Here's about the only worthwhile passage from that whole Wiki article:
Diversity and inclusivity
While coverage has occasionally treated GamerGate as being about white men resisting diversity in gaming, many women and minorities have come out in support of the movement.[67] A portion of those women and minorities that supported the #GamerGate movement took issue with the widespread description of the movement as misogynistic, asserting that the focus on misogyny served mainly to "deflect criticism" of gaming journalism, according to The Washington Post.[1] A second Twitter hashtag, "#NotYourShield", began to be used with the intention of showing that women and other minorities in the gaming community were also seeking changes in the ethical guidelines of the video game industry and press, whilst denying that the core issues behind #GamerGate were driven by sexism.[4][1][78] William Usher on Cinemablend argued that the accusations of misogyny use women as a "shield to be silently used in order for gaming media — and those that gaming media represents — to push an agenda".