I got time.
>The guy who failed at the tutorial to cup-head aka a nu-male glorified blog writer for GamesBeat writes his memoirs where he admits he doesn't even write more than a dozen game reviews a year but does post 29 stories a week.
>Says he put in over 10K hours into videogames and asks himself if he is a gamer.
>Goes into Gamegate and says it was focused on harassing women and that he was a good little male ally and didn't get any flak unlike all the female journos and devs.
The reason he didn't get flak is because he didn't make a "gamers are dead" article around that time.
>Editors would ask me, in the early days of game journalism, if I had gone native by being too friendly to the companies I was covering.
>Gamers now, after Gamergate, started asking the same questions, about whether game journalists are too friendly to game companies.
Imagine that.
He then oes off on a tangent about the dot com bubble.
>Rails on PewDiePie and recognizes he commands more corporate attention than he (a games journalist) does and says that "it is an issue."
Goes off on a small tangent about the AI future removing the concept of a job for some reason.
>Goes into his cuphead video a lot and talks about how sad all the KYS comments made him feel.
>"It made me think about—okay, we need to be kinder to people"
It is almost like Leigh Alexander and shitbags like her shouldn't post hit pieces toward the group of consumers they explicitly write for.
closes it with:
>Do you want to make fun of people who aren't skullful?
>Is it okay to drive newbies and the unskilled away from gaming?
Yes, otherwise the bar gets lowered for a massmarket of casuals dipshits who want games to be movies leading to many games losing their unique rewarding quality of challenge.
git gud fgt