Mark Kern plans on officially re-launching League For Gamers on July 15th next week. The initiative for the organization is to help bridge the gap between consumers and major corporations, as well as working with legislators for helping preserve the historic values of gaming and helping the consumers get their voices heard. Kern recently rolled out a few of the details for the features of the League For Gamers website and what members can expect from the outlet.

The information is contained within a brief Twitlonger post where he mentions that the site’s opening will be broken down into phases and that each phase will contain a number of different features. The opening salvo that will get things rolling and gamers, indie devs and bystanders alike utilizing the site to its fullest is the member sign-up and profile features. Kern writes…

“On or around the 15th, you can expect us to open up user profiles. Membership is the first priority for LFG, since members drive all activity. You will be able to log in, create your profile, upload an Avatar and list some information about yourself. You will also be able to see a list of LFG updates on the website itself. You will also be able to list your skills, which will help indie devs find talent or for LFG to find more volunteers. You’ll be able to search profiles too.”

The idea is to get League For Gamers feeling like a right proper social hub for all things gaming. This is very important for fostering growth and attracting a large following and audience. If they really want to look enticing to communities having MOBA, FGC and e-sports sub-communities will help a ton, as there will be a lot of hardcore gamers who pump righteous amounts of dollar bills, rupies, rupees loonies and euros into the market.

Now the real challenge is gaining widespread recognition. It will actually require a bit of marketing wizardry to get the gatekeepers of old to recognize League For Gamers and actually report on it. For now many of the old guard have a rather sour view of Mark Kern because he attempted to first approach #GamerGate as a neutral and they flayed him as a supporter. After getting royally burned, Kern opted to join #GamerGate as a full-on pro.

At this stage in the game the League For Gamers could be #GamerGate’s legal and organizational pipeline to the rest of the AAA industry (if gamers so choose) opening the door for more discussions regarding some of the piping hot tension boiling at unsafe degrees in the gaming industry’s digital kitchen.

For now, Kern makes it known that membership support and growth are what’s important and that’s going to be the starting plate for League For Gamers when it officially starts up on July 15th…

“Members are the heart and soul of League For Gamers. Since every activity we plan for the future (such as charities, e-mail and call-in campaigns, volunteer groups, indie dev teams, local chapters) revolves around members, it made sense to start there.”

You can learn more about the new organization by paying a kind visit to the official League For Gamers website.