NeoGAF

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NeoGAF
NeoGAF logo
Screenshot
Screenshot of NeoGAF's "Gaming Discussion" forum on March 15, 2018.
Screenshot of NeoGAF's "Gaming Discussion" forum on March 15, 2018.
Type of site
Internet forum
Available inEnglish
OwnerNeoGaf LLC
(100% — Tyler Malka)
Created byJim Cordeira
URLneogaf.com
CommercialYes
RegistrationOptional[α]
Launched1999; 23 years ago (1999) (as Gaming-Age Forums)
Current statusActive
Written inPHP, MySQL (powered by XenForo 2.1)

NeoGAF, formerly known as the Gaming-Age Forums, is an Internet forum primarily dedicated to the discussion of video games. Founded as an adjunct to a video game news site, on April 4, 2006, it changed its name to NeoGAF and became independently hosted and administered.

In 2017, site owner Tyler "Evilore" Malka was accused of sexual harassment. The allegations resulted in moderator resignations, mass exodus off the site and later site policy changes. Former members and moderators would later launch the new forum ResetEra.

History[]

NeoGAF began as "The Gaming-Age Forums," a forum for gaming website Gaming-Age. As Gaming-Age outgrew its hosting, IGN took over hosting of Gaming-Age's forums. After IGN ceased hosting of GAF in mid-2001, GAF moved to ezboard, and the administration of GAF became more estranged from Gaming Age.[1]

As the Gaming-Age staff became gradually more divorced from the day-to-day operation of GAF, problems with the new Gamesquad hosting cropped up. As software bugs in vBulletin 2, the version GAF was using at the time, continued to worsen, the Gamesquad hosting became increasingly more impractical, until the forums' database became corrupted, forcing a move to new hosting in order to change software and salvage what was left of the forums' database. In the spring of 2004, a fundraiser was held to move GAF to new hosting. On June 6, 2004, GAF took its newest form (known as NeoGAF to long-time posters) and moved to new hosting and new software, vBulletin 3.

On April 4, 2006, the forums were relaunched as NeoGAF, the former in-moniker, by its administrators. NeoGAF also features its own front page, an upfront admission that the forum's audience had drifted from that of its birthing news site, but yet mandated a single portal to represent the forum's members.

In an interview with VG247 in 2013, Tyler Malka claimed that he was offered $5 million to sell the website, turning down the offer.[2] One year later he stated in a forum post that the offer doubled, later saying he also turned down the deal.[3]

Sexual misconduct allegations against Malka and moderators exodus[]

On October 21, 2017, film director Ima Leupp described in a Facebook post, as part of the #MeToo phenomenon, a trip she took with NeoGAF owner Tyler "Evilore" Malka two years before. She said that while she and Malka were drinking together in a New Orleans hotel room in April 2015, she became very sick. While cleaning up in the shower, she said he approached her "fully naked" from behind without her consent.[4][5][6][7][8]

Following the sexual harassment scandal, half of the site's moderation staff resigned, and many users posted "suicide threads" wherein they demand to be banned from the forum. The website went offline soon after.[9][10] Afterwards, NeoGAF was restored, suspending the off-topic sections of the board, and announcing that politics would henceforth be a prohibited subject of discussion and that moderation would become anonymous.[11]

Industry response[]

Members of the video games industry have been known to be members of the website, such as David Jaffe and Cliff Bleszinski, Cliff has left the site.[12][13][14]

In 2007, in a thread discussing the resignation of Peter Moore from Microsoft, one user making fun of Microsoft's vice president of global marketing Jeff Bell received a personal message asking them "And your contribution to society is ... what?" The account was later found to be Jeff Bell's.[15] Malka later said he saw a shift on the forums with people in the games industry being more careful of what they post.[16]

In a 2009 thread post on NeoGAF dedicated to the game Scribblenauts, user "Feep" relayed the experience of discovering during E3 that he was able to go back in time with a time machine to collect a dinosaur in order to defeat an army of robot zombies that could not be defeated with regular weapons.[17][18][19] The story, memorialized as "Post 217", led to the games artist Edison Yan creating a desktop wallpaper image of the story, in appreciation of the positive fan response to the game, and the terms "Post Two One Seven", "Feep", and "Neogaf" were included as summonable objects in the game.[20] Scribblenauts' director Jeremiah Slaczka credited the word-of-mouth popularity of "Post 217" for part of the game's success at E3, and noted that he had contacted Feep to gain his permission to include "Feep" (appearing as a robot zombie) within the game.[21]

Describing the development struggles of 2017's Rime, Tequila Works co-founder Raúl Rubio Munárriz said reading the forum's reactions sent him into tears for two days and that if he read them early on in-development, the game would've been cancelled. "Partly because I just don't understand the cruelty, but more importantly because I could see those years over those two days, and I began to understand that maybe people can love something so much that they can hate it."[22]

Criticism[]

One of the biggest critics of NeoGAF was game designer and former Silicon Knights president Denis Dyack. In June 2008, he issued a challenge to forum users. He asked users to say whether they were for or against the then upcoming Silicon Knights game Too Human. Once the game was released, if the game received negative reception, Dyack would have "Owned by GAF" under his forum name. If positive reception, users who voted against the game would have had "Owned by Too Human."[23] Dyack would later go on the 1UP Yours podcast, explaining his challenge was an experiment to expose the lack of accountability on online forums, adding that NeoGAF would crumble if it doesn't reform itself.[24] He was later permanently banned from the site in August that same year after calling it the worst online forum.[25][26]

Circa 2017, NeoGAF was criticized for biased moderation and banning political dissidents. Tyler "Evilore" Malka made a post admitting biased moderation by at least one former member of the moderation staff. Malka stated that the ex-moderator banned hundreds of members without justification. Malka also made the declaration that discussion should be encouraged with different points of view, saying that people on the website have been "driven out, character assassinated, labeled traitor for not sounding angry enough, or for not being entirely on board with ostracizing someone else for the same reasons."[27]

In the media[]

In 2007, the website partnered up with The Get-Well Gamers Foundation to launch a donation campaign to bring video games to children in hospitals. NeoGAF raised $5,600 in cash and inventory donations over the October to December period.[28]

An exchange on the forum inspired members to start the development of Dudebro II in 2010. The game is intended to be a satirical take on the machismo found in some modern titles and will feature Jon St. John, the voice of Duke Nukem, as the lead.[29] The last update on the game's development was in 2015.[30]

During the Gamergate controversy of 2014, Slate's David Auerbach claimed NeoGAF "hosts pedophilia discussions on non-age-restricted boards and has a sexist owner."[31]

In June 2015, a Reddit sub-community devoted towards mocking NeoGAF became one of five communities shut down by the site.[32][33] Reddit argued the ban hit groups "that allow their communities to use the subreddit as a platform to harass individuals when moderators don’t take action."[34]

Vice News noted the site was one of the largest drivers of traffic to Hillary Clinton's website during the 2016 U.S. presidential election.[35]

ResetEra[]

Resetera
ResetEra logo
Screenshot
Screenshot of ResetEra's "Video Games" forum on March 23, 2021.
Screenshot of ResetEra's "Video Games" forum on March 23, 2021.
Type of site
Internet forum
Available inEnglish
OwnerResetEra LLC
URLresetera.com
CommercialYes
RegistrationOptional [α]
Users>53,000 registered users
LaunchedOctober 24, 2017; 4 years ago (October 24, 2017)
Current statusActive
Written inPHP, MySQL (powered by XenForo 2.0)

Following the sexual misconduct allegations against Malka, a number of former NeoGAF members & former moderators launched a new forum named ResetEra on October 24, 2017.[36][37] As of March 2021, ResetEra has over 53,000 registered users.[38] In October 2021, Resetera was bought by Swedish company MOBA Network.[39]

Notable members of the video games industry have signed up on the message board and interacted with the ResetEra community at one point, such as journalist Geoff Keighley, Cory Barlog, Creative Director at Santa Monica Studio, James Stevenson, the Community Director for Insomniac Games, and Thomas Mahler, director of Moon Studios, among others.[40][41][42] From November 2017 to March 2018, ResetEra also hosted Q&A sessions with Insomniac Games, Chucklefish, , DotEmu, and Tom Happ and Dan Adelman, the creators of Axiom Verge.[43]

In March 2021, the reaction of ResetEra staff and users to controversial comments by Troy Leavitt, then Hogwarts Legacy lead designer, was covered in a number of articles by video game outlets.[44][45][46][47][48][49]

See also[]

Notes[]

  1. ^ a b Registration requires admin approval and is required for creating threads and posting messages.

References[]

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  30. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2017-11-05. Retrieved 2017-10-22.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
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External links[]

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