GaymerX
GaymerX | |
---|---|
Status | Active |
Venue | Hotel Kabuki (GX1) InterContinental Hotel SF (GX2) San Jose Convention Center (GX3) Santa Clara Convention Center (GX4) |
Location(s) | San Francisco, CA |
Country | United States |
Inaugurated | GaymerX - August 2013 |
Website | gaymerx |
GaymerX, or GX is a fan-facing, LGBT-oriented gaming and geek culture, or gaymer, convention, with panels primarily focused on LGBT issues and debates in the gaming industry, founded by Matt Conn.
Origin of GaymerX
GaymerX was founded by Matt Conn, a "twenty-seven-year-old gay man and lifelong gamer" who felt larger gaming conventions like E3 were unwelcoming places for LGBT gamers.[1] The first instance of GaymerX was financed through a crowdfunding campaign on Kickstarter,[2] and occurred on August 3–4, 2013 in San Francisco, CA.[3] Organizers have said the event is about uniting gay gamers, not creating a division among gamers,[4] as they want to create a "safe place" for LGBT gamers.[5]
The planned convention began with significant news coverage of its initial Kickstarter launch, but the event achieved more widespread attention after the anti-gay Westboro Baptist Church, known widely as a hate group that pickets espousing homophobic statements, announced that they would protest the convention,[6][7]
GaymerX began with a Kickstarter project launched on August 1, 2012, which was covered by sites such as Examiner and GamePolitics.com.[8] The convention raised over $14,000 in its first two days,[4] exceeded its goal of $25,000 as early as August 6,[9][10] and ended with over $90,000.[10] Throughout the fundraising campaign, organizers added new support levels, in addition to existing support levels that include admission to the event and voice acting from Ellen McLain.[11] At a session during the convention, McLain took part as assistant to a marriage proposal to help an attendee propose to his boyfriend by voicing a version of the song Still Alive with reworked lyrics.
GaymerX2
GaymerX2 was held at the InterContinental Hotel between July 11–13, 2014 in downtown San Francisco. It featured Darren Young, the first openly gay wrestler in the WWE,[12] who revealed that he would be a playable character in the upcoming WWE 2K15.[13]
GXDev: Everyone Creates
GXDev: Everyone Creates, is a game jam and hackathon that first happened on January 9–11, 2015 and featured over 40 developers who produced over 10 games featuring queer content and themes,[14] including one about "dating butts",[15] and one about polyamory.[16]
Award | Game Name |
---|---|
Judge's Choice | Patchwork |
Crowd Choice | Fatal[e] |
Diplomacy Award | Here’s Your Fuckin’ Papers |
#suchridiculous | Cheek 2 Cheek |
The Whole Picture (Most Complete) | Cactus Seeking Hug |
Best Feminism | Fatal[e] |
LSD Award | Cosmic Endeerment |
Tobii EyeX Award | Cosmic Endeerment |
Firebase Award | We Are Here |
Volume Award | Consensual Chaos |
Strangest Game | Patchwork |
Prismatic Award for Diversity | We Are Here |
Best Message | Shiny Things |
GX3: Everyone Games
GX3: Everyone Games was announced for December 11–13, 2015 in downtown San Jose at the San Jose Convention Center featuring Jennifer Hale,[17] Zach Weiner, Anita Sarkeesian, Rob Jagnow, Jamin Warren and Natasha Allegri.[18] GaymerX announced in April 2015 that it was in the process of adopting 501c3 non-profit status."GaymerX goes 501c3!". Retrieved 2015-04-16.
Event history
Name | Dates | Venue | Location | Atten. | Guests of Honor | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
GaymerX | August 3–4, 2013[19] | Hotel Kabuki & Hotel Tomo | San Francisco, California | 1,400 | Ellen McLain, Zach Weiner, Matthew Michael Brown, Anna Anthropy, John Patrick Lowrie, Pandora Boxx | |
GaymerX2 | July 11–13, 2014 | InterContinental Hotel | San Francisco, California | 1,900 | David Gaider, Mattie Brice, Alexis Ohanian, Gordon Bellamy, Darren Young,[20] Zach Weiner, 2 Mello, Colleen Macklin, Jaime Woo | |
GXDev: Everyone Creates | Jan 9-11, 2015 | PubNub | San Francisco, California | 60 | Johnnemann Nordhagen, Anna Kipnis, Kortney Ziegler, Matt Conn | |
GX3: Everyone Games | December 11–13, 2015 | San Jose Convention Center | San Jose, California | 2,429 | Jennifer Hale,[17] Zach Weiner, Anita Sarkeesian, Rob Jagnow, Jamin Warren, Natasha Allegri, Trixie Mattel[18] | |
GaymerX • Year Four | September 30 - October 2, 2016 | Santa Clara Convention Center | Santa Clara, California | TBD | TBD |
References
- ^ Malcolm Thorndike Nicholson, WE’RE HERE, WE’RE QUEER AND WE LOVE THE LEGEND OF ZELDA
- ^ "GaymerX on Kickstarter". Kickstarter.
- ^ "GaymerCon for LGBT gamers". BoingBoing.
- ^ a b "GaymerCon is about uniting gay gamers, not separation". VentureBeat.
- ^ "GaymerCon wants to provide a "safe place" for LGBTQ gamers". ArsTechnica.
- ^ Nate Cook. "Gay Gaming Con To Be Protested By Westboro". Upcoming Cons.
- ^ Nicholas Tan. "GaymerX: Best Weekend Evar". gamerevolution.com. Retrieved 1 September 2013.
- ^ "GaymerCon Raises over $14,000 in Two Days". GamePolitics.
- ^ "LGBT convention GaymerCon secures Kickstarter funding". ShackNews.
- ^ a b "GaymerCon: Everybody Games". Kickstarter.
- ^ Lana Polansky. "Ellen McLain Summons GLaDOS to Voice Support for GaymerCon". GameRanx.
- ^ Travis Waldron. "WWE's Darren Young Comes Out As First Openly Gay Professional Wrestler". ThinkProgress.
- ^ Hayner, Chris (July 11, 2014). "WWE's Darren Young reveals his 'WWE 2K15' character: Pic". Zap2It.
- ^ "GXdev". Retrieved 2015-01-19.
- ^ Riendeau, Danielle (January 16, 2015). "Inspired by the best character in Bob's Burgers, here's a game about butts". Polygon. Retrieved January 16, 2015.
- ^ "A game about gardening, cute deer and dating multiple people". Retrieved 2015-01-16.
- ^ a b "Gamer idol Jennifer Hale to prove Everyone Games at GX3". CNET.
- ^ a b "Bosses of Honor|GX3: Everyone Games". Retrieved 2014-12-23.
- ^ "GaymerCon 2013". Upcoming Cons.
- ^ "Openly Gay WWE Superstar Darren Young Joins GaymerX2". Upcoming Cons.
External links
- 2013 establishments in California
- Annual events in California
- BioWare
- Gaming conventions
- Kickstarter projects
- LGBT and video games
- LGBT culture in San Francisco, California
- LGBT events in the United States
- Recurring events established in 2013
- San Francisco Bay Area conventions
- Video gaming in the United States