We’re Mad as Hell: Frat Boy Culture in the Gaming World

by Sep 3, 2021

The sexist culture in the gaming industry doesn’t start and stop with Blizzard.

According to this article in Forbes, “In 2020, 41% of video game players in the United States were female. Yet the vast majority of game protagonists are male… According to the 2020 Global Gaming Gender Balance Scorecard, roughly 84% of executives at the top 14 global gaming companies were men.”

Blizzard certainly deserves the attention it’s getting, though. Just imagine your daughter, wife, or friend going to work and finding her male colleagues on the floor doing “cube crawls”. Drinking and crawling their way through the cubicles while spewing sexual banter and joking about rape.

You think “she’s got to be kidding”, right? Not at all. Not according to over 2,000 Activision Blizzard employees. Not according to a lawsuit filed by the California Department of Fair Employment and Housing.

And it didn’t stop there. Nude photos of a female employee were passed around at a company holiday party. She tragically took her own life while on a company trip with her supervisor.

 

Company culture

As long as I’ve been doing this work and hearing these types of stories, I’ll never get less angry about them.

Unfortunately, many leaders don’t have a reaction unless monetary costs are identified. Riot Games, for example, agreed to a $10 million settlement in 2019 to a class-action lawsuit around sexual harassment and gender discrimination.

Take a good, hard look at what your company stands for. Don’t wait to address the culture of your company.

Company core values should reflect the beliefs, ideas and traits shared by your employees and people held accountable to living them by engraining them in your culture. It is the organizations’ North Star and the anchor for your diversity and inclusion work.

You might be thinking, “How do I start?” and also, “That Blizzard stuff will never happen here.” I got news for you; the type of bad behavior seen at Blizzard isn’t going away any time soon. And your organization is not immune unless you consistently focus on keeping that behavior out.’

 

Culture in the Gaming World

Here’s a few ideas to get you on track.

 

Look at how the values of your employees are reflected in your workplace, if at all.

Ask them what they value, how they’d like to be treated at work, and what they need from you to feel psychologically safe. Learn from them and then do it. Check out how we can help with an employee culture survey.

Does your executive team reflect female and ethnic minorities?

If not, hire them so you can gain their perspectives and improve your products, services, and work culture.

Review your recruiting process and your sourcing strategy to gather talent from differing backgrounds and add more diverse perspectives to the organization.

    1. Be sure your job postings contain inclusive language.
    2. Create an internal posting board to provide visibility and career growth for your employees.
    3. Conduct slate interviewing to advance a pool of candidates that contain a large percentage of women and/or minorities.

Create a mentorship program as a platform for underrepresented groups.

It is to advance their career goals and offer immersive experiences for them to access strategies and tools that support their progression.

Institutionalize channels where any employee can report inappropriate behavior.

Speakfully, is what we highly recommend. It is an online platform that provides a place for anonymous grievances, but also provides analytics related to company culture.

Invest in Diversity, Equity and Inclusion.

Start by providing training to your managers and supervisors on what inclusion is and how to recognize and minimize unconscious bias. We’ve got you on this one. Check it out at this link. Also, hire a DEI consultant to conduct an assessment. They’ll look at your marketing, products, culture and more to provide you with a list of action items for improving your DEI.

Watch this series of free courses from LinkedIn Learning.

Learn the topics of unconscious bias, allyship, inclusive conversations, and more.

Hire Civility Partners.

We can help you focus on strengthening the culture of your organization and ensure everyone can thrive in a workplace that celebrates a culture of respect, inclusivity, diversity and collective wellbeing.

 

Let’s create a plan to build a positive workplace! | Invite Catherine to speak | Check out our webinar library

About Catherine Mattice

Catherine Mattice, MA, SPHR, SHRM-SCP is President of consulting and training firm, Civility Partners, and has been successfully providing programs in workplace bullying and building positive workplaces since 2007. Her clients include Fortune 500’s, the military, several universities and hospitals, government agencies, small businesses and nonprofits. She has published in a variety of trade magazines and has appeared several times on NPR, FOX, NBC, and ABC as an expert, as well as in USA Today, Inc Magazine, Huffington Post, Entrepreneur Magazine, and more. Catherine is Past-President of the Association for Talent Development (ATD), San Diego Chapter and teaches at National University. In his book foreword, Ken Blanchard called her book, BACK OFF! Your Kick-Ass Guide to Ending Bullying at Work, “the most comprehensive and valuable handbook on the topic.” She recently released a second book entitled, SEEKING CIVILITY: How Leaders, Managers and HR Can Create a Workplace Free of Bullying.

Post-Election Chaos: 3 Ways to Keep Psychological Safety Intact

According to a survey by the American Psychological Association, nearly 70% of Americans view political discourse as a significant source of stress, and workplaces are no exception. In fact, SHRM reports that political and social tensions have driven workplace...

Your CEO thinks HR is operational, not strategic?

Do these comments resonate with you?  Owners don’t understand that we’re not just paperwork. HR is a punching bag expected to resolve everyone’s mess. There’s no HR budget, no support, and a team of 2 for 300+ employees. Even after a workforce survey, leadership still...

Free Webinar: Unlock Your Managers’ Leadership Potential

Being good at your job doesn’t make you good at managing people. You know this.  You also know the outcome when an individual contributor moves to a manager role without receiving the right training – a struggling team, unclear expectations, conflict, disengaged...

5 Tools for Pitching Culture Change to Leadership

You already know that a strong culture leads to engaged employees, lower turnover, and a healthier bottom line, but convincing leadership? That’s a different story. It's exhausting pushing for changes that are dismissed as “soft skills” or shot down because they don't...

Why leadership’s ‘Hands-Off’ approach to culture is costing you more than you think

Picture this: you’re actively working to foster a positive workplace culture, but managers and leaders are adopting a 'hands-off' approach. At first, it seems harmless, even convenient—but beneath the surface, it's quietly wreaking havoc. Top talent? They're slipping...

Elections and Leadership: 3 Ways Your Reaction Can Impact Your Team

Election season tends to bring division and tension, and it’s hard to avoid. Even if you’ve reminded your team to steer clear of political conversations at work, it’s likely that the topic will still pop up here and there. The truth is, having employees with different...

You Have It All Wrong: 4 Ways Employers Can Successfully Influence Well-Being

Did you know that the World Health Organization (WHO) classified burnout as an occupational phenomenon? In other words, while leaders and HR tend to classify burnout as a personal failing, as evidenced in the way they tackle it with offerings of gym memberships and...

5 Tips You Haven’t Seen for Engaging Hybrid And Remote Workers

According to Forbes, one in five workers is working remotely and 98% of workers want to work remotely at least some of the time. Yet, despite the flexibility that hybrid and remote work offer, engagement is a major challenge. In fact, the 2023 State of Remote Work...

Measuring Onboarding Effectiveness: Key Metrics for Success

Having an employee orientation program is a great start. It usually involves getting paperwork signed, introducing new hires around the office, and providing some initial training. But are you truly onboarding your employees? Effective onboarding is more than just a...

Measuring Recruiting and Hiring Success: Key Metrics to Track

In the past, recruiting was often a "spray and pray" approach—posting job openings everywhere and hoping the right candidate would find their way to us, even faxing over their resumes. Thankfully, recruiting today is far more strategic, thanks to the internet and...