The Eurasian Knot

Video Games of Eastern Europe

Sep 2, 2025
Daniil Leiderman, an art historian and game studies scholar at the University of Pittsburgh, dives into the fascinating landscape of video games in Eastern Europe. He discusses how games serve as a portal to explore identity, moral responsibility, and historical narratives. Daniil highlights the unique regional aesthetics and cultural critiques present in games influenced by Soviet and post-Soviet themes. He also examines the evolving identities within gaming communities, alongside the resurgence of tabletop games, underscoring the cultural significance of this medium today.
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INSIGHT

Identity Emerged From Culture Wars

  • Gamer identity crystallized during culture wars like Gamergate when inclusion triggered defensive reactions.
  • Those conflicts transformed gaming into a politicized identity space.
INSIGHT

Moral Panics Reflect Fear Of Agency

  • Moral panics around games mirror historic fears about art's power to change people.
  • Anxiety centers on agency: who games make you into and whether effects spill outside the magic circle.
INSIGHT

Games Reopen Historical Narratives

  • Games let players reenact and relitigate political histories and alternative outcomes.
  • Ludic simulation reopens grand narratives like utopia and revolution in interactive form.
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