So the Hugo awards happened. And last night was a pretty decisive defeat for the would-be awardwreckers behind the Sad and Rabid Puppies’ slates, and for Rabid Puppies ringmaster Theodore “Vox Day” Beale in particular: not only did his slate fail to crack the awards (aside from two nominees who didn’t need his help to win), but he also saw his longtime nemesis N.K. Jemisin take the top award for her novel The Fifth Season.
Teddy Baby is trying his best to spin the defeat as a victory (“we have the SF-SJWs exactly where we want them at this point in time”) but even the fake sci-fi boys on Reddit’s gamergate hangout KotakuInAction can see what happened. And they are indeed sad little puppies about it.
Here are some of their highly edifying reactions:
(I had to cross out YESmovement’s Reddit flair because it was a rape joke.)
And then there was this ever-so-slightly ironic comment.
Hey, speak for yourself, dude. The only science fiction, er, books I’ve read in ages have been Chuck Tingle’s Pounded By The Pound: Turned Gay By The Socioeconomic Implications Of Britain Leaving The European Union and My Billionaire Triceratops Craves Gay Ass.
But I do like the irony inherent in lambasting unnamed authors for not being able to “write a coherent sentence” in a group of words that is not actually a sentence.
Note to the banned would-be commenter who keeps indignantly asking why this is tagged #gamergate.
That would be because the comments I quote, as I explicitly mention in the post, come from Reddit’s gamergate hangout KotakuInAction. You know, the subreddit that describes itself in its sidebar as “the main hub for GamerGate discussion on Reddit.”
Also, one of the Redditors I quote has “GG” in their name, which suggests to me that they might just possibly a teensy little tiny bit associate themselves with gamergate.
Hope this helps!
I may be a bit late to this thread, but everything I’ve read by NK Jemisin is gold, and The Fifth Season was amazing. I read it straight through in a couple of hours and literally not a single thing about it bugged me. Gorgeous storytelling, well written, complicated characters of every description, original world-building, totally engrossing–she won because it was an amazing book that deserved to win.