The Herald (South Africa)

Female Indian gamers battle through abuse

Eplaying field far from fair, despite all the gains made, experts say

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When Saloni Singh was little, she would beg then brawl with her brother for a turn on his video games. Her mother would broker peace by handing Singh a story book.

“It’s our Indian culture; girls don’t play games,” Singh said.

Fast forward to adulthood and Singh now works remotely as a software engineer for a big US university, adding an extra 50%-60% to her already high earnings playing video games by night.

Singh’s success comes as India’s $1.5bn (R28.5bn) gaming industry grows rapidly and opens up — slowly — to a generation of women and girls who play, earn and even date via video games.

But female players say they face a barrage of abuse when they talk to fellow gamers online, with rape threats a daily hazard.

Add to that abuse the vastly lower prizes offered in female tournament­s, and gamers and industry experts say the eplaying field is far from fair, despite all the gains made.

“Women are carving out a space for themselves in an industry that has traditiona­lly been dominated by men,” Salone Sehgal, founding general partner of Lumikai, a gaming-focused venture capital fund, said.

According to a recent report released by Lumikai, 43% of India’s 507-million gamers are female the first year they have counted players by gender.

With 27.3% of India’s 1.4billion population aged between 15 and 29, its gaming population is growing 12% a year.

Cheap access to smartphone­s and the internet has brought mobile games to India’s masses and now their appetite is huge.

Indians consumed more mobile games last year than players in any other country, notching up a combined 15billion downloads.

That has unlocked new revenue opportunit­ies for female gamers, particular­ly in the competitiv­e esports world, experts say.

Esports, which gained huge popularity during Covid-19 lockdown, refers to competitiv­e gaming, in which players train, win sponsorshi­p and play in global tournament­s.

The percentage of female players in competitiv­e esports has risen from 12% in 2020 to 22% last year, according to the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry.

After decades of campaignin­g for recognitio­n as a mainstream sport, India’s gaming industry last year broke away from other online games such as poker, which is banned in some states that want to crack down on gambling.

Competitiv­e gamers chase the same sort of fame and fortune enjoyed by cricket and tennis stars through internatio­nal tournament­s and lucrative brand sponsorshi­ps.

But the gains have largely gone to male players.

According to the Esports Federation of India, women can win about $1,200 (R22,800) at a tournament, whereas open tournament­s, which are dominated by male teams, offer prizes 100 times bigger.

Yet there are gains to be won beyond the cash, Sehgal said, even as women top up prize money with streaming fees and brand sponsorshi­ps.

“Their increased visibility in the tech industry can help break down gender stereotype­s and encourage more women to pursue careers in tech-related fields,” she said.

With more games featuring female protagonis­ts, and plots that resonate strongly with women, she said the gaming industry is changing to include and encourage women players.

Khushveen Kaur is a 21year-old esports athlete who plays for GodLike, a leading pro team. She started playing video games when she was six, and became a pro gamer at 17.

When Kaur first started playing competitiv­ely, boys picked on her.

But as she got better, her peers took note.

Their appreciati­on and camaraderi­e helped her overcome depression.

“I became more confident,” she said.

And as she changed, so did her industry.

“People started organising girls-only or women-only tournament­s to push women forward, to create a safe space,” Kaur, whose sole income is gaming, said.

“Three of four years ago, girls never got any opportunit­ies. But I earn enough to live a good life.”

But India’s female gaming boom has come at a cost.

When Singh turns on her microphone to say “hello”, she is pelted with abuse.

Rape threats and sexist taunts echo down her headphones as she parachutes to remote islands to slay enemies.

“It’s horrible the kinds of things men say. The worst things a girl can hear,” Singh, whose online moniker is PlayLikeIn­cognito, said.

The level of online vitriol is high.

A 2023 survey by community social media platform Local Circles found that eight in 10 urban Indian women use the internet and 86% of them expressed concerns about being trolled, harassed, abused or subjected to cybercrime­s.

In 2021, Singh was asked to lead an all-girl team in an online tournament.

Instead of celebratin­g the tournament’s first all-girl team, the people streaming the tournament called them “free kills” — or easy targets, she said. The female players were also derided as a “reservatio­n ”—

India’s term for a quota to bolster marginalis­ed groups.

“My DMs [direct messages] filled up with hate,” she said. “All these keyboard warriors … I just didn’t want to play.” Lokesh Suji, director of the Esports Federation of India, admitted there was work still to be done.

He said the industry tried to stamp out abuse and he would like to see women grow as rich as the top men in gaming.

But, ultimately, Suji said: “It’s our culture — we don’t really encourage girls to play. ”—

 ?? Picture: 123RF/ DEAN DROBOT ?? SLOW PROGRESS: India’s gaming industry is growing rapidly and opening up slowly to a generation of women and girls who play, earn and even date via video games
Picture: 123RF/ DEAN DROBOT SLOW PROGRESS: India’s gaming industry is growing rapidly and opening up slowly to a generation of women and girls who play, earn and even date via video games

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