Pride Month and the LGBT Conquest of Gaming
Sometimes conservatives talk about what the stakes are if LGBT obsessed behavior wins out, like we’re still actually fighting on equal ground. We’re not.
It’s June now, which means it’s Pride Month.
Welcome to hell.
That’s only slightly a joke, because Pride Month means every single corporation on the planet needs to bow down to our new rainbow overlords and pretend like the ground they walk on is holy.
Companies like Target, Kohls, and Bud Light are gung-ho on Pride and they want us to know about it!
Unfortunately, the world of gaming is not immune to that full bore rush into Pride as gamers log into their favorite games only to get hit by a stream of rainbow vomit.
Enter Overwatch 2.
Blizzard, the company responsible for Overwatch 2 and gaming classics like World of Warcraft and Diablo, has decided to pledge its allegiance to the LGBT movement.
In a statement released late last month, Blizzard announced that every player that logs on to play Overwatch 2 will get a bunch of nametags and player icons featuring gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender, and genderfluid flags.
That’s really weird by itself. Why do players need to mark their profiles with their sexuality? Does it make your gaming experience that much better to force the rest of the world to acknowledge your gayness?
In fact, you’d almost think players would want to hide their sexuality since according to leftists,
gaming is a haven for far-right bigots who hate all things LGBT.
The same type of person cheering this obsessive need to identify one’s sexuality in game keep asking why conservatives harp on this issue.
Maybe it’s because on top of the flags, players will get in-game items featuring a bunch of characters Blizzard made LGBT meaning, in total, players will receive a total of 40 cosmetics they can blast on their profiles to let everyone know just how LGBT they are.
Worse, Overwatch 2 isn’t the only game planning to push Pride propaganda.
League of Legends, one of the most popular games on the planet in terms of streaming, also plans to assault the eyes of players the world over with noxious Pride content including emojis, character skins, and in-game items.
What does all this accomplish? Does this really make anyone’s lives better? Does waving a rainbow flag in someone’s face really do anything?
Waving signs featuring massive penises or talking about how much you like having sex with other men seems like a recipe for getting people to dislike you.
What Blizzard is doing isn’t nearly as bad as what you’d see at your average Pride parade, but it serves as a nice illustration of what Pride really is.
It’s the march of a victorious conquering army.
Much as the left would like to convince us that the alphabet people are an oppressed minority, they won.
Sorry for the shock, but LGBT ideology is now mainstream ideology.
There is not a company on Earth today that doesn’t kiss the rainbow ring, and God forbid you cross one of them, you’re out on your butt faster than you can say Richard Simmons.
Like having a job? Friends? Better talk about how brave Lia Thomas is for dominating women in the swimming pool.
This of course bleeds into gaming too as the Overwatch 2 and League of Legends pridepalooza shows.
Sometimes conservatives, myself included, talk about what the stakes are if this LGBT obsessed behavior wins out, like we’re still actually fighting on equal ground.
Well, we’re not. Our games don’t cater to us anymore. We lost.
Pride is the perfect way to describe these festivities because they're proud they won and they’re rubbing it in our faces. It’s up to us to make that victory as short-lived as possible.
This Pride Month, I say game on.
We’re gonna win this one.