In 2005, anti-video game activist
Jack Thompson wrote an open letter ("
A Modest Video Game Proposal") in which he said he would donate $10,000 USD if a game developer would create an ultra-violent game whose protagonist murders video game developers. Krahulik responded to Thompson with an email in which he said that he and fellow gamers had raised about half a million dollars toward charity. Krahulik later said, "Jack actually just called and screamed at me for a couple minutes. He said if I email him again I will 'regret it'. What a violent man." After a group of developers made such a game (2006's "
I'm O.K – A Murder Simulator"), Thompson refused to make the donation, calling the game subpar and saying that his proposal was satirical, not serious. Krahulik and the
Penny Arcade staff then donated $10,000 to the
Entertainment Software Association with the note, "For Jack Thompson, because Jack Thompson won't". Along with Holkins, Krahulik was included on the 2010
Time 100 for their work on
Penny Arcade. In 2010, Krahulik and Penny Arcade were criticized for several comics and statements about the
transgender community and rape, particularly in response to a comic featuring fictional creatures known as "dickwolves." Krahulik and Holkins dismissed these criticisms, later selling "Team Dickwolves" T-shirts. In June 2013, Krahulik apologized and donated $20,000 to LGBTQ youth suicide prevention group
The Trevor Project. In 2011, Krahulik wrote a foreword for the book
The Art and Making of Star Wars: The Old Republic, which was about the production of the
massively multiplayer online role-playing game Star Wars: The Old Republic. == References ==