Would you consider this image "strong bias against white men"? The only people I see on this cover are actually women, and as far as I know, they are not very white. While the races are fantastic, there is a lot of racial diversity in this image. Despite the publication's slogan , "Academic rigor, journalistic talent," the only thing that actively touched on reader intelligence was a survey of 320 respondents (73.8 percent) who described themselves as a group of mostly North American respondents. The majority of respondents are women: 60.4%, including 4.9% trans women. In our survey, more than a quarter of respondents were identified as male: 25.3 percent and 9.4 percent non-binary, respectively. " If you take a small enough sample for the survey and it is quite different from the actual population, you can try everything.
The sad thing is that there is an excellent answer to the question of why board games are so white. And it is not surprising that this has nothing to do with the coating. On the contrary, it has much to do with socioeconomics and Maslow's hierarchy of needs .
If you search for Gloomhaven on Amazon.com, you'll see that it's $ 140. When we talk about board games as a hobby, we are not talking about $ 20 retail games like Monopoly or Scrabble. We're talking about Kickstarter, which currently costs at least $ 100 for the simplest bet and can easily go up to $ 500 for all bets, including taxes and shipping. A typical computer gamer is someone who has: A) hundreds of dollars in cash and B) enough time to play games that Maslow says will reach the top of the pyramid of needs. . -Renewal needs.
In an ideal world, many people, regardless of skin color, will meet this requirement. In the real world, especially in the real United States, white Americans are more likely to have the income, time, and need to play this expensive board game . This is no exception, these are statistics. There are great channels on YouTube where black content creators play board games, but they are statistically underrepresented because blacks are statistically underrepresented in the highest percentage of revenue . Putting a black man on the cover of an expensive board game won't change that.