11% of black people in the U.S. would say the term "gamer" describes them well. Only 7% of white people would say the same.
Another portion of that same study examines how men and women identify with gaming. According to the study, 50% of men have played video games and 48% of women have played video games, although only 15% of men and 6% of women describe themselves as gamers.
Part of this male/female disparity in gaming may come from the hostility and harassment that women face in gaming communities. For instance, a 2015 study showed that males were more likely to be hostile toward low-skilled female players in Halo 3than they were to low-skilled male players.
Additionally, male gamers involved with GamerGate — a loose group of gamers that have routinely harassed and threatened women since 2014 — may dissuade women from seeking jobs in the games industry.
Even though 84% of respondents said diversity in the games industry was important, actions speak louder than words. The majority of respondents (58%) felt that the industry did not grow any more diverse over the last two years.
Bridging the gap
Some game developers and gaming communities are fighting to improve diversity in gaming and the games industry.
Developers like Culture Shock Games and Dim Bulb Games bring in diverse voices in their games — including notable projects like We Are Chicagoand Where the Water Tastes Like Wine— to make sure different demographics are accurately represented or are a part of the creative process.
There are also gaming communities like Smash Sisters, which hosts Super Smash Bros.tournaments for women around the country, encouraging women to compete in an otherwise male-dominated space.
Additionally, organizations like Girls Who Code work to encourage young girls to learn how to code, a vital part of the game development process, and potentially inspire them to seek jobs as programmers.
But as it stands right now, the video games industry has a long way to go before its diversity problem is solved.
Featured Video For You
This charity is helping kids through video games
Topics Diversity Gaming Gender
Search
Categories
Latest Posts
Not a Revolution
2025-06-26 01:36Justin Trudeau looks damn heroic in upcoming Marvel variant cover
2025-06-26 01:28Elon Musk opens up about the personal toll Tesla is taking on him
2025-06-26 00:36Kanye Unbound
2025-06-26 00:20Popular Posts
So Much Winning
2025-06-26 02:22Alexa and Cortana integration now available on Windows 10 and Echo
2025-06-26 02:05Flexible squirrel is the star of a stunt
2025-06-26 02:00A first look inside SureFly's re
2025-06-26 00:21The Same F’ing Song
2025-06-26 00:10Featured Posts
Panic in Textopolis
2025-06-26 02:09Apple Car could launch between 2023 and 2025
2025-06-26 01:46Reinventing the Wheel
2025-06-26 00:18Popular Articles
I Dream of Content-Trash
2025-06-26 02:49How to completely delete Facebook from your life
2025-06-26 01:58Man catching a breeze on a subway grate is the king of summer
2025-06-26 00:32Introducing the most awkward three
2025-06-26 00:25The Reaching-Out Industry
2025-06-26 00:11Newsletter
Subscribe to our newsletter for the latest updates.
Comments (87675)
Exciting Information Network
Laboring Academia
2025-06-26 02:46Happiness Information Network
Why surrealist art is a perfect application for augmented reality
2025-06-26 01:28Micro Video Information Network
'Game of Thrones' star says final season will be 'heartbreaking'
2025-06-26 01:27Miracle Information Network
The 10 fictional couples with the least amount of chemistry
2025-06-26 01:20Wisdom Information Network
Dunce’s App
2025-06-26 00:46