So I was browsing around on the internet today as I usually do when it's another boring Monday in the office before the holidays, which aren't quite over, and i came across an article on Bloomburg. Bloomburg typically does a bit more business centric articles but occasionally dips into tech and video games whenever their editors get desperate for content.
Today's article is bragging about how cool Aloy is in Horizon Zero Dawn and the upcoming sequel and how it's just so great that strong female characters are starting to emerge from Sony Entertainment.
As expected of most video game articles, a lot of what is said in the article comes from a writer who doesn't have any real basis in video game history and therefore doesn't have references available (except google, but come on what self repecting journalist is actually going to bother doing research anyway?) to immediately dig through their lifetime of playing video games to call out the countless "strong female characters" out of a very deep hat.
There is, however some grounding of meaning here in the article that I think needs to be related more clearly.
I don't think video games now, or frankly ever, had a sexism problem when it came to having a selection of good strong female characters within the actual video games themselves. That isn't to say there haven't also been bad female characters too, because of course, there have been bad characters of every creed in games too. But I don't believe there was ever a sexism problem in video games themselves.
However, the real people and real studios obviously have a big fucking problem. I think we can all agree on that. From sexual abuse reports at Riot games, to the insanity that has been thriving at Blizzard Entertainment, to the date rape from higher ups at Ubisoft. I don't think there is a major studio that hasn't had some form of sexist problems.
I think what really gets my goat about the article is that they make specific mention to Aloy being ugly, or at least not super model beautiful, as if a character can be amazing in every other possible way but if she is too attractive then she is to be dismissed as eye candy and nothing more. It sends a terrible message in that a woman can only be valuable if she is not exceptionally attractive and it demeans characters because it places judgement on them specifically on their appearance which is hypocritical of how the people behind this mentality want the world to judge women. Ideally you are to measure a woman's worth on what she can do, not on her physical appearance, yet this article directly comments on Aloy being a good example based off her appearance first citing " The game’s developers said they wanted to create a “believable and inspirational hero for everyone.” Because of course she can only inspire people if she is only a 7/10 and not a 10/10 obviously.
The author goes on to say " Characters like Aloy remain too rare among mainstream games. As a video-game enthusiast, I find it uncomfortable playing leading titles like Tomb Raider, Genshin Impact or Bayonetta, all of which feature female characters in skimpy outfits. " Which just goes to show you that the author has no idea what they are talking about and are commenting on these games based strictly on reputation and not actual reality. In the new Tomb Raider trilogy (which covers the last TEN YEARS of Lara Croft games minus a couple isometric niche games) Lara wears snow jackets, cargo pants, and at the very skimpiest a tank top. Genshin Impact might have some tight outfits but none of it seems too revealing based of what character images I could find (maybe optional outfits?). And Bayonetta....technically she's naked most of the game and is actually wearing her hair so this one I'll tentatively agree with.
But sexy characters do not equal sexism, nor sexist attitudes. Bayonetta uses her sexuallity as a weapon and is always in total control over it. She has all the power when in comes to that, so I don't believe that you could argue she comes from a sexist viewpoint.
I tried thinking about this and I can't really think of any real characters that are sexism fodder outside of hookers in GTA games that aren't real characters or the strippers in hitman. Side NPC's don't count as characters as they are extremely minor in the grand setting of the game.
Are there any main characters that you'd argue are just sexist representations?
Today's article is bragging about how cool Aloy is in Horizon Zero Dawn and the upcoming sequel and how it's just so great that strong female characters are starting to emerge from Sony Entertainment.
Video Game Industry Struggles to Shake Sexist Attitudes
Denigrating portrayals of women are common in popular titles, but a hit Sony game offers a glimmer of hope that things are changing.
www.bloomberg.com
As expected of most video game articles, a lot of what is said in the article comes from a writer who doesn't have any real basis in video game history and therefore doesn't have references available (except google, but come on what self repecting journalist is actually going to bother doing research anyway?) to immediately dig through their lifetime of playing video games to call out the countless "strong female characters" out of a very deep hat.
There is, however some grounding of meaning here in the article that I think needs to be related more clearly.
I don't think video games now, or frankly ever, had a sexism problem when it came to having a selection of good strong female characters within the actual video games themselves. That isn't to say there haven't also been bad female characters too, because of course, there have been bad characters of every creed in games too. But I don't believe there was ever a sexism problem in video games themselves.
However, the real people and real studios obviously have a big fucking problem. I think we can all agree on that. From sexual abuse reports at Riot games, to the insanity that has been thriving at Blizzard Entertainment, to the date rape from higher ups at Ubisoft. I don't think there is a major studio that hasn't had some form of sexist problems.
I think what really gets my goat about the article is that they make specific mention to Aloy being ugly, or at least not super model beautiful, as if a character can be amazing in every other possible way but if she is too attractive then she is to be dismissed as eye candy and nothing more. It sends a terrible message in that a woman can only be valuable if she is not exceptionally attractive and it demeans characters because it places judgement on them specifically on their appearance which is hypocritical of how the people behind this mentality want the world to judge women. Ideally you are to measure a woman's worth on what she can do, not on her physical appearance, yet this article directly comments on Aloy being a good example based off her appearance first citing " The game’s developers said they wanted to create a “believable and inspirational hero for everyone.” Because of course she can only inspire people if she is only a 7/10 and not a 10/10 obviously.
The author goes on to say " Characters like Aloy remain too rare among mainstream games. As a video-game enthusiast, I find it uncomfortable playing leading titles like Tomb Raider, Genshin Impact or Bayonetta, all of which feature female characters in skimpy outfits. " Which just goes to show you that the author has no idea what they are talking about and are commenting on these games based strictly on reputation and not actual reality. In the new Tomb Raider trilogy (which covers the last TEN YEARS of Lara Croft games minus a couple isometric niche games) Lara wears snow jackets, cargo pants, and at the very skimpiest a tank top. Genshin Impact might have some tight outfits but none of it seems too revealing based of what character images I could find (maybe optional outfits?). And Bayonetta....technically she's naked most of the game and is actually wearing her hair so this one I'll tentatively agree with.
But sexy characters do not equal sexism, nor sexist attitudes. Bayonetta uses her sexuallity as a weapon and is always in total control over it. She has all the power when in comes to that, so I don't believe that you could argue she comes from a sexist viewpoint.
I tried thinking about this and I can't really think of any real characters that are sexism fodder outside of hookers in GTA games that aren't real characters or the strippers in hitman. Side NPC's don't count as characters as they are extremely minor in the grand setting of the game.
Are there any main characters that you'd argue are just sexist representations?