Former Overwatch director Jeff Kaplan has told gamers who complain about titles they have no intention of playing to 'shut the fuck up, no one cares.' He made the remarks during a 10-hour stream of his new game, The Legend of California. Kaplan argued that developers ignore such uninformed hostility.
Jeff Kaplan, who served as vice president and director of Overwatch at Blizzard Entertainment until leaving in 2021 after 19 years, shared his views on gaming fandom during a 10-hour Twitch gameplay stream for The Legend of California. The stream was hosted on the channel of Kintsugiyama, his current independent studio, which is developing the open-world action-survival shooter set on the mythical Island of California during the gold rush era. The game enters early access later this year following its recent unveiling at the studio's first project announcement. The event was published around March 16, 2026, with coverage from Eurogamer and Kotaku on March 15-16, 2026. Kaplan was initially discussing the possibility of official role-playing servers when he veered into criticism of what he termed 'nerd baby rage.' He distinguished between feedback from invested players and outrage from those who haven't tried a game. 'It's one thing if you're playing a game and... they nerf the paladin and then I get a little upset and I voice my opinion because I so love this game,' he said, adding, 'I never understand being hostile about it, being rude about it, but I understand being upset and I understand voicing your opinion.' However, for non-players, he was blunt: 'But if a game comes out and you don't want to play it, and you've never played it, shut the fuck up, no one cares. We don't need to hear you weren't into it.' Kaplan, drawing from experience including Overwatch community reactions to his new project, explained the developer response: 'As a game developer who's been in charge of teams... I just fucking ignore you. That's all you've accomplished.' He noted that such comments often fuel echo chambers on forums and Reddit for upvotes rather than productive discussion, and urged more positivity: 'There needs to be a little more spread the love and a little less I freak out and I baby rage.'