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News, Reviews & Commentary on Gay and Bisexual Men in Entertainment and the Media

Lyle Masaki

by Lyle Masaki

Gay-inclusive "Game of Life" has homophobes' knickers in a twist

As a kid, one of my favorite games was The Game of Life — between filling my little car with blue and pink pegs, driving it over plastic bridges or mountains and, most importantly, spinning that colorful wheel (which made feel like a The Price is Right contestant) it had plenty to keep my young mind occupied.

As an adult, I've tried out various attempts to recreate the board games of my youth as computer games and it turns out that latest version of The Game of Life is quietly gay-inclusive.

The game gives you the ability to choose your character out of ten (five male and five female) options. When the time comes for you to get married, there are no limits upon who your spouse can be. (I'm not sure what I think about being able to marry someone who looks exactly like you.)

Unsurprisingly, that has the Helen Lovejoys of the world sounding the alarm.

There are no hints of sexuality in this Game of Life. You get married and when you land on a space that gets you more children, a baby magically drops into the car. Same-sex couples and opposite-sex couples are treated exactly the same way, but that has drawn the ire of the anti-gay World Net Daily, who are trumpeting the story of a woman whose 6 year-old daughter played the game as a female character who married another woman and raised four children.

According to WND, the mother posted a review of the game on the Shockwave game site complaining that she found the game inappropriate for children (because acknowledging the existence of gay people requires an early discussion about sexuality that you don't have to face when your child, say, asks were babies come from). However, since a site administrator deemed her comments as inappropriate, she decided that the site is "pushing the homosexual agenda".

A WND editor also tried to post a negative comment that had the word "homosexual" censored with asterisks. However, checking out the current reviews, there are three reviews complaining about the game being gay-inclusive, though the WND editor's review isn't there. The newest review, interestingly, seems to have "gay" censored, as well. As a side note, for all three users complaining about the game, The Game of Life is the only one that has compelled them to write a review. (Or, all their other reviews were also deleted.)

Considering the homophobic language they throw around at WND, I have to wonder if the mother's idea of a "respectful" review violated Shockwave's terms of service, which forbid members from using the site to say things that "contain expressions of hatred, bigotry (or) racism." Since (as far as I've been able to figure) Google's cache didn't capture either review, there's no way to judge.

For you Windows users, you can download a free trial of The Game of Life to sample for yourself. It's a cute adaptation with plenty of mini-games. And if you're a Shockwave.com user, why not pop in and post a review including a bit of thanks for treating gay people as just a part of Life?

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  • David in Houston's picture

    Game of Life

    I think the whole thing is really cute. The game makes choosing the sex of your partner a non-issue... as it should be. The six year old daughter of the homophobic mommy is the future of this country, and that terrifies the mom. Obviously the mom's brainwashing hasn't taken root. She might end up with a kid that can think for herself, and realize that it doesn't matter what gender you end up with. Neat!

    As for dealing with any questions from your kids. How hard is it to say, "Most of the time boys fall in love with girls, and girls fall in love with boys. Sometimes boys fall in love with boys, and sometimes girls fall in love with girls, and that's okay too." End of story. Although I doubt that the six year old was thinking about any of these issues. She just wanted to play the game.

    Average (2 votes):
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    Lyle Masaki's picture

    It shouldn't be any more difficult...

    ...than answering "Where do babies come from?".

    AddisonDewitt's picture

    Life reflects life

    Funny how a game called LIFE is being accused of being too much about life. Go figure! When will these parents learn that they have to be open to questions from their child at all times and be prepared to provide one. Regardless of whether you support gay marriage or not, it doesn't mean that you should avoid teh topic all together. Reality is reality and I feel sorry for kids who are not exposed to the truth so they can make up their own minds. What happens when one of their child's classmates has two moms or two daddies?  How do they describe divorce and remarriage to teh kids? Sorry marriage is more complicated then these stifled folk realize.
    Glenn's picture

    I've played this a few

    I've played this a few months ago and just for fun, I tried clicking on the guys when it came time to marry and voila, same-sex marriage.  If only it was this easy in real life.
    Katie's picture

    People fear what they don't

    People fear what they don't understand.Thats why homophobes are so scared of gay people.

    I think this is a great idea. It's called "The Game of Life" and now it includes all life.

    Sean's picture

    Wtf?

    I can't see what the fuss is about. People aren't really getting married, it's just kinda picking a person to be married to and BAM! you're marrried, the word gay isn't mentioned and you're treated exactly the same... wait a minute!

    I totally get it now, they don't want their children to grow up feeling that any pairing is equivalent, that being marrying someone of the same sex and having a family with them is just the same as opposite sex marriage.

    Their problem is they don't want us to ever be a part of the society we helped build, they want us to hide away, or better yet pretend not to be gay to make them feel better.

    The game isn't really that bad either, I'd totally play it with my nephews.

    boyd's picture

    Astonishingly unaware

    For decades people have been mixing and matching the pink and blue plastic pegs inside the cars in the real-life board game. I've played as a woman and man and married both women and men, countless times. So have dozens of people I've played with.

    So the only reason anyone's making a deal out of this is because instead of two pink pegs or two blue pegs in the front seat of the car, you get a computer-generated pic of your family?

    Wow. Some people are really out of touch.

    danny's picture

    game of life

    it's really sad how many bad parents there are  not to explain to your children about life if you wrap them up in cotton wool.what happens when they do meet a same sex couple they will freak everybody is scared of what they don't know bad parenting.yet they want to make the world a better place it all starts at home not telling them is'nt going to make it go away