Special Features

NeoGAF – Death of a Conversation


[Update: Vice speaks with Tyler Malka regarding the allegations.]

Imagine founding a small message board in 1999 as an extension of your site. Five years later, the moderators of the board decide to take over hosting and ownership due to issues with the ownership of your site. A year later, they shut you out. Over the next twelve years, two moderators are involved with pedophilia… Then the lead administrator abandons the site after specific accusations of sexual assault come to light.

For Gaming-Age, imagination isn’t needed. Tyler Malka, better known as EviLore in the online realm, was the topic of a #metoo post on Tuesday. Found by users of a related board, the post found its way to NeoGAF. Questions came up, and were deleted en masse. Moderators resigned, users asked for permanent bans, former staff commented negatively on Twitter.

Given the exposure NeoGAF has online, seeing slander come out about a user or staffer isn’t unusual–it’s typical. But this felt different. Between the two aforementioned moderators, Malka’s own bragging about sexually harassing a woman in a bar in Spain, and his posting photos of a forum user’s naked girlfriend on a troll-based offshoot of GAF in 2006–there’s a lot of smoke to indicate a fire. [Sites such as Kotaku] have contacted the accuser and cited the harassment, but write it off with NeoGAF’s penchant for kneejerk reaction and the accuser?s own brief (two month, maximum) relationship with Malka — [which isn?t unusual for victims of abuse.]

But in this case, as staff of Gaming-Age, it’s near impossible to take our history of interaction with the man through IRC, email, and his own self-documented history of harassment and behaviors and ignore the possibility that the accusations may be true.

Then again, Malka’s silence on the subject and concurrent offlining of NeoGAF speaks louder than any statement he or any other person can make in the wake of the serious accusations levied upon him.

Where do we go from here? Where do the users, of NeoGAF, who were administrated by–but not represented by–an accused serial abuser to go? Should Gaming-Age relaunch the forums in the wake of what’s transpired, or leave the users to build their own alternatives? How can anyone rebuild the trust, goodwill, and community that one man orchestrated the self-destruction of?

Where does that job even start?

Very real questions, all–but they come a very distant second place to our only current concern: the wellbeing and state of the alleged victims of Tyler Malka.

And with that, we try to take our first steps forward from the situation.

GA Staff

Recent Posts

Alien: Rogue Incursion set to bring sci-fi action horror to VR platforms Holiday 2024

Get ready for an in-your-face Xenomorph VR experience before the end of the year.

1 day ago

Gunnar’s Arbor Collection goes Galactic with a new frame inspired by Marvel’s Groot

If it’s good enough to be Stormbreaker’s handle, it’s certainly good enough to be worn…

2 days ago

Immortality awaits when you discover the Mark of the Deep

Mad Mimic’s new title has you seeking the greatest treasure, your own life!

2 days ago

Sand Land review for PlayStation, Xbox, PC

Come hang out in Akira Toriyama’s sandbox.

2 days ago

Robosen defects to the Decepticon cause with their latest auto converting Transformer

You really didn’t think they were gonna go with the gun did you?

2 days ago

Fallout 4 next gen console, PC update is now available

Check out the extensive patch notes and some media for the long-awaited native PS5 and…

2 days ago

This website uses cookies.