How Black Girl Gamers is changing the gaming landscape for the better

(Image credit: Black Girl Gamers; Shutterstock)

Black Girl Gamers is a multi-platform age, and LGBTQIA+, inclusive online gaming community on Facebook of over 6,000 black women united in their love of gaming.

Originally a Facebook group, it now has a community of around 50,000 followers over Twitch, Twitter and Instagram

It runs a Discord group with channels that cater to sub groups within its community, and guest-hosts black female streamers on its Twitch channel. In its five-year life it has put on a number of important events, like its Gamer Girls Night In and its recent online gaming summit sponsored by Twitch.

(Image credit: Jay-Ann Lopez)

Black Girl Gamers (BGG) was created in 2015 by author and UK influencer Jay-Ann Lopez. Frustrated with the racism and misogyny she, as a black woman, experienced in gaming, she wanted to increase visibility and inclusion for women within the industry.

By the time Jay-Ann created BGG she was no stranger to creating a community for minority voices. She had already created, along with best friend Trina Charles, an “online empowerment platform” called Curlture.

A year later, Jay-Ann decided to do something similar, but in gaming.

Building the community

"When I do things it's either go hard or go home."

Jay-Ann Lopez

“I wanted the kind of same representation and comradery in gaming that was in beauty," Jay-Ann told us. "Because in gaming you would see a lot more vitriol — be it sexism, racism — than you do in beauty. I was like, well this space needs to have been made five years ago! There were smaller spaces made, but ... Like when I do things it's either go hard or go home, and they didn't — by my definition — go hard. They were quite small and understated and — not to disrespect anyone, because everyone has different circumstances in their life — I definitely feel like we should have had more of a splash in the scene.”

Jay-Ann had created her own gaming channel around this time, which she later abandoned to properly concentrate on BGG. Some of the people she met during this time helped her to build the community.

“So, it was myself and three other women who were looking after the community at the time and it just grew and grew.”

(Image credit: Black Girl Gamers)

At the time Jay-Ann was running BGG, she was running Curlture and also balancing a full time job. To top it all off, she was experiencing personal struggles which caused her mental health to take a hit.

“It was such a traumatic time for me,” a time she still finds difficult to discuss even now.

This time in Jay’s life really had a profound effect on her, and while many people would have decided to slow down and take a step back, she persevered against all odds and continued to manage the many responsibilities she had to juggle, for the sake of the many people that rely on both communities. 

“So during this time I'm still doing stuff with BGG. BGG and Curlture become my outlet. I won an award sponsored by Facebook and I pitched Gamer Girls’ Night In to them. So there has been a lot. And balancing the two platforms.”

Despite all of this, BGG was still making major strides in the community and achieving its goal of increasing visibility for black women gamers.

Spreading the word

“We did our first panel — that was Pax East in 2017 in Boston — and then our first panel in the UK in 2019 at the V&A Museum. So we just started building up more and more on our events,” Jay-Ann explains.

After the V&A panel, which was on the future of gaming and gaming culture, BGG hosted its first ever UK event, Pass The Pad.  Partnered with Belong Gaming Arenas, its aim was to deliver a night of gaming, panels, tournaments and Super Smash Bros, Overwatch and Anthem gaming areas.

(Image credit: Black Girl Gamers)

BGG was then featured on a number of mainstream news outlets including, Sky News, BBC News, ITV News and i-D Magazine, and appeared at various tech and gaming conferences and panels in the UK and US.

Jay-Ann was UK video games brand MCV’s Women in Games award recipient for Campaigner of the Year in 2019. The award was sponsored by Facebook, and it led to her pitching Gamer Girls Night In (GGNI) to the company.

GGNI would end up being the first gaming event of its kind in the UK. It was free, and was co-produced by Jay-Ann and Stephanie Ijoma, founder of Nnesaga, a gaming and entertainment platform in the UK that focuses on championing diversity and inclusion.

It comprised of a panel of talks made up of diverse women from all areas of the industry, as well as cosplayers. There were nail technicians, tournaments, PlayStation arcade booths, food, a cocktail bar and much more.

"All the gaming events are made from this stupid template that was made from a male perspective...I'm tired of the same."

“There are women — not all women — but there are women who like to get their nails done, and have a little drink and a little turn-up. Why can't we merge those things? All the gaming events are made from this stupid template that was made from a male perspective. I can't wait to bring Gamer Girls Night In back to life, because it just needs to happen. I'm tired of the same — the blues and neon greens, and EDM.”

BGG’s philanthropic endeavors certainly haven’t gone unnoticed either. They have raised thousands through charity streams for St Jude’s Children’s Research Hospital, Black Girls Code and more recently for various black organizations to support the Black Lives Matter movement.

(Image credit: Black Girl Gamers)

Why Black Gamer Girls is necessary

So, why is an organization like Black Girl Gamers necessary? Let’s take a look at the recent announcement of the Black Girl Gamers online gaming summit sponsored by Twitch.

While the announcement was generally met with praise and excitement, there was some push back from men who felt it was unnecessary to have a group that specifically targeted black women, as they believed it to be exclusionary. Some considered it “racist” or asking for “special treatment”.

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It’s hard to understand why someone who thinks something doesn’t matter takes the time to complain about it. 

Thankfully, there were male gamers who were able understand the need for such a space and took no offense whatsoever:

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In a 2018 article on Engadget, journalist Jessica Conditt wrote about Black Girl Gamers and some of the reasons why the community was necessary. 

The comments alone were testament to the type of ignorance black female gamers are expected to combat and endure in order to just game in peace.

Offensive language aside, the overarching criticism from Black Girl Gamers naysayers is why it is necessary and why get special treatment?

Special treatment is not what is being asked. BGG simply asks for acknowledgement of its existence and that of the women that form its community.

Now, the next question that probably comes to mind for some is, “all women experience toxicity within the community. What makes black women so special?”

The existence or need for black female visibility within gaming does not mean white female visibility is not important. But there are things that make the black female experience a little more complicated.

(Image credit: Black Girl Gamers)

The black female experience

'Misogynoir' is a term coined by queer black feminist Moya Bailey to describe prejudice and hatred targeted at black women. This is the daily experience of many black female gamers, leading some to abandon games they love and disguise their gender and avoid discussions of race to avoid targeted abuse.

In an interview with BBC London South East, Jay-Ann shared some of the abuse she received while playing games as a black woman. Depressingly, it's quite easy to guess the sort of disgusting abuse she's had to face.

BGG has a Twitch Stream Team which was created to give a bigger platform to black female streamers that are often overlooked by Twitch and other organizations. It also provides a little more security for streamers, but even then they are subject to racist Twitch trolls.

It was recently discovered that a Steam group posing as BGG was set up with the tagline BGGWPG, with the WPG standing for “White Power Group”. It was filled with racist and misogynistic comments.

Changing the game

The gaming industry has been, to put it bluntly, white-male-dominated for quite some time, and, while there’s nothing wrong with that, it does mean that the industry can all-too-often neglect minorities.

If there wasn’t so much casual homophobia in gaming, individuals such as Matt Hardwick would have never needed to create London Gaymers, a community for LGBTQ+ people.

Streaming is difficult for women, never mind black women. Female streamers are held to different standards than their male counterparts. They are criticized for the clothes they wear on stream, and often accused of using their “assets” as a means to garner more followers. 

People say they can’t play certain games, and if they can, they’re told they can't play them well. They have to endure common insults like “get back to the kitchen” and “make me a sandwich”.

In 2019 Statista, a leading provider of consumer and market data, ran a survey on gaming stats based on gender in the U.S. from 2006 through 2019.

The data collected found that in 2019, women made up over 48% of all gamers in the US; a gradual rise of almost 10% over the past thirteen years.

However, some felt those figures meant very little as it didn’t account for what types of games and which platforms women were playing on.

While looking through data companies’ reports on gaming stats, we were surprised to find no stats on gamers and race, which, to some, may not be necessary. But how could it not, seeing as these things are important enough to garner such a toxic culture of racism?

“A lot of companies have ignored BGG for a while up until recently,” reveals Jay-Ann. “Twitch hasn't 100% but they haven't been the best either, and I've told them this.”

BGG has always been open to collaboration with sponsors and companies. After all, its biggest goal is to push for more inclusivity. Sola Asali, Arcoms Activation Manager for EA, and Twitch’s Community and Creator Marketing lead Eren Aureylian — who Jay describes as a “super advocate” – and a couple others have helped to push this aim forward, through its support of BGG.

“A couple other companies have reached out, so we're gonna see what we're gonna do with stuff like that...I'm definitely watching people," she laughs. “It's been interesting. I won't say it's been smooth sailing 'cause it hasn't.”

Perhaps what’s most inspiring about Black Girl Gamers, and Jay-Ann in particular, is how she is working to ensure that the struggles she’s faced within the gaming community will not be repeated for other black women. Part of that mission is working with companies within the gaming industry to help welcome black women.

"I won't say it's been smooth sailing 'cause it hasn't."

“The thing that they can do is have mentorship," suggests Jay-Ann. "Have fast tracks for black women into their company. Show them how to nurture creatives, how to help them get sponsorship and put them in contact with brands. They have ideas but it's never on that kind of level as far as I'm aware - they kind of look for us to consult them which I'm happy to do.”

In the end, gamers are extremely diverse, and that’s one of the many strengths of our rich community, so asking to see some of that diversity reflected in the industry is surely not asking for too much, and would serve to enrich the community we know and love so dearly.

TechRadar’s PC Gaming Week 2020 is celebrating the most powerful gaming platform on Earth with articles, interviews and essential buying guides that showcase how diverse, imaginative, and remarkable PC games – and gamers – can be. Visit our PC Gaming Week 2020 page to see all our coverage in one place. 

Rosario Blue

Rosario Blue is a writer, playwright, and freelance journalist. 

She is a Global Goodwill Ambassador for Postcards for Peace.