HomeNewsTrendsFeaturesEmmanuel Macron blamed video games for the violent riots in France. He isn’t the first one

Emmanuel Macron blamed video games for the violent riots in France. He isn’t the first one

Studies have repeatedly shown that the link between role-playing games, their storylines and the real-life behaviour exhibited by players is tenuous at best. Yet, video games continue to be blamed for real-life violence.

July 08, 2023 / 20:39 IST
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The idea that video games create violent behaviour originated in 1976, after the release of the arcade video game Death Race, in which players would sit behind the wheel and drive over humanoid figures to win. (Photo by Piotrus via Wikimedia Commons 3.0)

Content warning: Contains mentions of suicide, mass shootings.

Paris is burning. On June 27, 2023, 17-year-old Nahel, a French-Algerian resident, was shot dead by a police officer when he tried to escape arrest. Since then, riots have spread across the country, with young people far beyond Paris taking to the streets to protest the shooting. Cars have been set on fire, buildings damaged and vandalized as thousands have lashed out against alleged racial profiling. According to the French ministry of the interior, the 2023 riots have already caused more damage and mobilized more security forces than the 2005 riots—which were sparked by an eerily similar incident.

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Days later, French President Emmanuel Macron made an observation about the spreading unrest in his country at a press conference. He said that young rioters had been using social media, such as Snapchat and TikTok, as platforms to organize and orchestrate protests. He also said the rioters were “acting out the video games that have poisoned their minds” and the protests themselves were “a mimicking of violence, which for the youngest leads to a kind of disconnect from reality.”

Macron has been criticized on social media in the days since this event, for the reductive and simplistic nature of this argument. It’s a comment that seems particularly on the nose in the face of persistent police brutality—an issue that has been part of the French socio-political landscape for decades. And especially ridiculous given that in September 2022, Macron himself announced that France was to host two major eSports events in 2023 and 2024, including a Major Counter-Strike: Global Offensive competition.