Should Games Have Social Commentary?

“Make America Nazi Free Again” is controversial to say in 2017. This is a sad bellwether of where we’re at, generally. But the fact that Bethesda has been reassuring fans that the political appearance of Wolfenstein II is all coincidence begs the question: Should games have social commentary? What role do games play in culture generally?

John Carmack, the lead programmer at Id Software on legendary games such as Doom, Wolfenstein 3D and Commander Keen once commented, “Story in a game is like a story in a porn movie. It’s expected to be there, but it’s not that important.” This might have been true at the time, but the role of story, tone and generally the impact of games on the societies in which they exist have evolved, whether the Wolfenstein franchise wanted that to happen or not.

Junk food tastes good. But if all you eat every day is double bacon burgers and French fries, you’re going to ruin your body. And one day you’re going to have that massive heart attack.

We are having the cultural equivalent of a massive heart attack. Online gaming culture is hugely toxic, with Pewdie Pie’s fiasco revealing the tip of that ugly iceberg. Beyond the world of gaming, we have flag-waving, Swastika-wearing Nazis marching through American streets. Half the country lives in poverty, several dozen cities have poison for drinking water, and our infrastructure is collapsing.

Standing Up Is Risky, But Vital

I recently released a dystopian point-and-click adventure game called Neofeud that deals directly with racism, classism, and skyrocketing inequality through the lens of science fiction. It was designed to be a compelling, engaging, 15+ hour experience on its own. But as a person of color who grew up in a ghetto, then worked as a teacher/social worker with homeless children and immigrants for years, I definitely had a message to communicate: cyberpunk dystopia is already here, it’s just society is good at hiding the dystopic parts. The degree and breadth of that dystopia will spread, if nothing is done.

Reactions have varied from, “Has something to tell and does this in a brilliant way, without hitting you in the face with his message,” to “Different and cerebral.” And of course there were the folks who didn’t like Neofeud, because it was “too political” for them. As a professional game developer who relies on revenue from my customers to pay bills, this is a risk I had to consider. “What if a lot of people get upset because of the political aspects of the game, and cause it to fail?” But I’d rather be criticized for “saying too much” than not saying anything.

Question Everything

Deus Ex, often lauded as one of the greatest games of all time, was a game that took huge risks. It not only revolutionized gaming by introducing the FPS/RPG hybrid, but was also one of the first titles to seriously explore a plethora of political and deeply relevant topics at the time. It examined the nature of terrorism, nationalist blowback in the context of neoliberal globalization (sound familiar?), the coming trans-human age, and the implications of mass-surveillance. Above all, Deus Ex emphasized the need to ‘question everything’, especially information sources — something increasingly relevant in our milieu of ‘fake news’ of all sorts. Today, games like Fortnite are suggesting that an inclusive and positive online gaming experience not filled with slurs and hate is indeed possible.

Similarly, I applaud Bethesda for doubling down on their anti-Nazi stance and marketing campaign, even if it is just marketing. Because taking a political stance is always a risk, but the only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good people to do nothing. And I believe that goes for developers and platforms as well.

Ultimately, I think that we all should double down on taking stands on things we believe to be right — in our games, and society at large — while we still have a (relativity) free society in which to do so.

The following two tabs change content below.
Christian Kealoha Miller is a native Hawaiian game developer and founder of the one-person indie studio, Silver Spook Games. Christian also served for years as a STEM teacher and social worker for the underserved youth of Honolulu’s inner city. Working with low-income, minority, and immigrant children, Christian taught game design and Lego robotics in an effort to keep kids out of gangs, off of drugs, and on a path towards better opportunities. A writer, programmer, artist, and musician, he now lives on the Big Island of Hawaii, with his nerdy goth Canadian wife, and two kids. His favorite game of all time? Deus Ex (the first).

Latest posts by Christian Kealoha Miller (see all)


Comments

5 responses to “Should Games Have Social Commentary?”

  1. Only tangentially related to the articles : what do you make of arguments about Deus Ex (like this one : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UN1GJLBM8Wc) that says that this game just couldn’t be made today, what with its “every conspiracy theory is true, ain’t that fun” premise?

    1. I think that the video kind of oversimplifies what Deus Ex actually accomplished. I don’t think the specific conspiracies in Deus Ex were really the crux of the game, but rather, the byzantine mess of complexity and nuances that make up advanced human civilization itself. It was an examination of the nature of power, and all the other things I mentioned in the original article. A game that accomplishes this, and the level of choice and emergent gameplay (that is as-yet unmatched) is certainly something that could be made today.

    2. I think that the video kind of oversimplifies what Deus Ex accomplished. I don’t think that conspiracies were really the crux of the game, but rather the examination of the byzantine mess of complexity and nuance that is advanced human civilization. A game with that, and the degree of choice and emergent gameplay (as yet unmatched) is certainly possible today.

  2. Games should only have social commentary if they are able to present intelligent methodology of presenting shades of grey and not just black and white opaque arguments. Every social issue has people who see things differently and if all arguments for each side are not presented, at least in some fashion, even if a side is taken, then the commentary will ring false and alienate a large group of people.

    1. I agree that games (and media generally) should strive for nuance and try not to do caricatures of one side of an issue.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *