The one most DF players could identify with would probably be the Graphics vs Aesthetics episode.
DF is lucky in that it gives no helmets over graphics and hands the aesthetics mostly to the player to work with. But the rustic music and the entire language and behaviours + descriptions truly makes it an immersive simulator.
Calling people homo's across the internet has always made me question anonymity as a whole.
I mean, anonymity is supposed to protect us right? It stops actual homosexuals from getting followed around and harassed online by people who know them (excluding facebook), but instead of anonymity stopping these kinds of things, it seems to have given people the perceived right to call anyone and anything a homosexual whether its true or not and to complete strangers.
What? Noooo, go to any .chan and it's not an exclusive term - everyone is a X-fag! It's so imbued in anonymous culture that it's detracted all negative value, it isn't even regarded as defining someone's sexuality - if you're gay you're a les/gay fag, if you endorse some specific internet value (anything from boards, sites to even fetishes) you can be an old, new, fur, /soc/ /e.t.c/ fag, with the only quarrel coming from people who've had no experience with internet culture - where it seems so foreign to them and they assume that it's said as an insult, which is impossible when you insult a non-entity, an anon. Basically, acting like they would irl on the internet.
You don't do that, generally.
When it's taken
outside of anonymity, when it's said in real life, yeah that's just some people trying to insult each other by questioning their insecurity of their own sexuality. Same with gaming really.
Anonymity is a wonderful thing. Adding a face and a voice to it is enough to remove total anonymity that people have something to feed off of, whether it be positive or negative reactions, hence griefing. It's not the spawn of anonymity, it's the spawn of online console gaming.