This paper explores the dual nature of digital gaming ecosystems as potential vectors for both conflict and peacebuilding. Challenging the apparent "cult of war" in virtual narratives, it investigates how adaptive legal frameworks and intercultural regulation can transform these spaces into platforms for dialogue. The analysis focuses on the intersection of law, religion, and digital governance, proposing a normative shift to foster virtual coexistence and mitigate the rise of fundamentalism through rights-based digital interactions.