Valorant studio head Anna Donlon says Riot Games is taking new steps to address toxic behavior in the game, and delivered a pointed message to the most egregious offenders: «If you need to make truly evil statements under the guise of regular shit talk to enjoy gaming, then please play something else.»
The video message (via Kotaku) comes after several recent instances of abusive conduct were shared on social media: In one clip that recently went viral, a player was repeatedly threatened with rape. In the video, Donlon said addressing that kind of behavior is a priority for Riot, and «one of the most challenging issues» it faces, and that Riot's systems and technologies «have been making a lot of progress» in reducing toxicity.
At the same time, she acknowledged that those systems cannot catch everything: «At the end of the day, there are still some people in this world who want to take out their insecurity or their bad day or their hate or their whatever on some stranger through their computer screen.»
«Too often it takes someone experiencing the worst behaviors—something egregious, something painful, something threatening for us to better understand where the gaps in our systems and processes are,» Donlon said. «And that's exactly what we're experiencing and addressing right now.»
Riot has no interest in cracking down on «banter,» Donlon said, nor is it looking to «sanitize gaming by over-addressing these issues.» But players should not be forced to mute comms or «grow a thicker skin» in order to play online without facing abuse: «There's no room in our community for the most egregious behaviors, and we're not going to compromise on that point.»
Most Valorant players who are sanctioned for bad behavior don't do it again, according to Donlon, and those who do represent «a very small fraction of our player base.» But the current systems aren't doing enough to deter the worst offenders, so Riot is taking further steps to weed them out. Over the next 30 days, Riot's
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