Alter Ego
kiwifarms.net
- Joined
- Oct 15, 2020
I remember the story well as it was happening several years ago and consider it to be one of the most unjust personal attacks carried out by game journalists. You can find many posts about it if you search for his name on KotakuInAction.More or less. He was hitting on a girl with a pissy attitude, took the hint, moved on and now she's MAD! Like she said, "this may be sexual harassment to some, not others..."
There's more stuff but even at the time, for as fun as it was laughing at Polygon, it came off as complete bullshit. What started all of this? He was critical of the Overcooked Switch port and it made someone salty enough to start flinging accusations at him. IIRC Polygon was going to memory hole the videos he did but they were the most popular thing they had at the time so they didn't.
You're correct that the catalyst for the entire ordeal was Nick Robinson talking shit about the Overcooked port, but you're wrong about the girl in question having a pissy attitude. The two mutually and consensually flirted. It's just one of those cases where the girl later regretted what turned out to be a momentary fling and so turned the short-lived relationship into ammunition against the guy. Here are further flirty DMs between the two as well as this explanatory reddit post the girl made during the middle of the controversy, revealing just how empty the accusations against Nick were:
In order to hide this evidence that vindicates Nick and make up for their own lack of evidence besides that incriminates him to be the serial sexual harasser they say, journalists and the like who aimed to strike him down would shout "NO RECEIPTS!" The idea being that asking for evidence is intrusive and everyone should just "listen and believe" what Nick's being accused of. And in the end when they couldn't hold their initial serial sexual harasser accusation, they settled on convicting him of exploiting a "barely-legal" (i.e., legal) girl with "power dynamics", So because Nick had a degree of internet fame, he's not allowed to pursue a relationship with any adult unless that person is just as famous as he is, else the person will be too "star-struck" to think rationally and consent in his presence. It's all very hypocritical when you consider how promiscuous game journalists and their social circles are in general.
In the years since being fired from Polygon, Nick appears to still have a successful living making YouTube content about video games, regularly getting millions of views on a single video and even overcoming an additional personal tragedy in which his home burned down. This pisses off his detractors to no end as they see that their "you'll never work in this town again" mantra has failed, so you'll still see them occasionally sperg out and continue to slander him, such is this recent case with Liam Robertson. And you can be sure that despite the remarkableness of Nick Robinson obtaining this McDonald's training game on the Nintendo DS, video game outlets have buried the story when they would've otherwise written about it if it had involved anyone but Nick.
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