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  2. Afrogameuses - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Afrogameuses

    Afrogameuses is an international community, created in 2020, composed mainly of female gamers and streamers, both amateur and professional.This collective campaigns for a better representation and visibility of minorities in the world of video games and streaming in France, while focusing on Afro-descendant women, in order to promote diversity and inclusiveness in these environments.

  3. PMS Clan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PMS_Clan

    PMS Clan (previously short for Psychotic Man Slayerz, now short for Pandora's Mighty Soldiers) [1] is an all-female multi-platform online gaming group. [2] It was founded in 2002 to provide a competitive, fun and positive environment for female gamers, and is one of the largest all-female gaming groups in the world.

  4. Black Girl Gamers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Girl_Gamers

    Black Girl Gamers was founded by Jay-Ann Lopez, a British author and blogger, in 2015. [2] Lopez had enjoyed playing video games since she was young, but struggled to find other black women who were interested in gaming, and faced sexist and racist comments playing video games online.

  5. Women and video games - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women_and_video_games

    A content analysis report of 571 games released between 1983 and 2014 with playable female characters touches on one of the possible reasons behind a lack of women in certain video game genres; women may choose to avoid certain genres depicting female characters in a negative light, such as oversexualization, in order not to become part of a ...

  6. Loserfruit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loserfruit

    Kathleen Veronica Belsten (born 22 February 1993), better known by her online aliases Loserfruit, Fruity, and Lufu, is an Australian Twitch live streamer, YouTuber, professional gamer, and internet personality. [5] She has had the second-most followed channel on Twitch among female gamers, behind Pokimane. [6]

  7. Frag Dolls - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frag_Dolls

    The team promoted Ubisoft games during interviews and events. Katscratch, Valkyrie, and Rhoulette spoke at the Women's Gaming Conference in Austin, Texas (October 2005) about their role as Frag Dolls, and how they are attempting to reshape the image of female gamers and raise industry awareness of the female market.

  8. In hidden Discord communities, adults are abusing and ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/child-predators-using-discord...

    Discord launched in 2015 and quickly emerged as a hub for online gamers, growing through the pandemic to become a destination for communities devoted to topics as varied as crypto trading, YouTube ...

  9. Video game culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Video_game_culture

    Gamers can often develop sub-communities in-game clans and may use third party VOIP programs to communicate while playing games such as Skype, Ventrillo, TeamSpeak or Discord. These video game communities may have nothing in common, or instead be designed for dedicated, skilled players, or even clans made for those with shared commonalities ...