Well, politics in games is nothing new. Go back to the early 2000s and the majority of games featured a naked avatar for US military might defending his country (very often characterized as the entire Earth) against 'alien' invaders of one kind or another. It was much the same in movies (and still is, quite often).
It might not sit well with some to hear it, but Halo and Call of Duty are much more overt forms of political propaganda - I mean, just try to think of a game from that period where Western political establishments were painted as 'the bad guys'; where military force wasn't taken as the only obvious solution to any problem; where typical western values weren't those that needed 'defending'. The closest you get is cyberpunk corporate dystopias, but no-one ever regards them as serious political commentary (it's normally massive corporations selling them to us, ffs).
So yeah, nothing new there. What's changed in the last ten years is the hyper-fixation on social politics ('woke', I think the kids call it). Personally, I think it's a red herring: good old divide and conquer. I think the idea is to stop a whole vast swathe of people from talking about material things they absolutely agree on (like decent jobs, affordable housing, healthcare provisions, well-maintained local infrastructure, clean waterways, etc) and have them focus on things they will never agree on (like sex, gender, race, etc.). And for the middle classes who are pushing all this stuff into our media, it's a nice moral fig leaf. They are the beneficiaries of a system that doesn't benefit most people, so to assuage that guilt, they've shifted the focus to areas where they can feel like moral superiors (an ironically colonialist view that gaming and movies are backward and savage cultures that need civilising by better-educated people - and like all good colonialists they've wrecked the joint by presuming to know better than the locals).
But on the grander scale, woke is all smoke and mirrors - a dead cat, a distraction: most people on either side of the argument are facing the same escalating cost of living, stagnating wages, impenetrable housing markets and the complete erosion of a way of life that a century of their labour paid for, but instead of holding those in charge to account, we're going to war over dumb shit we'll never agree on.
What a time to be alive.