Water Cooler Games served as the web's primary forum for "videogames with an agenda" — coverage of the uses of video games in advertising, politics, education, and other everyday activities, outside the sphere of entertainment.
The site was maintained at watercoolergames.org from 2003-2009, where it was edited by myself and Gonzalo Frasca. It is now archived here in full.
Here's a link to a Reuters article called "Islamists using US video games in youth appeal". Frankly, I find it misleading, manipulative and a clear example of propaganda. Propaganda as in twisting facts with ideological goals. Basically, the article quotes Dan Devlin, a Defense Department public diplomacy specialist. This fellow gave a talk to the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence and argued that al Quaeda and other groups have created mods of popular videogames where they inversed the good guy/bad guy relationship and Americans ended up as the ones to kill.
Here comes my question? So what? How come that these mods are labelled as propaganda but neither SOCOM or America's Army are? Either these folks at Reuters have no idea of what they are writing about or they are acting in bad faith (either case is a shame).
Games have dealt with ideological content way before the invention of videogames (think Cowboys and Indians as an not-so-old unplugged version). People like to play with reality, that is a fact. The fact that Arabs are doing mods where they play as the good guys does not necessarily mean that these mods are propaganda. I had no access to these mods and all the info that I had from this is from Reuters (which, as I hope is clear by now, is not really trustworthy). Is it possible that al Quaeda is using videogame mods to recruit fighters? It is possible. Still, given the recent US government record on "evidence" (does the acronym WMD rings any bell?), I would not be surprised that some guy just donwloaded an Arab mod and saw it as enough "evidence" of being part of a twisted al Quaeda plot.
If al Quaeda is indeed using videogames to lure young people into fighting a hate war against the US, then I find that use of games to be despicable. But then the same would have to apply to America's Army. It's a shame that journalists just write down whatever they get fed, without questioning it.
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