"First - there are women in EFT already (trader, some future key storyline quests will have women as main characters). However, when numerous replies asked if this meant Escape from Tarkov would eventually see playable women, Battlestate held firm that it would not be adding them, offering a different explanation: "The employee was reprimanded and properly instructed. "The answers were done by one, not a key BSG employee which probably were misinterpreted and as a result didn't reflect the official position of the company, that we always respected women in wars and military women. "Regarding the 3 years old article with points about women in EFT," the tweet reads. In response to criticism for the 2016 stance taken by Dyatlov, Battlestate issued a statement on its official Twitter separating itself from the expressed views. The Wccftech interview was re-circulated on social media recently due to a sudden surge in Tarkov's popularity with some help from a recent Twitch event. There's only place for hardened men in this place." "I can agree with you and we discussed it for a very long time, but we came to the conclusion that women can't handle that amount of stress. When pressed by the interviewer on the fact that women are involved in real-world combat scenarios, Dyatlov continued: At the end of the interview with Wccftech Dyatlov was asked about playable female characters, and said that while the studio had considered them, they "came to the conclusion that women are not allowed to be in the war." The statement was made in response to the recent resurfacing of a 2016 interview in which one of the developers, Pavel Dyatlov, gave a very different reason for the lack of playable women in the game (which was unreleased at the time). Battlestate Games has stated that it will not be adding playable women to its first-person shooter, Escape from Tarkov, due to the "huge amount of work" it says is required to implement them.