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Ex-Blizzard boss blames CoD on rainbows

šŸŽ®šŸ³ļøā€šŸŒˆ When in doubt, blame the rainbows? A former Blizzard boss says Pride skins are ā€œruiningā€ Call of Duty — gamers aren’t buying it.

TL;DR

  • Former Blizzard president Mike Ybarra blames ā€œrainbow coloursā€ for Call of Duty’s alleged decline.
  • Ybarra predicts Battlefield 6 will ā€œstompā€ Black Ops 7.
  • Pride Month skins featuring LGBTQ+ flags have appeared in recent Call of Duty titles.
  • Black Ops 6 still broke franchise records despite criticism.
  • LGBTQ gamers see Ybarra’s comments as dismissive and coded.

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Rainbow crosshairs in the firing line

In the ever-toxic trenches of online gaming, former Blizzard president Mike Ybarra just lobbed a grenade — straight at the LGBTQ+ community. The ex-executive has claimed that Call of Duty’s supposed decline can be pinned on… wait for it… ā€œrainbow colours.ā€ And yes, he meant the Pride skins.

In a social media spat, Ybarra doubled down on his prediction that Electronic Arts’ upcoming Battlefield 6 would ā€œboot stompā€ Call of Duty: Black Ops 7. Why? Because, in his words, the long-running shooter has ā€œgone downhillā€ thanks to bloated file sizes, load times, cheating, and — inexplicably — the presence of LGBTQ+ themed gun camos.

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Recent CoD titles have rolled out a rainbow arsenal for Pride Month, with flags representing trans, lesbian, bisexual, non-binary, pansexual, and asexual communities. Some players celebrated the inclusivity; others, predictably, lost their killstreak over it. Ybarra appears firmly in the latter camp, tossing ā€œrainbow coloursā€ into his laundry list of grievances without explaining how equality tanks frame rates.


The game’s not over — yet

Here’s the gag: despite his complaints, CoD’s numbers don’t scream ā€œdeath spiral.ā€ Last year’s Black Ops 6 smashed records with the biggest launch weekend in franchise history, proving that rainbow-tinted guns haven’t scared off the masses. The next installment, Black Ops 7, is already hyped as a futuristic espionage thriller set in 2035, complete with campaigns, co-op missions, multiplayer chaos, and zombie hordes.

The LGBTQ+ gaming community isn’t just rolling its eyes — it’s firing back. Many see Ybarra’s comment as lazy scapegoating that taps into the same tired narrative: that queer visibility ā€œruinsā€ things. Newsflash — queer gamers have been fragging since the LAN party era, and Pride skins are just one more way to say ā€œyou belong here.ā€

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The bigger picture

The rainbow controversy isn’t just about cosmetics — it’s about who feels welcome in the virtual battlefield. For LGBTQ players, seeing their flags and identities represented can be a lifeline in a space that often feels hostile. Dismissing that as the reason for a game’s ā€œdeclineā€ not only erases that progress but sends a message that inclusion is expendable.

Call of Duty will keep selling — rainbow or not — but the culture war over pixels shows no signs of reloading. And as long as gaming execs keep blaming ā€œcoloursā€ instead of real issues, queer gamers will be here, controller in hand, ready to respawn.

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