It seems I misread the OP. I thought they were talking about the threat of games catering less to men, and they clarified it the threat of people saying bad things about male gamers.DC_78 said:Again this is an incredibly middle class/upper middle class American centric view and this is from an American.
You conveniently leave out all other variables to make this lovely point which is intellectually dishonest. Games (ESPECIALLY AAA)are still primarily marketed to men because they are still the largest market share. They are the more reliable audience, with more disposable income, with known franchises so that is why men are catered to. Is that sexist? No it is economics and arguing anything else is dishonest.
Secondly who makes the argument that "games are under threat by treating women equally?" No one. The argument is usually that games are threatening/unwelcoming to women because certain folks have put forward a sex negative critic instead of a sex positive one. Which is also often done in feminist critique of pornography by the way.
As to your second point, people often do seem to see that as a threat, for some reason.
Er, no. Firstly, various other groups looking at other inequalities use it as well, not sure why it's associated with feminism so much.DC_78 said:Only if you subscribe to feminist thought. Which many people do not. You have literally just morally admonished something like 80% of the American public who do not agree with your morality.
Secondly, people outside of those groups don't tend to use it in that context at all, so I'm not seeing the problem in giving their definition.