Last summer, I reported on major studiosâ valiant (but still lacking) efforts to combat toxic voice chat (of which women are often the target) in popular competitive games like Overwatch 2, Call of Duty, and Apex Legends. And though Riot Games, the studio behind the 5v5 competitive hero shooter Valorant, is one of the more aggressive teams in the fight against hateful in-game chat, myriad problems linger in that game, as well.
A recent social media post has resulted in dozens of Valorant players (some esports pros, others content creators) speaking out against the way women are treated in-game and showcasing how this is still a problem plaguing competitive multiplayer shooters.
The Valorant video that started it all (again)
The conversation kicked off on April 9, when a Valorant player and content creator named Davis âLightEditsâ Bray shared a clip from a recent Twitch stream on X (formerly Twitter) with the caption âmy bad never going to try to comm [voice chat] in ranked again.â In the clip (which appears to have been taken from Valorant streamer Joonaâs Twitch page), he reminds a player in a ranked match (Luna âLuna Foxâ Ryan) that she has her ultimate, to which Joona says, âshe knows.â This quickly descends into bickering, with Bray and other men saying the suggestion was an example of âgood commsâ and asking why the women were getting âangry.â
my bad never going to try to comm in ranked againđ pic.twitter.com/fOP6JwLZe7
— light (@lightedits_) April 9, 2024
âThe joys of being a woman,â Joona eventually says, before muting them. âFucking loser fucks. Loser freak fucks,â she says as she appears to report them.
âANYWAYS FOLLOW ME ON TWITCH <3,â Bray wrote in an X/Twitter thread of the video he shared. Replies include comments on Joonaâs âegoâ or âattitude,â many of which Davis liked. An alleged screenshot of a message in his Twitch chat reads, âbro if that was my shorty Iâd smack some sense into her, not white knight.â On the morning of April 10, however, Joona shared her own video, with the caption âthis is probably why you deleted your vod and looked for scraps in mine huh?â (Brayâs video on demand or VOD, which is the entirety of a Twitch livestream uploaded to a streamerâs page for evergreen viewing, is still available, but only to subscribers of his channel.)
this is probably why you deleted your vod and looked for scraps in mine huh? đ„Ž pic.twitter.com/lUmGESnhO5
— joona! (@okijoona) April 10, 2024
Joonaâs video appears to start before the events of Brayâs video, but in the same match. About eight seconds into the clip, Joona says something about an in-game strategy, and Bray immediately reacts to the sound of her voice. âOh my god, guys, e-girl, e-girl,â he says. He then asks, âWho is this Viper?â more than once, referring to the character Joona was playing. âIsnât Joona the one who has, like, the ego?â he asks his chat, before complaining about her communication. âWhat the fuck kind of comm is that, bro?â he asks, his in-game mic clearly not transmitting to her.
âWhat is wrong with Joona, bro? Ainât no way sheâs fucking ShahZamâs girlfriend. She has an ego because sheâs dating a pro player,â he says, referring to Joonaâs public relationship with Valorant pro Shahzeb âShahZaMâ Khan.

Valorant comms and conflict
In an email to Kotaku, LunaFox explains how the game went down from her perspective. âLightEdits wanted to make a comm (that wasnât bad by any means) that I had my ult, which both me and Joona [the pair duos a lot together, and are friends both on and off Valorant] were aware ofâŠOnce Joona heard this, she responded with âshe knowsâ so that the team would understand to just not talk while Iâm in a clutch, which I prefer in my ranked gamesâŠhe took this as aggression and it was very apparent in his response.â
According to Luna, Bray and the other men in the game repeatedly misgendered her in the voice chat, âeven though Joona corrected them multiple times.â âAfter the game, we thought it was over and then both were surprised at the resulting Twitter post trying to paint Joona out to be a bad person,â she tells me.
In the aftermath of Joona and Brayâs posts, dozens of Valorant players and other esports pros weighed in on the controversy. Valorant pro Alan âethosâ Ruan called Brayâs actions the âdefinitionâ of âincel behavior,â while esports analyst Rod âSlasherâ Breslau jokingly said that players who âwonât stop talking while someone is trying to clutch should be waterboarded until the round is over.â Joonaâs partner, ShahZam, replied to Brayâs initial video, writing, âYou guys were being weird all game. Thatâs just how she talks and people think itâs attitude because itâs not in a soft âuwuâ voice. This is pretty lame to do dude, your team was instigating the whole game. Do better.â
âFull transparency, I like to make content from clipping streamersâ reactions. I never intended it to victimize myself. I apologize to Joona for involving her in this video this blew way out of proportion,â Bray wrote on X on April 10. The post has since been deleted. On the same day, he shared a YouTube video called âlightedits vs joon false accusationsâ that does not include any of the clips of him discussing Joonaâs âegoâ or her relationship, or the comments about LunaFox.
Brayâs X profile shows that he liked dozens of comments on the original video he shared, including one that tags Elon Musk and asks him to weigh in, and another that reads âevery Valorant mf starts a problem then acts like a victim.â Bray is currently an esports student athlete at the University of Waterloo in Canada. Kotaku reached out to Bray for comment.
A rep for the University of Waterloo said in a statement to Kotaku via email: âThe University is committed to fostering a campus community where all of our students can thrive. We have been made aware of this issue and are addressing it in line with the appropriate internal policies and processes.â

Women Valorant players on in-game harassment
As is the case in most high-level competitive video games, this controversy is yet another example of how a small but vocal group of players often create an openly hostile space for women. In the wake of the conflict, women shared their own stories and clips of in-game harassment theyâve faced while playing Riotâs highly competitive game.
TW: threats of SA
Women in gaming; the experiencejamal#swaz
TeePeeBee#3818
Ethan#Bosh (their quiet trio)None of them have been banned at this moment, watch me get a ban for running it down tho đ pic.twitter.com/wjmlkx3wtV
— syrenity (@_syreniity_) April 11, 2024
Content creator Serenity posted a clip on X in which several men sheâs playing with harass herâthe men discuss rape, call her âa retard,â and one one tells her to âkill yourself you little slut.â
28-year-old Valorant content creator Birbo shared a clip of a match in which her male teammates are body-blocking her in-game and using stuns and flashes to impede her movement. âAt the start of every game I always say âhello teamâ or something similar, so Iâm assuming thatâs how they figured out Iâm a girl,â she told Kotaku via email. âThis video is not the only example of [harassment Iâve received in Valorant]âŠThis video is the first where I have shared the names of the people doing it, and I donât wish for them to receive any harassment, but I do hope that it will make other people more hesitant to be toxic toward their teammates.â
âGenerally speaking, I do believe that most of the community is welcoming towards women, at least in my experience,â she wrote. âI usually get maybe one or two games like this per week. However, the minority group that is toxic definitely gives the rest of the community a bad reputation.â
Nao, a 24-year-old Valorant player who cut her teeth in CS:GO lobbies, sent Kotaku a clip of a Valorant match in which a male player repeatedly calls her mommy after she politely asks him not to. âI think Valorant is better [than other games in terms of toxicity],â but just because itâs better doesnât mean itâs okay,â she wrote in an email.
Tess, a 24-year-old marketing specialist who has often runs duos with her friend Morgan, told Kotaku that she regularly experiences harassment in-game, so much so that âany day we queue and donât experience harassment in Valorant is an abnormality.â
âJust last week, I made the mistake of solo queuing and had an all-male team who made fun of the guys I was outfraggingâŠThey yelled at me the entire game, then started yelling at me for not talking. They said I got scared and shut up. There is no winning,â she writes in an email.
Tessâ duo partner Morgan, shared similar sentiments in an email to Kotaku, writing: âItâs crazy what people can say online with just the sound of your voice. I also think itâs easy to gang up on one person, especially if you are solo queueing.â
All of the women I spoke to had myriad stories about harassment theyâve faced in Valorant and other online competitive games. Many of them said that Riot Games has done a good job of policing in-game chat, but almost uniformly said that the company could do better. (Kotaku reached out to Riot Games for comment.) Several women spoke about the importance of prominent content creators and esports athletes speaking out against in-game harassmentâas well as how helpful it is for even the average player to try and nip hate speech in the bud.
âI genuinely believe that if people want to see change, we need people to also speak out or speak up when someone is being openly sexist or transphobic to tear someone else down,â Luna said via email. âI truly believe if there was at least one person every game who would have done this, the games will feel a lot safer for many women and marginalized genders alike.â