People who happen to enjoy video games are fine. It's the capital G Gamers who make it their entire identity who are almost invariably chuds
"Can't shake the Devil's hand then say you're only kidding."
-- They Might Be Giants, "Your Racist Friend" (1993)
You didn't notice the gigantic swastika on the cover, complete with the totally cool Tigers with their long, hard penises prominently visible?
Can you imagine purchasing a product with a swastika on it? Or, check that, a store agreeing to stock it on their shelves? And people wonder why gamers are such chuds.
Oh God, that game. Yeah it had swastikas all over the place. Portraits of Hitler. If you download the modern version all that shit has been removed. The reason is because gamers saw that and thought it was awesome. 20 years later and they showed their true faces.
At the time it must have seemed harmless.
At the time the dangers of naziism were well-known. People were walking around with tattoos on their arms. Gamers just loved it and couldn't get enough of it. I mean, come on - "Panzer General"? The game where you conquer Europe for Hitler? It was a mega-hit.
If you went back in time to the days of the Roman Empire, and you asked some dudes if they were gay or straight, they probably wouldn't really understand the question. Our concepts of sexuality are just radically different from what was held by other cultures in other times.
And likewise, if you went back even to the late 90s and asked people about "gamer culture", they'd probably be pretty confused. The idea of people who play video games sharing in some kind of "culture" wouldn't make sense (I would know, I was there). Other than maybe some concept of people who play a lot of video games being a bit nerdy, there was no such thing as a "gamer culture". I mean, only families that had money for a console could really have "gamers", so maybe there was some skewing to kids who were better off materially. And there were very few adults or girls who played video games. But again, hard to call this a "culture".
Gaming only emerged as a "culture" with the advent of well developed online multiplayer games and online forums for discussing games.
wasn't the "game culture" originally like "arcade culture"? Haven't there always been competitive arcade game players?