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GNET Report Launch: 30 Years of Trends in Terrorist and Extremist Games

GNET Report Launch: 30 Years of Trends in Terrorist and Extremist Games
23rd October 2024 GNET Team
1st Nov 2024

GNET Report Launch: 30 Years of Trends in Terrorist and Extremist Games

In
Where: Online via Zoom
When: Friday 1 November, 16:00 GMT/ 12:00 EST
What: 30-minute presentation of report findings, followed by 30-minute moderated Q&A

The Global Network on Extremism and Technology (GNET) invites you to attend an online report launch for Emily Thompson and Galen Lamphere-Englund’s new GNET Report ’30 Years of Trends in Terrorist and Extremist Games.’

Violent extremist, terrorist, and targeted hate actors have been actively exploiting video games to propagandise, recruit and fundraise for more than 30 years. This report presents an analysis of that history using a unique dataset, the Extremist and Terrorist Games Database (ETGD), developed by the authors. It contains 155 reviewed entries of standalone games, modifications for existing games (mods) and browser-based games dating from 1982 to 2024.

The titles analysed appear across the ideological spectrum: far-right (101 titles), jihadist (24), far left (1) and other forms of extremism and targeted hate (29), including school-massacre ideation (12). They span platforms ranging from simple standalone games for Atari in the 1980s to sophisticated mods of some of today’s most popular games. The number of titles has increased year on year – in line with global conflict and extremist ideological trends, and revealing a continued push by malicious actors to exploit gaming.

Far from being a comprehensive analysis of the ETGD, we intend this preliminary launch report to form a basis for future research of the dataset and a framework for continued contributions to the ETGD from Extremism and Gaming Research Network (EGRN) members. Above all, we seek to contribute to sensible policymaking to prevent violent extremism that situates games as part of a wider contested and exploited information space, which deserves far more attention from those working towards peaceful ends.