>Jesus Strikes Back: Judgment Day is a PC shooter that allows you play as Jesus Christ alongside a number of figures beloved by the alt-right, including Donald Trump, Adolf Hitler, Vladimir Putin, Jair Bolsonaro, Pepe the Frog and Brenton Tarrant, the Christchurch Mosque gunman who killed 51 people in March of this year.
>The objective of the game is to kill a variety of different enemies, including "Social Justice Warriors," "Feminazis," gay and trans people, migrants, Democrats, Antifa and abortion doctors.
>Some of the video game boss battles see you fight characters based on Democratic politicians including Barack Obama, Bernie Sanders, Nancy Pelosi, Ilhan Omar and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.
>The game can be purchased online for $14.88, an apparent reference to the secret code used by neo-Nazis and white nationalists to signify their ideology based on the white supremacist slogan, "We must secure the existence of our people and a future for white children."
Well, I guess this is my new "I wish this game was real" game.
Carter Jones
Is it as bad and janky as those NRA shooting games and that one KKK shooting game?
Blake Rivera
based as fuck
Tyler Gonzalez
it isn't?
Oliver Miller
Silly user, where is the game hosted? On a shady site that popped up out of nowhere. How many people heard of the game before the news article? How many people seen gameplay (if any) before the news article? It's fake news.
What was that game that had the Murdoch Murdoch guys in it, didn't it get coverage like this too
Jacob Flores
Retarded game. But anyway none of them complained about the millions unity "games" about brutally murdering trump.
Chase Cook
Like most ideologues they're more concerned with pushing an agenda rather than making a good game, these sorts of things usually bank the person being contrarian enough to buy it regardless of the product's quality
Daniel Anderson
>What's the deal with extremists being really bad at making vidya? Putting the message well before the gameplay because to the extremist mind only the message matters not how it's delivered.