logo
Can Gaming Go Glam?

Can Gaming Go Glam?

In a bit of beauty industry news that could read like the result of a very niche Mad Lib: The actress Chloë Grace Moretz and the pop star Rina Sawayama have created a cyberpunk cosmetic line, called Godmode, catered toward female gamers.
The label is the first to launch from Closer Brands, the incubator beneath the UK-based Closer Group, The Business of Beauty has learned. Godmode's first collection comprises five products, including a cool-toned highlighter called Genesis Glow that approximates the pallid blue light cast off by screens; it will debut in early June on a direct-to-consumer website. On Tuesday morning, the brand teased an 'unlock' code on its founders' Instagram channels as well as its own, and intends to keep the exact launch date a secret for now.
The launch reflects a broader effort on behalf of the beauty and fashion industries to engage female gamers, a growing segment of the population aided by the pandemic. While plenty of beauty brands have collaborated with popular coed games like The Sims or Roblox, Godmode seeks to integrate the two worlds more fully, creating a cast of characters and a universe of lore through marketing and a makeup collection. Godmode, itself, is not an actual video game or affiliated with one.
'Female gamers are everywhere,' said Mark Loy, the founder and executive chairman of Closer Group and the founder of Spring Studios. 'But brands barely speak to them.'
Gender parity in the gaming population has narrowed significantly in the past few decades; in the US about 53 percent of gamers identified as male, 46 percent as female and 1 percent as non-binary, according to a 2024 report from the Entertainment Software Association. When it comes to preferences, however, there are some distinctly gendered trends; while about half of men who game play 'live service' titles like Fortnite or Grand Theft Auto, nearly 70 percent of women prefer mobile games, according to a 2024 Deloitte survey. The brand's first drop, Genesis, includes the Genesis Glow Highlighter, which approximates the pallid blue glow of a screen's light. (Godmode)
Godmode achieves a more unusual milestone in the beauty industry as the first brand of its era to be fronted by not one but two celebrities, though Loy is reluctant to use the c-word.
'It's important to us that it's not seen as a celebrity brand,' he said.
With celebrities or without them, Godmode will need to create something more explorable, more tangible and more playable than gamified product drops paired with hyper-lush marketing imagery to gain and maintain credibility with its gamers.
'Rina and I have the ability to build a new world for beauty that isn't just, 'Oh, you like this product, buy this product,' right?' Moretz said. A Perfect Match
The realm of video games, only a handful of decades old, has historically been a place where brands go to meet men: the cult bar arcade game Tapper was a branded effort from Anheiser-Busch, and brands like Mercedes-Benz have more recently sponsored esports leagues and made its S-Class available in Mario Kart.
Fashion and beauty companies, by contrast, have only recently entered the category. In 2020, MAC Cosmetics gifted a batch of 12 makeup looks to users of The Sims, which has also offered paid expansion packs sponsored by H&M (in 2007) and Moschino (in 2019). Meanwhile, a number of brands including E.l.f. Cosmetics and Givenchy, and most recently the fragrance and flavors conglomerate Givaudan, have created minigames for Roblox, the online game with 90 million monthly average users. Givaudan's 'The Garden of Memories,' in which players help a cute woodland creature craft perfumes, has logged about 60,000 players since it launched in France in January.
Many of these are attempts to hook young consumers, rather than consumers who game, which has required a carefully calibrated approach by Closer.
Godmode crystallised in 2023, as the incubator sought out celebrity partners. Moretz and Sawayama were deemed a perfect match for the gaming-inspired brand — the former had expressed interest in working on a beauty label to her agents at CAA, while the latter is an ambassador for Playstation. The two met for the first time in New York when they convened to shoot promo photography. Co-founder Chloë Grace Moretz appears as Chroma, her Godmode alter ego, with makeup by Daniel Sallström. She is partial to the brand's Level Up Lip Liners.
The uncommon dual-founder structure was not lost on the greater public when news broke earlier this month that Moretz and Sawayama were collaborating on a beauty line. A representative example, from X: 'I don't think I would have put them together, but hey, good for them!'
The co-founders corral audiences from different fields of the entertainment industry, but are also passionate gamers themselves, they told The Business of Beauty. Sawayama is a fan of tycoon-style titles like Two Point Museum, while Moretz enjoys open-world roleplaying games like Cyberpunk 2077 and Final Fantasy XIV. 'Once I realised how much you can customise and go deep into this character lore and create your own story, it's just a whole different form of gameplay,' Moretz said. A promotional still from Godmode's launch film animated by the production company All of Us Here. (Godmode)
Loy pointed out that the two are 'emotionally and financially invested' in Godmode, but declined to elaborate on the partnership structure. He also hinted at forthcoming collaborations that could see Godmode entrench itself in the world of gaming beyond a product that is 'rebranded with somebody's IP.' There will also be immersive spaces, similar to the ones Closer has designed for brands like Louis Vuitton and Miu Miu.
For the brand's debut, the co-founders will reveal their Godmode alter egos, with the brand's product drops — beginning with 'Genesis' in the summer, and another planned for the fall — released as chapters of an intergalactic series.
'If you're not a gamer, it's hard to understand the fantasy,' Sawayama said.
Sign up to The Business of Beauty newsletter, your complimentary, must-read source for the day's most important beauty and wellness news and analysis.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Etiquette expert shows the ‘correct' way to eat a banana — and people are appalled by it: ‘You offended the entire world's population'
Etiquette expert shows the ‘correct' way to eat a banana — and people are appalled by it: ‘You offended the entire world's population'

New York Post

time32 minutes ago

  • New York Post

Etiquette expert shows the ‘correct' way to eat a banana — and people are appalled by it: ‘You offended the entire world's population'

An etiquette expert is rocking people's worlds by claiming that there is a right and wrong way to eat a banana. While most people don't think twice about eating the fruit — according to William Hanson, known as Britain's leading etiquette coach, people need to whip out cutlery to eat a banana properly. In a recent Instagram video captioned, 'This really is the only way you should be eating a banana,' he is seen sitting at a table, fork and knife in tow, with a perfectly ripe banana in front of him on a plate. 'No, we don't pick it up and peel it like a primate,' Hanson said, kicking off his tutorial. 'Instead, we use a knife and fork. First, going from one end, cut it off, then cut off the other end, turning your knife on its side. Then score down the skin, peel back and eat like so,' the expert instructed. The video is one of those things that people couldn't scroll past without giving their two cents — because it has over 200,000 views and over 40,000 comments. 'What kind of lazy, no-good servants do you have working for you in that big mansion that they didn't even PRE-PEEL YOUR BANANA before serving it?!?? Preposterous!' quipped one angry commenter. 'Bruh, you offended the entire world's population,' said someone else. People seem to be offended by Hanson's claim that people don't know how to properly eat bananas. Instagram/@williamhanson 'Trolling us at this point,' read another comment. And this isn't the first and only fruit Hanson has shown how to properly eat. Grapes were Hanson's second victim — but that tutorial wasn't as controversial. He said people should not pick grapes off one by one and pop them into their mouths. Instead, the correct way to eat them with class is by cutting a smaller bunch using scissors to place the 'grapes on your plate and eat like so.' Commenters were relieved that there was no fork involved in Hanson's grape-eating tutorial. 'I'm glad we didn't use the fork for this,' joked one person. 'So glad he's not using a fork and knife to do so…banana post got me traumatized,' another person chimed in. All jokes aside — it is important to occasionally listen to etiquette experts, especially when it comes to dining out. If you have reservations at a restaurant, always be sure to respect them. 'The service at the high-end restaurant is based upon everyone being there at the same time, on time,' etiquette expert Elaine Swann told Business Insider If a place has a dress code, look it up beforehand and follow it. 'You might live in an area where the attire is more casual and shorts are acceptable, but that may not be acceptable in some higher-end restaurants,' Swann said.

Offset Fires Back After Cardi B Goes Instagram-Official With Patriots' Stefon Diggs
Offset Fires Back After Cardi B Goes Instagram-Official With Patriots' Stefon Diggs

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Offset Fires Back After Cardi B Goes Instagram-Official With Patriots' Stefon Diggs

Cardi B appears to be moving on with her love life amid her messy divorce from fellow rapper Offset. Over the weekend, the 'WAP' musician went Instagram-official with her rumored new love interest, Stefon Diggs. In a now-viral carousel post on Sunday, Cardi B showed off a picture of herself and the New England Patriots wide receiver cuddled up on the deck of a yacht. The post also included snapshots of a room filled with giant bouquets of roses and oversized teddy bears, which appeared to be gifts from Diggs. Cardi B, whose real name is Belcalis Marlenis Almánzar, has not confirmed whether the gifts were from Diggs. In a separate video in the post, she appeared to dance on the star athlete as he smacked and rubbed on her bare backside. It appears the content featuring Diggs was later deleted on the desktop version of Instagram. 'Chapter 5 ……Hello Chapter six,' she captioned the post. Representatives for Cardi Band Diggs did not immediately reply to a request for comment. The two were first seen hanging out together in New York City and Miami in February 2025. Most recently, they were photographed sitting courtside at a New York Knicks game at Madison Square Garden on May 12. The former reality star filed for divorce from Offset (real name Kiari Kendrell Cephus) in July 2024. She'd previously filed for divorce in September 2020, but they later reconciled. The pair share three children — Kulture, Wave and Blossom. Cardi and Offset have publicly clashed on social media on multiple occasions, including on Sunday, when Offset shaded his estranged wife's relationship with Diggs as a 'good roll out n PR' in a since-deleted post on X, formerly Twitter. Separately, he shared a since-deleted GIF of a man throwing a basketball with the words 'TODAY I PASS' written on top. Diggs appeared to respond to the apparent slight from Offset, posting a photo of himself catching a football on his Instagram Stories later that day. During an X Spaces session on May 30, Cardi claimed that Offset has only seen their youngest child, Blossom, 'five times' since her birth, which was announced in September 2024. She also told her nearly 37 million followers in the scathing audio post that she wanted Offset to 'die slow.' Cardi B Just Revealed A Very Risky New Piercing — And It's Not Where You'd Expect Cardi B Deletes Election Night Video After Hurricane Comment Sparks Backlash Cardi B Reacts To Daughter Drawing On Her $60,000 Bag

Grupo Firme cancels appearance at La Onda festival, becoming latest international act to face visa issues
Grupo Firme cancels appearance at La Onda festival, becoming latest international act to face visa issues

Los Angeles Times

timean hour ago

  • Los Angeles Times

Grupo Firme cancels appearance at La Onda festival, becoming latest international act to face visa issues

Grupo Firme was unable to show up for its previously planned June 1 set at Napa's La Onda festival. The Tijuana band announced the cancellation Friday afternoon on social media. 'Currently, the visas of Grupo Firme and the Music VIP [Entertainment] team are in an administrative process by the U.S. Embassy, a situation that makes it impossible for Grupo Firme's performance at La Onda Fest to go on as planned,' the band wrote in a statement posted on its Instagram stories. 'We are sorry for the inconvenience this may cause. Thank you for your understanding and, above all else, the love from our U.S. fans.' Grupo Firme is the latest international musical act facing visa issues since President Trump took office for his second presidential term. Many of these have been música Mexicana artists. The group's news came only a week after Mexican singer Julión Álvarez postponed his May 24 show at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas, after he claimed his work visa had been revoked. The 42-year-old musician alleged in a May 23 Instagram video that he had received the news of his work visa revocation that day, leaving him and his band unable to travel to Texas for their planned performance. He also claimed he didn't have a full sense of clarity regarding the ongoing status of his visa and was limited in what he could dispel about the situation. Also in May, Chicago's Michelada Fest, a Spanish-language music festival that had programmed several Latin American acts was canceled due to concerns over artists' visas. 'Due to the uncertainty surrounding artist visas and the rapidly changing political climate, we're no longer able to guarantee the full experience we had dreamed up for you with all your favorite artists,' the festival's organizers explained in a statement. 'Although we tried to push through, it became clear that we wouldn't be able to deliver the full lineup as planned.' The organizers would go on to write that, as an independent outfit, Michelada Fest 'can't afford to take on a big risk with so much uncertainty ahead.' Grupo Firme, Anitta, Danny Ocean, Tokischa and Luis R. Conriquez were scheduled to perform at the July festival. In early April, the U.S. State Department canceled the work and tourist visas of the members of the Mexican corrido band Los Alegres del Barranco after the group displayed photos of drug lord Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes at its concert in Guadalajara, Mexico. During their March 29 show at the University of Guadalajara, the band put an illustrated depiction of Cervantes — a key player in the Jalisco New Generation Cartel, or CJNG — on a mega-screen while playing their song 'El Dueño del Palenque.' Videos of the incident were captured on social media. 'I'm pleased to announce that the State Department has revoked the band members' work and tourism visas. In the Trump Administration, we take seriously our responsibility over foreigners' access to our country,' said Christopher Landau, the U.S. deputy Secretary of State in April. 'The last thing we need is a welcome mat for people who extol criminals and terrorists.' Outside of the world of Latino artists, British singer FKA twigs announced in April on Instagram that she had to cancel series of concerts for the month in North America — including a slot at Coachella 2025 — due to 'ongoing visa issues.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store