Geeky Women Are Sharing Times They Were Shamed For Their Interest By Geeky Men, And It's Unbelievable

For some nerds, it can feel like judgment and gatekeeping is simply a part of the territory. But if you're a woman who's interested in stereotypically "geeky" topics, you might notice that the judgment you get is a bit different.

NBCUniversal Television Distribution / Via media.giphy.com

The women of the BuzzFeed Community shared their experiences with sexism in geek and nerd communities, and here are some particularly outrageous responses:

1."I read books on break when I have union construction jobs. I like horror. Two different fellow coworker men on two different job sites asked me if I’ve read 50 Shades Of Grey, and one said he was thinking about starting to read books and that it would be his first. I did not initiate conversation, for I was reading. I’ve never read 50 Shades of Grey, but I'm not interested unless there are demons."

Bettysometimes

2."I once had some punk kid tell me Kerouac wasn’t part of the Beat Generation."

hannahw432d6c6f0

3."I had to change my Gamertag on Xbox just to not be randomly messaged bs like, 'You belong in the kitchen,' or 'Make me a sandwich,' or some awful sexual thing. I lost it after some kid, who sounded like a 10-year-old, sent me audio messages talking shit about me being a girl, so I told him to fuck off. My Xbox Live rights were suspended for three days because I violated the rights by cursing. Seriously? No, I didn't do the right thing, but there's only so much someone can take."

XBox Controller
Moussa81 / Getty Images/iStockphoto

4."I do not talk while gaming online because the sexist comments don't stop when anyone hears a girl's voice. God forbid you aren't first place and racking up the kills, then they just use that to justify their nonsense by saying all women suck. I also hate that female characters are way too sexualized in video games."

RosieGirl

5."I love to play video games. One time, I was in Home Depot wearing a shirt that said 'Gaymer' in rainbow letters. One of the male employees complimented it, and then followed up with, 'But do you ACTUALLY play video games, or did you just buy it because you like the colors?'"

k47f255e17

6."A female friend and I used to go to a 24-hour diner and drink coffee for hours ('90s teens did this a LOT), and there was a group of nerdy guys who were there now and then to play Trivial Pursuit. One night, they invited us to play, so we did. We played teams, and I and my friend won. One of the guys was so absolutely convinced we had to have read all the cards before and memorized them, because how did he get beat by GIRLS? It was hilarious."

Nudibranch

7."Being a female geeky video gaymer and former tech support agent, lemme tell you. It's obnoxious. I've taken calls from men calling in for tech support who immediately ask to be transferred to a man because there was no way I was going to be able to help them solve their issue. Bitch, I got the job because I filled out the tech proficiency test better than most of the people they'd hired. But sure, I'll transfer you, so I don't have to deal with your sexist ass."

A woman in tech support
Peopleimages / Getty Images/iStockphoto

8."I play a lot of Ark, and it’s horrible how much men want to 'help' as soon as I say things in chat when they see my name has 'lady' in it. They want to give me all the answers, and assume that I haven’t been playing for the seven years I have been playing."

Ladynightfyre

9."I worked at a board game cafe as a game guide whose entire job was to recommend and teach games to people. I was incredibly fortunate that a solid 99% of the people who came in were wonderful, as were my coworkers. But I distinctly remember one time a cis guy came up and very obviously avoided me to go ask my cis male coworker about a particular moderately complex game he wanted to try (Scythe). My coworker, who knew that Scythe is one of my absolute favorite games and I both love and am very good at teaching it, immediately called me over and told the guy, 'Oh hey, she's really great at Scythe; she can totally help you!' It was a fantastic example of how men can hold each other to higher standards so the burden isn't always on women to call it out."

OllieMolly

10."The gatekeeping is absolutely ridiculous. I'm a huge Marvel fan. I mentioned once that I have an Iron Man tattoo, and was met with 'probably just because you think Robert Downey Jr. is hot. You've probably never even read a single comic. What's your favorite comic storyline with Iron Man?' First of all, if I DID just love RDJ's Iron Man, bite me. Second of all, I actually have read a shit ton of Marvel comics, and I do have favorite storylines and favorite runs. But I don't owe you that information because as my girl Captain Marvel said, 'I have nothing to prove to you.' Men, if you see your friends do this shit, shut it down."

bkellison93

11."I regularly cosplay, go to conventions, everything, so I’m sadly used to it all. But I think the crowning moment for me was a few years ago when I was literally in the middle of teaching a class, and a substitute teaching assistant noticed my Captain Marvel poster in my classroom and felt obligated to interrupt me so that he could start grilling me about whether I actually knew Marvel movies, or that character, or Marvel comics in general. I literally cosplay Carol Danvers, have the symbol tattooed on me, and I’m in the MIDDLE OF TEACHING a lesson to 15 high schoolers, but sure, let’s do this now, my dude. And he wonders why I won’t speak to him four years on. Hm."

Cici

12."I’ve noticed that at my local board game shop, the nerdy guys aren’t that nice to me until I buy something that can only be played alone. My friends noticed that the nerds are nice to their boyfriends and not to them either."

charlotte

13."I once got quizzed about rock/heavy metal music by a man old enough to be my father. It was such a fun night."

yourgirlfriday

14."It’s so weird how they will straight up go from attacking your opinion to attacking you. I said something about the new Boba Fett series, and a guy got so mad he said he wished my mom would get cancer. Women can have an opinion on your nerdy crap, too!"

JadedHunter

15."I'm really into animal, science, and dinosaur documentaries. Multiple times, guys have been like, "Well, if you haven't seen 'documentary title,' then you can't claim to be a fan of documentaries.' Yes, they gate-keep documentaries."

Television playing documentary
Marco_piunti / Getty Images/iStockphoto

16."I'm a 41-year-old mom of six, and way more into the culture than they are. I'm into gaming, Sailor Moon, LOTR, Harry Potter, etc. My husband constantly tells me to calm down about things, as no one cares from Mortal Kombat to LOTR, to Marvel and Harry Potter. I'm not 'supposed' to be into this stuff as I'm a mom, and I'm just going with it because it's popular. This was from my husband. Like dude, I have been into this since before I met you. I was at the opening night of Fellowship of the Ring, and I was one of two girls in that theater."

aquariusdoulaservices

17."I put on my Tinder that I really love Marvel, and it seems like every other message is some guy trying to secretly quiz me 'cause they think I’m lying or just like it for the 'hot superheroes.'"

lmniccum01

18."I used to play Garry's Mod all the time, back when youtube gamers played lots of Prop Hunt and TTT. I ended up on a Prop Hunt server with these guys who seemed pretty chill, and we played together for a good few hours. I mostly stuck to text chat but started to feel pretty comfortable after the few hours we'd been playing together, so I turned on my mic. Big mistake. I barely got two words out before one of the dudes was like, 'Wait, you're a chick?' My response was something like, 'Yeah, so?' and from then on, all the dudes started making fun of me and saying other really disgusting things. Dudes that were on my own team started killing me at the beginning of every round.

"I left a couple of rounds later, turned my mic off again, and went into another server, but one of the dudes from the previous server kept chasing me around different servers until I just quit the game altogether. I played GMod with some dudes that were genuinely my best friends and I knew wouldn't give me any shit.

novelust

19."When I played my very first D&D campaign, I felt relieved because my DM was also a girl. I thought that meant the guys in our group would be a bit more bearable, but I was wrong. Thankfully, they never did anything super crazy or extremely misogynistic, but I was regularly talked over, and oftentimes, when I solved puzzles, the credit for that solution would somehow get misattributed to a guy in the party. The worst part was that I can't even lie to myself and say this was because I was a newbie, because the whole party was first-time players!"

Dungeons and Dragons dice
Cavan Images / Getty Images/iStockphoto

20."I joined a friend's tabletop RPG group as the only female player (but not the only female character). Their meeting place was a local game shop. One of the oldest men in the group, upon our characters meeting each other, stood up and walked over from the other end of the table to check my charisma stat to see whether his character would be attracted to mine. I didn't return for another session with that group."

shortypenguin

21."I've been running a fan website about an animated show for years. It's a pretty big website: episode lists and recaps, character pages, fun facts, and information about the comics and DVDs. It's obvious on some pages that I use female pronouns. However, it's a pretty dark animated show, and some people die in the first episode. One day, a guy sent me a message that said, 'Hey, I love your website, but I'm surprised. Are you a girl? It's not exactly a girlish show.' No comment."

silencesilence

22."There was this local comic book store, and I would get ignored every time I went in. We're talking like, I'd try to ask questions like, 'Is X in yet?' or 'Where do you keep Y?' Blank faces, no response. Even knowing I was trying to purchase an issue or manga, the cashier would ignore me waiting at the checkout only to take the guy in line behind me. One time, I got a comic that had duped the last 20 pages. I took it back and asked if I could trade it in for one with all the pages, and the guy was like, 'Sorry, sucks to be you.' I asked a guy friend if he'd try, and the same guy bent over backward trying to fix the issue. After that, I just had him order my stuff and pick it up, and I reimbursed him."

yeahokwhatevermeh

23."I’m from Eastern Europe. Andrzej Sapkowski, the author of the Witcher series, is Polish, very well-known in that region, and I grew up reading the books. When the Netflix series came out, I had multiple guys telling me that to understand the story, I’d have to have played the video game. Yeah, dude, it’s not like it was a book first or something."

eklimen

24."I got a tattoo a few years back inspired by Captain America's shield, because Captain America/Steve was my favorite Avenger. I was told the only reason I liked Captain America was because of Chris Evans. Yet, here I am, interested to see where Anthony Mackie takes Sam as the new Captain America."

rmcullen

25."The metal community can be super toxic in this way, too. I couldn't even count the times I or my friends were accused that 'You only like this band because they're hot, you're not a true fan of the music!' Quite usually, this happens with bands I've been listening to for the last 10-15 years and know all their stuff by heart. At the same time, it's always these men drooling all over any female bandmate ever, or alternatively, shaming those women if they're not 'sexy' enough, or whatever. I still love the music, but I don't want to be a part of the community anymore. There are so many entitled assholes there."

depresivnisuva

26."As a dad, I introduced my daughter to TMNT when she was 5. We all dressed as turtles for Halloween; she had the pillows, bed sheets, rugs, and T-shirts. Then, at school when she was 6-7, she started being made fun of (I'm not sure if by girls or boys) that this was a BOY cartoon. Now, she hates them, same with Batman, and Spider-Man. It makes me so mad. At least she lets me play Pretty Pretty Princess with her."

frogger27

Are you a geek girl who's experienced sexism? Tell me about it in the comments