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The gendered nature and malleability of gamer stereotypes

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posted on 2025-08-01, 09:20 authored by T Morgenroth, M Stratemeyer, B Paaßen
Video gaming is seen as a male space. Female gamers are seen as atypical, have their competence challenged, and face more harassment than male gamers do. This precarious position is increasingly problematic as video gaming is now one of the most prevalent leisure activities, providing an opportunity to both forge and maintain friendships, and to achieve social status and career opportunities. We argue that the marginalization of female gamers is driven by masculine gamer stereotypes. We investigate the content and gendered nature of gamer stereotypes as well as their malleability in response to exposure to female gamers across two studies (NStudy 1=287; NStudy 2=176). We explore the content of gamer stereotypes and find that they contain both negative aspects, such as lacking social skills, and positive aspects, such as being competent and agentic. Both studies demonstrate that gamer stereotypes are more similar to stereotypes of men and boys than those of women and girls. In Study 2 we test whether exposure to a female gamer can change the negative association between female stereotypes and gamer stereotypes, finding support for this prediction. We conclude that gamer stereotypes are highly gendered but may be malleable: increasing the visibility of female gamers could potentially reduce the incompatibility between femininity and gaming.

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© 2020 Mary Ann Liebert, Inc

Notes

This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Mary Ann Liebert via the DOI in this record Data availability: The data sets used in this paper are available at https://osf.io/jfh9b/?view_only=f7de84580b8242e5b965a3b32ecdb6b9. All materials can be found in the online supplement.

Journal

Cyberpsychology, Behavior and Social Networking

Publisher

Mary Ann Liebert for International Association of CyberPsychology, Training and Rehabilitation (iACToR)

Version

  • Accepted Manuscript

Language

en

FCD date

2020-04-28T18:44:15Z

FOA date

2021-06-01T23:00:00Z

Citation

Published online 2 June 2020

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