Did you seriously bring up high school gym locker rooms? Seriously?Kerg3927 said:Have you ever been in a male sports locker room? I admit that it's been 25 years for me, since I played (American) football in high school, and maybe things have changed since then. But in my experience, when you have a group of dudes hanging out together, and they all know each other well, they typically act noticeably different than a mixed group of men and women do. There is typically more masculinity, bravado, crude language, etc.
It's been about 25 years for me too, and despite repressing the memories of that terrible place I still remember about 5-6 assholes (who were still trying to figure out what being a man actually meant) defaulting to gorilla-style "Oooga ooga, must establish dominance by being an aggressive idiot!" as what they thought men should be.
That and shit like shoving me around, grabbing my stuff and chucking it in the garbage, or in one case literally pulling down my pants, mocking my yellow underwear as "He's wearing a yellow thong!!!", and proceeded to drag me by the legs on my ass all the way across the locker room before dumping me into the garbage can. To say nothing of all their insults and other bullying because I had no interest in girls or sex (nor had an opportunity to make girl friends because it was an all-boy school), and as a result they assumed I must be "gay".
And let me tell you, the rest of the class that wansn't part of "club asshole" only sorta played along because they didn't want to end up like me, the guy that the entire school shat on.
If that behaviour was normal (as the VP of discipline initially pretended it was), then why is it that when they FINALLY sent someone down there to check on us, the gym teacher (a sports guy) walked in on a relatively MILD day and flipped his shit going "What the actual FUCK are you idiots doing?! You were raised to be better than this! What, do we need to install cameras down here so you don't act like a bunch of animals?! You 5-6 guys, come with me, we're going to the office" and finally, FINALLY, some suspensions got doled out. Afterwards, while the gym locker rooms still had some crass humor and bravado, it was actually within the realm of reason and not like a bunch of animals who learned to speak.
Now, in the adult world, I can't speak to professional level sports. But my dad plays hockey in a "garage league" in the winter, and while there are some crass jokes (and a few guys who don't give a shit and walk around naked after showers despite people going "dood, we don't wanna see that! It's all shriveled up, man!"), my dad says he's never run into any toxic shit, and he's someone with no tolerance for that kind of thing.
TLDR, the locker room example is likely bullshit, especially if you bring up high school, when the BOYS are literally trying to figure out what it means to be a man, and a bunch of them think the right answer is to act like some kind of sex-crazed gorrila who needs to establish dominance.
Also, maybe I just hang out with guys who aren't idiot assholes, but we don't act different when it's just guys VS with girls. We still swear, we still pun, we still shout obscenities when someone launches a Blue Shell, and make the occasional crass joke, etc. Hell, one of the girls in my friend group is more foulmouthed than the guys.
Then again, none of the men in our group feels that masculinity involves crowing about how much sex we have and how much we wanna fuck whomever. We value mutual respect, after all.
Testosterone just makes you more aggressive and potentially "dumbs down" your brain when you get aroused, AFAIK.I know not all men act masculine. But I find it hard to believe that it's "most men." We do have testosterone in our bodies after all.
And considering most of the guys I know aren't sex-crazed goofballs who think passing around lists of chicks they wanna fuck at work is appropriate, I'll say that if testosterone is the cause, then I think the ones who DO think that kind of behaviour is ok suffer from way too much testosterone, instead of the normal levels.
Masculinity, in my view, is about Protecting, Providing, and stepping up to Lead by Example (or deferring to the leadership of someone who knows better, and then doing your task as well as possible). Acting like a sex-crazed gorilla desperately trying to asset dominance, to me smacks of someone trying to prove they're masculine when they lack the ability to actually lead by example.
Does someone get hurt or feel that they need to shut up and be very very small to avoid attention because they feel like they could be the target of harassment? Does someone have to deal with a bunch of people talking about how much they want to fuck them and it makes them feel seriously uncomfortable?Agreed. Harm is a difficult thing to define, though.
That's harm. It also cuts down on productivity because those people are no longer fully focused on their tasks, but rather the shit that's happening to them that's making them feel like they should get the hell out.
So...A lot of big game studios believe that Crunch Time is a good idea. Some accept Crunch that goes on for months. They basically set unreasonable deadlines and force developers to do insane overtime (likely unpaid and only compensated by bonuses if they meet the unreasonable deadline, and not as much as if they were paid the overtime), and make some basically live at the office and ignore their families and lives for long periods of time, or risk being fired. And it doesn't actually break any labor laws that are supposed to protect people.As far as F2P, I've never played League of Legends. I was just saying that their business model appears to be successful for their shareholders, which is the reason all for-profit companies exist.
These studios make tons of money with big budget games. Does this mean that Extended Crunch Time is a good idea and that it's a successful business model?
Hell no! It causes mass burnouts and makes talented people leave the industry, it exhausts people and makes them work a lot less effectively, and makes them stop caring about their work. And it can destroy families and lead to various stress-related health problems.
And, to counterpoint a little, the small studio I worked at last summer was founded on the ideal of "You can still make ambitious games while running a business ethically" and of avoiding crunch time. Other studios and execs looked at our project and said "It's impossible to make something that ambitious with only about 10 people, that small a budget and no crunch". And yet, the project is very much on track for completion without ANY crunch needed.
Just because something makes a lot of money, or follows conventional wisdom, doesn't mean it shoudn't be questioned or improved.
So just because Riot can make hugs gobs of cash on LoL, doesn't mean that their "bro culture" (where they share lists of women at work they want to fuck, and ignore women's suggestions) should be emulated. Hell, I'd pin their success on being the first not-shit F2P game and managing to crack the E-sports scene in Korea, plus some distinctive cool cosmetics, not on whether or not they allow guys to fart in each other's faces, and make crude sex jokes in front of the women there.