Hey i wanna talk in game but I have indian accent everyone gonna make fun of me so i dont talk in game what should i do?
insecurity is not something you control if you haven't realized lmao. same goes for confidence. you don't just one day wake up and be like "ahh yes, today i have crazy confidence". for a lot of people confidence is something you have to build up over long amounts of time and it can easily be broken down in seconds again
3 options.
Don't give a shit. And if anyone says something like actually disrespectful just report them and make sure you write a detailed report on how much of a dickhead that person was to make Valorant a better place and just having your voice not be made fun of.
Use a voice changer. Honestly it only costs a little and just make it relatively obnoxious so no one will actually hear the accent. Or you can take some classes on linguistics to try to improve your accent because there are ways to do that and it could help.
Just queue with friends. Not a solution but there's not many things you can do in this scenario. I'm a squeaker but I just lowered my voice a little through vocal practice and shit but an accent is much harder to deal with.
He really shouldn't. But it is how it is. I would prefer if everyone chose option number 1. Because honestly if someone's being a dick. I don't see people reporting enough. Riot can ban people for toxicity. People. fucking do it. It's literally 2 buttons. But I do lower my voice. And that's how I can kinda mask my lisp.
And these really are the only options I know of.
Bro I literally got harassed to no end for making my username out of Chinese Characters (or Japanese Kanji).
It was utterly garbage to see how many racist remarks were thrown at me for having a Chinese character name. Changed my username back to my original one eventually but the experience sucked badly.
For voice coms, not too sure how bad that would be. I had a guy with an Indian accent on my team and no one really said anything + I'm friends with a crap load of Indian people so I kinda got used to the traditional "auntie" accent.