Slay by Brittney Morris
One of the only African-American students at Jefferson Academy, seventeen-year-old honors student Keira enjoys playing "Slay," a secret, multiplayer online role-playing game celebrating black culture that she secretly developed. When a Kansas City teen is murdered over a dispute in the game, Keira's previously safe space is now labeled racist, exclusionist, and violent. Now she tries to defend her game while keeping her identity hidden.
Review from Kirkus Reviews:
A high school senior secretly creates a massively multiplayer online role-playing game dedicated to black culture but is attacked in mainstream media after a player is murdered. Frustrated by the rampant racism in the online multiplayer game universe and exhausted by having to be the "voice of Blackness" at her majority white high school, honors student Kiera creates SLAY-a MMORPG for black gamers. SLAY promotes black excellence from across the African diaspora as players go head-to-head in matches grounded in black culture. Although Kiera is proud of the game and the safe space it has become for hundreds of thousands of participants, she keeps her identity as lead developer a secret from everyone, including her black boyfriend, Malcolm, who believes video games are a tactic on the part of white people to undermine black men and hold them back from success. When a dispute in SLAY spills into the real world and a teen is murdered, the media discovers the underground game and cries racism. Kiera has to fight to protect not only her identity, but the online community she has developed. Despite some one-dimensional characters, especially Kiera's parents, debut author Morris does a fantastic job of showing diversity within the black community. Nongamers might get bogged down in the minutiae of the game play, but the effort is well worth it. Gamers and black activists alike will be ready to SLAY all day.