I used to go to games events and feel like I was going home.
I still love gaming and the gaming community.
My family are so proud of me for standing up for marginalised people in nerd communities.
Mistakes, once owned, apologized for, and buried, need to be an accepted part of life.
I'm a weird goofy dork.
I was nerdy and awkward and didn't know how to talk to people - except online.
I was the funny-looking one who wore a trench coat and played hacky sack with the other greasy kids.
The bulk of my work is comedy and I wanted to use the gaming world as a vehicle to deliver comedy.
My entire career is online - I create games on the web.
I used to be a part-time enthusiast press games writer when I was starting to get into making indie games.
The first week of Gamergate, I didn't sleep or eat at all.
Games are awesome. Stop letting jerks hijack them.
I know the first time I see a 'Goddess Mode' cosplayer I'm going to cry in such a loud, obnoxious way that it'll be audible from space.
I really, really, really love writing comics.
I think as an author every character ends up low-key being some kind of self-insert.
I like the weather in England.
I still really love the Internet.
I would not have pretty much any of the good things in my life if it weren't for the Internet.
I'm so tired of cyberpunk that says using machines to make your life better makes you less human.
I've been trying to reassert myself as a human and not just a current events story. I should not be the face of online harassment.
I've lived my entire life online.
If Gamergate had happened to somebody else, years earlier, I probably would've been on the wrong side.