“…Debates have ensued, for instance, over the extent to which games replicate the logics of coloniality and racial violence that characterise the lived experience of many (e.g., Llamas‐Rodriguez, 2021), or, conversely, how their ‘procedural rhetoric’, to use Ian Bogost's influential term, might generate subversive senses of affinity in the player, for instance with cross‐border migrants between Mexico and the United States (Cleger, 2015). This kind of discussion is consonant with a broader trend in what Bjarke Liboriussen and Paul Martin (2016) term ‘regional game studies’: an exploration of how games mediate between (often unequal) global and local contexts while endeavouring to avoid replicating simplistic postcolonial centre‐periphery models of power and influence.…”