The Culture Wars Churn On with Fake Outrage Over Battlefield V
Battlefield's Latest Front: These Absurd, Never-Ending Culture Wars

Here’s the first trailer for Battlefield V. It looks like pretty much every World War II-based shooter that’s come before, with a team of soldiers fighting through an action movie set piece version of war. It’s part cartoon, part Saving Private Ryan homage, and entirely fictional. It’s also set off another battle in the ridiculous culture wars that have taken over almost every aspect of American life these last few years. If you can’t get enough of fake outrage and bad faith arguments from people motivated by fear, selfishness and a desire to divide America even more than it already is, here’s a new thing to get angry over.
That’s right: there’s a woman in this trailer! A woman in this make-believe war game that has more in common with whatever you dreamt last night than any actual war throughout history. Oh, and also a black man. That’s riled up the coterie of disingenuous self-styled provocateurs that have channeled their bigotry into feigned offense over any media that dares to have anything other than a white man as its lead. I’m reluctant to give any of those frauds attention, but if you want to know what I’m talking about, just head over to Twitter and search the #NotMyBattlefield hashtag. Or check out any of the familiar websites and message boards where these kinds of people assemble—it’s their big topic of the day, and will probably remain so until they have something else to vent their fake grievances over.
Their argument goes that DICE is catering to “SJWs” and “non-gamers” and disrespecting history by putting a woman and a black man on a World War II battlefield. Apparently it’s a blatant act of aggression against “true gamers” to have even one woman or person of color pop up amid the swarm of white dudes that includes every other person you see in this ad. It has nothing to do with racism or sexism, they say—they’re angry because it’s not historically accurate. They’re angry, they claim, because this is blatant tokenism and an attempt to cater to the Tumblr-posting identity politics crowd—an audience that doesn’t even play games, their argument goes. They’re angry because they claim to believe that the mere presence of anybody who isn’t a white man is an inherently political act, and they want their videogames about massive multi-national conflict to be free of politics, goddammit.