I read obligation to mean.....if you support LGBT folks, then you're obligated to support games that are about them. Which I disagree with. You're obligated to support games you enjoy. Any more than that, to me, is trying to make an overt political point using a game as a vehicle. I don't play games like that, because I don't play games to wage the same political and social battles I do in real life.
If you support LGBT folks, you certainly have an obligation to avoid assisting those attempting to make their lives, do you not?
You seem to have come a long way from the Mozilla thread, nenjin. There, you were a big proponent of companies "having moral and ethical imperatives". And you were arguing it didn't even matter if they had an effect- simply employing someone who thought wrongly justified action against them because of that imperative. Why do game companies get a pass?
There you argued
And what about when said business uses its wealth and power to push a social agenda? Still ok to let them do that and continue using their product, increasing their market penetration and empowering them further, because there's such a clear distinction between their business and their beliefs?
Where you said that it was not okay to continue using a product even if the business didn't advocate the problem behaviour. But here, when the business specifically is pushing a social agenda through it's media, suddenly
I don't play games to wage the same political and social battles I do in real life.
Why is it not ok to to use a product from a company that employs someone who dislikes gays, but it's perfectly okay (in fact, in your words "You're obligated to") purchase games you enjoy but which come from companies who though that game are actively working to reduce representation of minorities, often in express opposition to what would be better for the game according to the people actually developing it.
It's a choice someone who enjoys X but believes Y must make. Do they want to enrich people that hold a view point that's abhorrent to them? Most would answer no. And so would I if I, for example, learned that Namco-Bandai, who make Dynasty Warriors 8 which I am currently enjoying the shit out of, hates gay people and contributes heavily to their political and social repression. But from a company who chooses NOT to include a gay or transgender relationship along side their hetero one? That's claiming omission is sin, and I certainly do not believe that.
But that doesn't represent the vast majority of games. And that's where I start to get annoyed with the LGBT folks. They attribute negative motivations to people because they're not automatically included, ascribing malice where it's simply a matter of preference.
And more to the point, a video game is not a web browser. Koei or Namco-Bandai or Blizzard or aren't wielding the same level of impact on society that a web browser with the ability to restrict access to information and websites does. That's mostly where I draw the distinction. Mozilla being anti-gay is not the same as game dev X being anti-gay.
I do still believe that companies have moral and ethical imperatives in some form. But this is one of those issues where people opposed to LGBT rights also believe they're acting on a moral imperative, and so they have a camp that does not believe what they're doing is wrong. If it were an issue of them employing 5-year-olds to press CDs in China, something most people would align on the same side of, we wouldn't be having this debate. So I'm hesitant to tell someone they're wrong, even if I believe it.
And yes, I do believe this has to do with rights. You've got a right not to include LGBT views, characters and themes in your game. Just like they've got a right to make games about it, much to the consternation of conservatives. Otherwise, we should be protesting every single LotR movie because it didn't go outside of the source material to include LGBT hobbits, elves, orcs and humans. Again, the only thing at this point I wish for is that most people would just do what they do, instead of actively trying to subvert each other. But conservatives can't help giving money to actively exclude people, and LGBT groups can't help occasionally lashing out at EVERYTHING in order to be validated.
You've even got a right to make a game specifically about eradicating non-hetero people. And I won't buy it.