

I take that very seriously at Riot, and we have worked very hard to make our company a better place to work." "I mean really all men at a studio do, but especially the leaders of the studio. "I do believe men in leadership roles have a responsibility, a duty, to make sure women and other marginalized folks feel welcome, happy, and successful at our studios," he continued. He also emphasized that he was not trying to speak on behalf of Blizzard, or the women or people of color who work there. Street clarified that his prediction of future bad answers isn't meant to reflect a "blasé attitude" toward the treatment of women in gaming, but that interactions with players can be inherently risky-although, he believes, still important for developers to engage in. I apologize for those as well as for this one." I have more experience now answering questions live, but no doubt that won’t be my last shitty answer. Street added in the thread: "You can’t really see the people asking the questions well from the stage, and I feel terrible now seeing the look on her face. I wish I had said something better then." "Look, it was a shitty answer at the time and it certainly hasn’t aged well. "There’s a 10 year old BlizzCon video going around of players doing a Q&A with a panel of devs of which I was a member," Street tweeted.
