Palestine.
For many, that absence is not political.
It is personal.
It is the place of grandparents’ stories…
the olive trees remembered in family photos…
the songs carried from one generation to the next.
A homeland that lives in memory, even when borders shift.
One player wrote:
“I just wanted to play as the land my family came from. Seeing it gone feels like losing it again.”
The movement that followed is not loud.
It is tender.
It is simple:
Let this land exist on the map, as it exists in the hearts of millions.
In a world where identity matters — even a digital one — adding Palestine is more than a feature request.
It is recognition.
It is dignity.
It is belonging.
And sometimes, even in a game, that is all people ask for.
