Ok, I get that, but don't you think it's important to look at Rikku as who she is, not what she looks like? Rikku is:Lil devils x said:I am not arguing that Upton is an example of a " Normal woman", I am arguing that the photo shopped Rikku is not obese. Healthy is a separate issue
Fair enough.Lil devils x said:I am not arguing that Upton is an example of a " Normal woman", I am arguing that the photo shopped Rikku is not obese. Healthy is a separate issue,a s we even have Olympians that are not healthy as well even with intensive training. If they are calling Rikku Obese, they would be calling Upton obese as well due to comparable body fat percentages. It is absurd to call Rikku obese and think Kate is not. Their perception of what is and what is not obese is the issue.
Nice ad hominem you got there. Kate Upton may look like she's healthy, and at this stage in her life can surely function sufficiently to pass for 'healthy' by current standards(which are terrible standards, btw), but what about 15 years from now? 20? Heck, while her diet is certainly better than the standard American diet, it's still a long way off from being optimal and still has stupid things like cleanses thrown in. Her exercise routine is effectively no better than low intensity aerobics, and will barely help her improve her joint and bone strength. Regardless, how likely is she to follow her current lifestyle when her career no longer depends on it a decade from now? You seem to be of the opinion that everyone turns into this fragile, paper scarecrow as they age. Below are two of many studies that prove you can do plenty to significantly improve quality of life, even as you age.elvor0 said:.....you don't have a significant other do you? Sounds like something out of the GAF.
Most people are likely to have those issues to a certain degree later in life, it's called getting old. that's a fact of life. Upton isn't exactly fit, but she's hardly unhealthy.
The characters role is also a separate issue than the one I was discussing, as for a better fitting character model for a character like Rikku, I think the petite agile muscular gymnast would be much more fitting. More like this :AgedGrunt said:Ok, I get that, but don't you think it's important to look at Rikku as who she is, not what she looks like? Rikku is:Lil devils x said:I am not arguing that Upton is an example of a " Normal woman", I am arguing that the photo shopped Rikku is not obese. Healthy is a separate issue
1) 15 years old in FF-X. For her age, being quite thin is not unusual. Size will also help convey this youthful age to gamers, especially compared to the male protagonist who is a small, whiny *****.
2) A thief! (ok, technically skilled in alchemy and chemistry, but her battle command is Steal). She steals items from enemies and can destroy machina easily. So she needs legs as quick as her hands.
Whether you're male or female and have a "healthy" weight and appearance, if you're too big and slow you can't do the same work as someone smaller and faster. Stealing, fighting, sports, big and bulky can only do so much.
In a video game the player should believe what they see. I could not believe that a fat Rikku could have the speed, agility and dexterity as portrayed (and compared to other party members, and you'll have to ignore the sphere grid, but that's more or less magic).
Husky boys and girls are totally fine people, but in fictional roles that require physical standards, it doesn't make sense.
Eh, it's FF, heavily inspired by anime,specifically shounen, which is in itself largely inspired by legends and the like. Strength is more expressed by what the character can do than what they look like anymore since around the mid-80's.Lil devils x said:The characters role is also a separate issue than the one I was discussing, as for a better fitting character model for a character like Rikku, I think the petite agile muscular gymnast would be much more fitting. More like this :AgedGrunt said:Ok, I get that, but don't you think it's important to look at Rikku as who she is, not what she looks like? Rikku is:Lil devils x said:I am not arguing that Upton is an example of a " Normal woman", I am arguing that the photo shopped Rikku is not obese. Healthy is a separate issue
1) 15 years old in FF-X. For her age, being quite thin is not unusual. Size will also help convey this youthful age to gamers, especially compared to the male protagonist who is a small, whiny *****.
2) A thief! (ok, technically skilled in alchemy and chemistry, but her battle command is Steal). She steals items from enemies and can destroy machina easily. So she needs legs as quick as her hands.
Whether you're male or female and have a "healthy" weight and appearance, if you're too big and slow you can't do the same work as someone smaller and faster. Stealing, fighting, sports, big and bulky can only do so much.
In a video game the player should believe what they see. I could not believe that a fat Rikku could have the speed, agility and dexterity as portrayed (and compared to other party members, and you'll have to ignore the sphere grid, but that's more or less magic).
Husky boys and girls are totally fine people, but in fictional roles that require physical standards, it doesn't make sense.
Petite, strong, quick, With high agility would fit her much better. I think her original character could use much more muscle.
She also has an abnormally enlarged head and eyes. Anatomically, she's off in a variety of ways all over her body, though. Rikku, like most animated characters, is not realistically proportioned. It allows characters like that to be more iconic, emotive, and idealized. Nothing wrong with any of that.rosac said:I know a lot of girls that are a similar build to Rikku on the left, they exercise regularly and eat well. Seriously, she's just slim/toned and shockingly for a vidja game character doesn't have tits the size of my head whilst being ridiculously skinny.
No.Redryhno said:So what you're saying is to combat a real world problem, we must use solely fictional examples of fictional characters?maninahat said:You asked why they don't just use realistic models. I told you it is because sexy, skinny women are generally seen as more marketable.Redryhno said:[snip]
That is not the question I asked. And that is not what the article claims was the intent. Is it about bulimia, or is it about game shapes?
Bulimia and game shapes go hand in hand. Bulimia is a consequence of a person's anxiety about what is the "proper way to look". This proper look is dictated by the world around you, in that we are bombarded with endless depictions of idealized, sexy women in advertising, entertainment and human interaction. We are trained from childhood to measure a person's value or worth on their appearance. It's why Susan Boyle got famous; she shocked people who believed the patently absurd (yet widely accepted) idea that only good looking people are capable of singing.
To combat bulimia, you have to let these anxious people know that - actually - not being skinny isn't a bad thing. You can help that by not making fat people invisible in entertainment.
I'm going to assume that anorexia/bulemia organisations have other methods of combating damaging self images beyond editing pictures of game characters. The fact that the article only talks about the game character method doesn't mean they don't do anything else - however if everything else they do isn't really game related, it may not get a mention in an article on a gaming website.We are bombarded much more by real-world media than we are game media, and yet this article uses SOLELY game characters(heck, most of them aren't even recent or even much more than niche games). It doesn't use celebrity shops, real people in the world that are both healthy and have a variety of body shapes that aren't the "skinny norm" as you put it, they don't even use cosplayers to get the same idea across while also having the geeky edge.
I mean, are you saying that games have a bigger impact on body shapes than...the real world, live-action media, and parts of first-world society combined? And that we need to fight game shapes first?
Is there really a point to be made regarding body image standards when fictional characters who are either healthy looking or stylized are made to look so overweight that they have serious health risks? Even ignoring the fact that this is yet another point on the long list of attempts to make being more fat then the human body was meant to be accepted instead of dealing with the issue, it begs the question of why another instance of non-gamers trying to mess around with game characters to put a world view is being tolerated.chikusho said:An organisation makes an illustrative point regarding body standards for girls with eating disorders.
Gamers flip the fuck out for no concievable reason, once again showcasing the tact and grace they so vehemently deny exists within the culture.
At some point you have to wonder if it's less about "games don't affect the real world" and more "the real worlds doesn't even matter to me".
Stay classy, gamers.
Yeah, fuck those guys trying to help people suffering with eating disorders!Zontar said:Is there really a point to be made regarding body image standards when fictional characters who are either healthy looking or stylized are made to look so overweight that they have serious health risks? Even ignoring the fact that this is yet another point on the long list of attempts to make being more fat then the human body was meant to be accepted instead of dealing with the issue, it begs the question of why another instance of non-gamers trying to mess around with game characters to put a world view is being tolerated.chikusho said:An organisation makes an illustrative point regarding body standards for girls with eating disorders.
Gamers flip the fuck out for no concievable reason, once again showcasing the tact and grace they so vehemently deny exists within the culture.
At some point you have to wonder if it's less about "games don't affect the real world" and more "the real worlds doesn't even matter to me".
Stay classy, gamers.
The only ones here without class are those who made the images in the first place.
Yes, you were wrong and No, it did not. Although yes, Rikku is distorted I am not even sure what they were doing to her head in that picture, she still has comparable body fat percentages and body type to Kate Upton. IF Kate Upton is not Obese, neither is Rikku, it is the perception that Rikku is that is false.Johnisback said:Which is why I used ratios to show that Rikku's measurements are much larger and not the measurements themselves.Gundam GP01 said:You do realize that the image of Rikku is objectively bigger than the other one and seems to be zoomed in more, right
I'm not claiming that it's some super accurate, scientific level shit I've done there, like I said in my post it's just something I threw together in Microsoft Pain in 2 minutes. But when someone claims the sky isn't blue you have to get creative in proving to them that it is.
How exactly am I wrong? I wanted to show that Rikku's measurements (in that picture) are larger than in the picture of Kate Upton provided. Does my little 2 minute project not show that?ILikeEggs said:While he is wrong, and you are correct in observing that, Kate is still actually significantly more 'normal' than the post-photoshop Rikku.
Man, just...what?Leon Royce said:If Americans didn't eat so much garbage they wouldn't be so fat.
Stop eating food imitation products, chemical products, GMO, fertilizer, pesticides and eat real food instead. Watch the fat melt away.