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But it was what the Penny Arcade authors did next that set the stage for the most explosive act of the debate yet.

 In October, a new item appeared in Penny Arcade's online store — a T-shirt designed to look like it supported a sports team. The name of the team? The Dickwolves. So much for siding against the rapers.

 Courtney Stanton
NOT PLAYING Courtney Stanton received death threats after she objected to Penny Arcade’s “Dickwolves” meme.

Although the shirt, and the tone of the debate, continued to deeply offend a growing number of Penny Arcade's fans, its creators went on as if nothing had changed. The preparations for 2011's PAX East were underway. One of the game-industry professionals that PAX staffers approached to appear on a panel was Courtney Stanton, a project manager for Boston-based game developer DINO Interactive, a rape survivor, feminist, and advocate for marginalized groups in the game industry. She said no. Her explanation was long. It involved Dickwolves.

Stanton found herself repeating this explanation to many people who asked why she planned not to speak at — or even attend — PAX East. So in January, she decided to catalogue her thoughts at her blog, kirbybits.wordpress.com. By that time, she'd already become well-entwined in the Dickwolves narrative. Back in October, after the Dickwolves shirt appeared in the Penny Arcade store, Stanton had responded with a satiric gesture of her own: she created a counter-T-shirt with a picture of a Phoenix rising above a dead wolf and a legend that read, "Dickwolves Survivor Guild." She earmarked the profits to charities that benefit rape survivors.

Now, months later, she weighed in with what she thought would be a little-read post: an explanation of why she was boycotting PAX. Her explanation had much to do with the Dickwolves T-shirt specifically. In the post, she wrote, "The idea of being in a room full of mostly men (if the demographic holds true to last year, anyway), where some of those men are wearing it, feels like a threat against me. (Which, given the shirt basically says, "Team Rapist!" on it, doesn't seem too far-fetched.) Penny Arcade has gone out of their way to make sure that the floor of PAX East is no longer a safe space for me."

She published the post on January 24, 2011. Two days later, the Dickwolves shirts quietly vanished from the Penny Arcade store.

Stanton's post about her refusal to speak at PAX had already caused some rumblings, but after the Dickwolves shirts disappeared, her post's pageviews picked up speed at an alarming rate. "It hit gamer and feminist blogs," Stanton recalled, "then the Penny Arcade forums, then Reddit, then Metafilter." Within days, her post had accumulated over 400 comments, tens of thousands of hits, and a tsunami of vitriol.

Stanton and other rape survivors were harassed repeatedly on Twitter, blogs, and forums all over the Internet. Dickwolves advocates created Twitter handles like @teamrape, @DickWolvington, and @rapefatchicks (that last one using Krahulik's dickwolf drawing from PAX Prime as an icon), and used these accounts to post pictures of mutilated women, to demand that Stanton provide "proof" that she had been raped, and to track down a police station near her house to report her rape for her.

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35 Comments / Add Comment

thewbert

First, I'd like to say that this is a very well written piece. I really feel like Stanton has come out of this whole affair sounding mature and respectful where others most certainly have not.

I do wonder about one thing, however. This piece makes it sound like the second dickwolves comic was written as a response the blog post on Shakesville. As a journalist, where is your evidence for this? Just because it was written after the Shakesville post does not mean Mike and Jerry were even aware of the Shakesville post. The only evidence we have is that Mike and Jerry were responding to messages that they actually received. And we have no way of knowing what those messages contained. This piece suggests a false back-and-forth that never happened and exists entirely in some people's imaginations.

It is unfortunate that the incident couldn't have led to better and more respectful communication, but the thing is, there was no communication.
Posted: March 02 2011 at 6:07 PM

smzilla

re: the question posted above

This page on the Penny Arcade site seems to be from the same date as the second dickwolves comment, the one that suggests that "rapers" should stop.

http://www.penny-arcade.com/2010/8/13/

The first paragraph seems pertinent to me. I think it references "The Sixth Slave" as Wednesday's comic.

"Reaction to Wednesday's comic fell, conveniently for my purpose, into two camps: those who found a phrase like "raped by dickwolves" a stunning return to form, and those who felt that we were somehow advocating the actual rape of human beings. It sounds as though we've already satisfied the first camp, but an effort should certainly be made to assuage the latter."

(However, the link at the end of the paragraph appears to link to the latest PA strip. Presumably it used to link to the "apologize and leave" anti-rape comic.)
Posted: March 02 2011 at 7:52 PM

Shawn Struck

"I do wonder about one thing, however. This piece makes it sound like the second dickwolves comic was written as a response the blog post on Shakesville. As a journalist, where is your evidence for this? Just because it was written after the Shakesville post does not mean Mike and Jerry were even aware of the Shakesville post. The only evidence we have is that Mike and Jerry were responding to messages that they actually received. And we have no way of knowing what those messages contained. This piece suggests a false back-and-forth that never happened and exists entirely in some people's imaginations. "

Mike Krahulik posted as cwgabriel on the Shakesville post, as well as responded to fans that raised the issue on twitter. A good timeline of events is here:
http://debacle.tumblr.com/post/3041940865/
Posted: March 02 2011 at 10:46 PM

Sinstarcrafter

I would first like to say that this piece is very well thought out, well written, and well... missing the point. I think everyone misses the point. The ****wolves comic (since the mention of ****wolves upsets some people) was a fictional account of a fictional character, in a fictional video game based on a fantasy video game. There is an immense disconnect from reality here. If you are Jewish, do you not watch South Park because they had multiple episodes with Cartman dressed as Hitler.
It seems to me that the outrage "falls into two camps:" those who are rape victims with PTSD, this is understandable and I feel sorry for those people; the other camp are people who like to feign offense for other people. I see this a lot, because I am a college student. White middle class young people have such comfy lives they have to be offended about something. ****wolves is a great place, because everyone who isn't a jerk on the internet hates rape and rapists. The extent of this faux outrage amongst the middle class white people (Rob Zacny) is what upsets me. This strip is not very offensive, neither is the one after. Fine, you don't want to read their comics anymore... your loss. I just want this to blow over so people will A. stop being pro-rape degenerates, and B. stop trying to make me feel bad for something two rich guys in Washington wrote.
Mainly, I wanted to buy a ****wolves shirt, but then it got taken off their store. I am annoyed at both camps at this point, especially the hypocrisy in PA for taking it down, but keeping the strip up. Either piss on your artistic credibility, or stay consistent.
Posted: March 03 2011 at 1:46 AM

Anonymous

I find it incredibly frustrating that people still call the Dickwolves comic a 'rape' joke. Rape is used as a vehicle to describe how awful it is that you're letting some slave sit behind while you finish your quest. The humor of the strip comes from how, in the game, you're only allowed to rescue 5 slaves. Shouldn't you be able to stay for more? "Nah, quest is done, I'm out."

I mean...come on, I can't believe how you guys missed the point. It was like if I was reading this article, and I glanced up at the top and saw 'rape culture', and got offended because "OH GOD YOU SAID RAPE!"

Let's just dial back on the drama and look at things fairly, alright?
Posted: March 03 2011 at 9:12 AM

NEnerd

People are making way to big of a deal over this. Get over yourselves. It was a joke. No one cares if you, your friends or anyone else will stop reading their comics because there will still be millions more with a sense of humor continuing to read, laugh and enjoy.
Posted: March 03 2011 at 9:15 AM

Anonymous is Legion

Rape is as legitimate a joke as theft, murder, and genocide carried out by the Nazis.

Get over it. Just because you don't find a joke funny doesn't mean it isn't a legitimate joke, nor does it mean it advocates whatever socially offensive action it includes.
Posted: March 03 2011 at 9:43 AM

CHILDISH AND UNFUNNY

[10 page article]
[After I talked to Stanton, I e-mailed Holkins and Krahulik to ask for their input into this story. I got a response back almost right away.

"No thanks," Krahulik wrote. "We really don't have anything to say."]

Ahahaha, fucking raped.


Wait, shit, my bad.

On a serious note: Should Penny Arcade censor themselves in regards to war jokes or murder jokes? Surely there are ex-soldiers out there with horrible cases of PTSD that don't appreciate their comics that reference Call of Duty or whatever. I'm not sure I understand how this is different. Nowhere in this article did you clearly explain why you found their silly joke so offensive.
Posted: March 03 2011 at 9:54 AM

reginar

As frustrated as many of you seem to be that people can't understand the original comic, I find it equally appalling that you can't take the events that happened after the comic into consideration.

Yes, I got the original joke, I understood where the irony was, it was a clever send up of something that could be viewed as horrific if it weren't "in game".

Some people had problems with the comic, as is their right. What happened after that, is what widened the circle of people who were offended. The joke is no longer the crux of the issue and quite honestly it hasn't been for a long time. The problem has been the handling of the controversy. In either their silence or immature seeming comments, Mike and Jerry have alienated a segment of their readers. Once again, that is fine, perhaps they will be happier with a smaller audience, one that contains a very vocal minority who don't mind making disgusting threats on real people. I personally wish they had handled things in a way that lead me to believe that they were happier with a larger audience, one that doesn't include that smaller subset, but that's just me.
Posted: March 03 2011 at 10:17 AM

Mallor11

"He wrote that anyone who asked for a refund would receive one. But they would also be added to a list that would ban them from ever registering for a PAX again."

It's cute that you're immature enough to try to spin their words into the most negative concept imaginable, but here's the real quote:

"My response to them is: don’t come. Just don’t do it. In fact give me your name and I’ll refund your money if you already bought a ticket. I’ll even put you on a list so that if, in a moment of weakness you try to by [sic] a ticket we can cancel the order."

My suggestion to you: stop talking about this. People do not care. Comments towards you and others who've been regurgitating the same tired lines as you are only given in passing; as a form of self-entertainment throughout the day by adding fuel to a pointless fire. Writing a 10-page article summating why you've decided to stop reading PA (plummeting their readership from 3.5 million all the way down to 3.5 million) does nothing at all.
Posted: March 03 2011 at 10:21 AM
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