Now do the same thing, but with POC
— ?? biden/harris ?? (@kstang) October 17, 2020
”This year's report shows that 18% of new games shown featured a defined female character as the lead. This marks a significant improvement on the 5% recorded last year.” ?https://t.co/maBDF2n32R
— Jenni Ahlapuro (@Jepu) October 16, 2020
"More Video Games Featured Women This Year. Will It Last?" ?? Check out this excellent article from @WIRED : https://t.co/fwEv0Oovms pic.twitter.com/V1uBexNHpj
— Girls Who Code (@GirlsWhoCode) October 16, 2020
Every year @femfreq dives into game announcements to see if the games industry is improving in terms of women’s representations. How was this year compared to years past? Check out our data published in @WIRED https://t.co/eB4cp30mcE
— Anita Sarkeesian (@anitasarkeesian) October 16, 2020
Another year, another statistical analysis of the games featured during the longest E3 we've ever attended. Check it out over at @WIRED! ?https://t.co/Rxt6b6Xrm3
— Feminist Frequency (@femfreq) October 16, 2020
How it started: Only about 9% of the games shown in a @WIRED study featured female characters in 2014.
— Girls Who Code (@GirlsWhoCode) October 15, 2020
How it's going: This year, that number nearly doubled to about 18%.
Definitely not enough, but let's keep this going. ? ?♀️ ? https://t.co/NoXdFubYnL