66 members of The Game Awards Future Class, a program intended to honor people «who represent the bright, bold, and inclusive future for video games,» and hundreds of others involved with the videogame industry have signed an open letter calling for a statement acknowledging the ongoing humanitarian crisis in Gaza during The Game Awards show in December.
Gaza has been under siege since mid-October, following an attack on southern Israel by Hamas militants that reportedly resulted in 1,200 deaths, mainly civilians, and more than 240 people taken hostage. In response, Israel unleashed an attack on Gaza that has thus far killed more than 15,000 people, according to Gaza health authorities, roughly 6,000 of whom were children. Alongside the military assault, Israel also cut off food, water, fuel, and communications to the enclave, deepening a humanitarian crisis that United Nations secretary-general António Guterres described as "inhuman collective suffering."
The open letter, addressed to Game Awards host Geoff Keighley, Future Class director Emily Bouchoc, «and the whole The Game Awards team,» begins by noting that members of the Future Class were not selected «as symbols of what the game industry currently is, but of what it could be: a diverse, inclusive and caring workplace. A positive force in the world that can influence billions of people… You gave us the role of ambassadors of a better future – as such, our duty towards you and all the players world-wide compels us to speak up.»
«Like many of our peers, we are appalled by the war crimes the Palestinian people are victims of, and we grieve the loss of so many civilian lives,» the letter states. «Adding to that pain, is the knowledge that our industry is playing a
Read more on pcgamer.com