On August 16th 2014, Quinn's ex boyfriend, Eron Gjoni, launched a wordpress blog titled "The Zoe Post," featuring screenshots and pictures providing evidence that Quinn cheated on him with five different men, including her boss, Joshua Boggs, and video game journalist, Nathan Grayson, who writes for Kotaku and Rock, Paper, Shotgun.

Nathan Grayson was the only one talking about Depression Quest at the time. Zoe, the whore troon that he is, had sex with his boss, his personal journalist, not to mention out of those five guys, two or more were married. Kotaku tried to clear Grayson out of the sex-for-coverage allegations with a "Kotaku Investigation", basically stating that he wasn't talking with Zoe or anything, that they didn't knew eachother at the time, which is, of course, a blatant fucking lie (Pic related). Here's the article in question: https://kotaku.com/in-recent-days-ive-been-asked-several-times-about-a-pos-1624707346

This would lead to "GamerGate". Knowing someone is trading sex for reviews in the gaming industry would mean that any form of coverage would be demonized as a self-benefit deal between developers and journalists. Baiting consumers into buying games that sucked was becoming the meta. As much as it sounds like a bad apple analogy, that some reviews were actually unbiased and journalists actually enjoyed the games they reviewed, people still weren't wrong in being speculative about the reviews.