Here are some examples of SWJ stuff you can find in this game..

-->* Near the beginning of the game, a flashback set in the 1910's is shown to the childhood of the protagonist. His father is depicted as extremely abusive, and the scene depicts him trying to find his son to beat him because he's been seen dating a black girl. His wife, who's revealed as Jewish, is trying to stop him. He openly uses racial slurs, like the n-word, and the word "queer". When his wife tries to stop him, he hits her and uses both sexist and anti-semitic slurs.



-->* In a cutscene at the beginning parts of the game, the biggest Nazi villain in the game, who appeared in that same role in the previous games as well, is a female high-ranking official. She is seen as having a 20-or-so years old daughter, who is very obese, and is revealed to be lesbian (her mother discovering this by reading her diary). Her mother berates her in a very nasty way for both things, scolding her for being so fat and not following the exercise regime she had ordered, and berating, taunting and insulting her for her "deviancy" for being a lesbian. (It gets even worse from that point on, but I won't spoil too much of the cutscene.)



Not surprisingly, the daughter very quickly deserts the Nazis and joins the heroes of the game. She is shown to have no negative personality characteristics or attitudes.



-->* I'm not exactly certain of this (because it has been so long since I have played the previous games), but I get the strong feeling that the word "Nazi" is spoken a lot more in this game than in the previous ones. Previous games used many other terms, such as "German forces", and while "Nazi" was also used, I don't think it was used even nearly as much as here. It's very often used in expressions like "killing Nazis", and "Nazis are not welcome here", and other such peculiar expressions (which, as commented earlier, wouldn't raise any suspicion on their own, but given everything else...)



-->* More peculiarly, however, the word "fascist" is used extraordinarily often as well, especially in the parts of the game that happen in America. I don't remember ever seeing or hearing that word being used in any video game that depicts Nazis (either in a historically semi-accurate way, or in a more fictional settings). If that word has ever been used in another video game to describe Nazis, I don't remember ever hearing or seeing it. In this game it's said by many characters, and perhaps the most prominent (and perhaps very telling) example is uttered by the playable character himself at one point:

"Come and get me, you white♥♥♥♥♥fascist Nazi pigs!"

This is eerily similar to the regressive leftist rhetoric in the United States. (I really have to wonder why the word "fascist" is there. The boast would work perfectly well without it. Yet they decided to put it there. I just have to wonder why.)



-->* There's an unusual amount of black people among the American rebels fighting the Nazis.



-->* In one scene, a black woman is shown with burn scars from a bomb. This exchange happens between her and the protagonist:

Him: "Monsters did this."

Her: "No, men did this."

If there is a political message being depicted in this dialogue, it's really smart. It plays on the ambiguity of the word "men", and could be construed as "plausible deniability" of sorts.



On one hand, "men" is a very common word (especially in the 1960's, which is the time where the game is situated) for "people". In other words, that sentence would be completely synonymous with "no, people did this."



On the other hand, this is a woman, who is depicted as a victim of an attack, saying "men did this", which feels like an accusation eerily parroting the current regressive feminist narrative. Of course I can't say for sure, but I just get the feeling that the ambiguity is completely deliberate.



-->* The journal of a Nazi soldier describes the protagonist with these words: "[...] big, murderous ape. Blazkowicz. People like him. Communists, anarchists, degenerates. They need to be exterminated from this planet, just like the Führer said. We are superior. Strongest and bravest! We are not afraid of them! Earth belongs to us!"



I suppose that historically Nazi soldiers probably did detest communists and anarchists. However, I can't help but to think that this is trying to garner some kind of sympathy for "communists" and "anarchists", by having a Nazi soldier hate them and wish them exterminated.



-->* Fictional newspaper articles can be collected throughout the game. One of them says the following. I have the strong feeling the game developers are referring to Donald Trump:



"...the larger the mob, the harder the test. In small areas, before small electorates, a first-rate man occasionally fights his way through, carrying even the mob with him by force of his personality. But when the field is nationwide, and the fight must be waged chiefly at second and third hand, and the force of personality cannot so readily make itself felt, then all the odds are on the man who is, intrinsically, the most devious and mediocre - the man who can most easily adeptly disperse the notion that his mind is a virtual vacuum.

The Presidency tends, year by year, to go to such men. As democracy is perfected, the office represents, more and more closely, the inner soul of the people. We move towards a lofty ideal. On some great and glorious day the plain folks of the land will reach their heart's desire at last, and the White House will be adorned by a downright moron."