Ms. Sarkeesian promised the people who donated to her Kickstarter a series that "will explore, analyze and deconstruct some of the most common tropes and stereotypes of female characters in games." The gaming community gladly donated $158,922 with the expectation that the video series would be completed by the date noted, and would be a fair and factual analysis of how women are portrayed in video games.
I'll start off with the first promise: The deadline The first video was promised to be delivered during August of 2012. We received it on March 7, 2013. Seven months late. The rest of the videos? Some people donated 250 dollars with the expectation that they would receive a video copy of all the videos in the series by December 2012. Two years later and the series is only half done. For a series so biased and factually wrong, the delay is inexcusable and yet, the creators refuse to refund the money.
But let us ignore this and take a look at the actual contents of the series. Ms. Sarkeesian spawns out of the abyss: a set of ridiculous tropes with which she would be able label the vast majority of female characters whom she did not like in the games she barley played. The few characters that were praised in the series would have failed by her own standards if only the show was not completely arbitrary and had some structure in how everything was criticized. So what exactly did all the criticism consist of?
That lady is a bystander on the street whom you can kill. Violence against women. That girl is beautiful and is not modestly dressed. Objectification of women. That women is killing people in a bad ass way, acting like a man. Man with boobs. This girl needs help. Saying women are weak or incapable. This game has no important female characters. Sexism.
This is the entire series. The few (very very few) legitimate arguments that were made discounted the fact that the games in question had a demographic of men in mind. Much like how romance novels with muscular men on the cover have a demographic of women in mind.
Literally anything could have been sexist if Ms. Sarkeesian wanted it to be. Everything in the video series was said on a whim, with the precise and bigoted goal of shaming video games and the people who enjoyed them for being who they are.