lol, I lost it when I read that! hahaha.Blablahb said:Then you've never met my mother-in-law.Lilani said:I don't think there is ever an appropriate context for calling somebody a ****.
lol, I lost it when I read that! hahaha.Blablahb said:Then you've never met my mother-in-law.Lilani said:I don't think there is ever an appropriate context for calling somebody a ****.
You know its very immature to correct a person's spelling and grammar to make your point appear more valid.iRevanchist said:*womenLordFish said:The woman are not real, It is a work of fiction, Games are an art form.
There wouldn't be outcry if a woman was punched/raped/dressed as a strippernunassissin in a book, movie or TV program (assuming it was aired at the right time).
and if a woman was unched/raped/dressed as a strippernunassissin in a book, movie or TV program you bet your ass there would be a public outcry.
It's in the same game as "Press X to kill dudes". One step at a time, please.Mortai Gravesend said:Is "press X to get a job" a good lesson in today's economy? Is "press X not to starve" something that people in 3rd world nations should applaud? Or does it trivialize things with unrealistically easy solutions?lacktheknack said:Isn't "press X to not be raped" a step in the right direction? It shows a girl in a nasty situation turning it right the hell around on itself. That's female empowerment, is it not?Mahoshonen said:On the other hand, when I look at the recent history of games and see:
2010: Metroid Other M-"Samus is my precious wittle waifu uguu~!"
2011: Duke Nukem Forever-"Hey Let's make constant misogynistic jokes and show bimbos getting raped to death!"
2012: Tomb Raider-"Press X to not be raped."
It trivializes the problem of "there's someone there who wants to hurt me" with an unnecessarily easy solution ("KILL HIM IN THE FACE"). I never saw the game as an empowerment thing anyways, I always was viewing it as "Horrible Situation Survival Sim", with attempted rape not being one of the simulated survival bits (it's there for the same reason it's on TV - it adds sympathy towards the victim and allows her to act in a way that no one will question, I'd only consider your point valid if you have to manipulate the controls beyond "press one button to keep watching").Mortai Gravesend said:But 'Press X to kill dudes" isn't empowering for anyone, so I don't see how the comparison changes the situation.lacktheknack said:It's in the same game as "Press X to kill dudes". One step at a time, please.Mortai Gravesend said:Is "press X to get a job" a good lesson in today's economy? Is "press X not to starve" something that people in 3rd world nations should applaud? Or does it trivialize things with unrealistically easy solutions?lacktheknack said:Isn't "press X to not be raped" a step in the right direction? It shows a girl in a nasty situation turning it right the hell around on itself. That's female empowerment, is it not?Mahoshonen said:On the other hand, when I look at the recent history of games and see:
2010: Metroid Other M-"Samus is my precious wittle waifu uguu~!"
2011: Duke Nukem Forever-"Hey Let's make constant misogynistic jokes and show bimbos getting raped to death!"
2012: Tomb Raider-"Press X to not be raped."
It's only a word. Like any number of swear words. I mean, we still use words like "dick" or "jerk" or "jackass" to describe peopl, and these could be considered offensive to men. Most of the time, when people are using swear words, it's just an expletive, generally used without reference to the historical context or the origins of the word.zLilani said:I don't think there is ever an appropriate context for calling somebody a ****.Khanht Cope said:What you've taken are tweets. They're soundbites wihtout sufficient context or elaboration to draw commentary without that being perceived as trollish or 'reactive'.
This is what I get for not tracking my own arguments. Please punch me in the face.Mortai Gravesend said:It doesn't trivialize it, it was never meant to mean anything. I'm saying if you're trying to portray it as empowerment then there's the issue. And you're backtracking if you now say it isn't empowerment, that was the statement I took issue with in the first place.lacktheknack said:It trivializes the problem of "there's someone there who wants to hurt me" with an unnecessarily easy solution ("KILL HIM IN THE FACE"). I never saw the game as an empowerment thing anyways, I always was viewing it as "Horrible Situation Survival Sim", with attempted rape not being one of the simulated survival bits (it's there for the same reason it's on TV - it adds sympathy towards the victim and allows her to act in a way that no one will question, I'd only consider your point valid if you have to manipulate the controls beyond "press one button to keep watching").Mortai Gravesend said:But 'Press X to kill dudes" isn't empowering for anyone, so I don't see how the comparison changes the situation.lacktheknack said:It's in the same game as "Press X to kill dudes". One step at a time, please.Mortai Gravesend said:Is "press X to get a job" a good lesson in today's economy? Is "press X not to starve" something that people in 3rd world nations should applaud? Or does it trivialize things with unrealistically easy solutions?lacktheknack said:Isn't "press X to not be raped" a step in the right direction? It shows a girl in a nasty situation turning it right the hell around on itself. That's female empowerment, is it not?Mahoshonen said:On the other hand, when I look at the recent history of games and see:
2010: Metroid Other M-"Samus is my precious wittle waifu uguu~!"
2011: Duke Nukem Forever-"Hey Let's make constant misogynistic jokes and show bimbos getting raped to death!"
2012: Tomb Raider-"Press X to not be raped."
If you're taking a video game as a method of effectively conveying actual methods of survival, then you're probably overestimating the medium a bit at the moment. I don't see how you can draw connections between "press X to get a job" or "press X to not starve" in a piece of entertainment that runs on the idea of the protagonist NOT getting raped and killed. As is, most game economics DO function on "press X to get job" (see the Sims) or "press X to not starve" (see Fallout: New Vegas on hardcore mode). I don't expect much more than that, based on the context and aspirations of the game.
If you want to see someone recovering mentally after a terrible event, try playing "The Path" or "Trauma", games which are to Tomb Raider as eggs are to asparagus (they both are food, but that's where similarities end).
More or less, I just see a huge red herring from you. You went from empowerment to crap I wasn't talking about.
Thats... not what feminism is.psijac said:Feminist make bad feminist. anyone who claims to speak for all women on every topic has their head so far up their own as they can taste their own breathe
The important part isn't the medium in which the scene takes place, but the framing of the scene within its' own narrative. Movies have reached the point (just like books and teather) where you can expect a rape-scene, or other scene of similar emotional gravitas, to be handled in a fair manner. That's why the Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, Irreversible, Strawdog and many others can portray horrific violence against women and "get away" with it, because those movies set it up carefully and handle it with the respect it deserves.LordFish said:You know its very immature to correct a person's spelling and grammar to make your point appear more valid.iRevanchist said:*womenLordFish said:The woman are not real, It is a work of fiction, Games are an art form.
There wouldn't be outcry if a woman was punched/raped/dressed as a strippernunassissin in a book, movie or TV program (assuming it was aired at the right time).
and if a woman was unched/raped/dressed as a strippernunassissin in a book, movie or TV program you bet your ass there would be a public outcry.
Also Punched* (I never claimed to be mature.)
I haven't seen it but I believe there is a pretty brutal rape scene in The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo (Film and Book).
Mr and Mrs Smith has Angelina Jolie dressed as a sexy assassin then later on in the film Brad Pitt punches her several times then kicks her in the stomach... Thank god he didn't beat her up while she was dressed in latex or there would have been rioting on the streets.
An art flick called 'The Serbian Film' features a woman giving birth, having her head cut off and then the new born baby raped - I can't comment on how graphic it is because I also haven't seen that. But that is controversial for similar reasons; Is it art or just gratuitous on-screen violence. Difference is that is so extreme it's sickening. This just adds some mild sex appeal to an otherwise mundane fight scene.
Realistic? Buffy's a superhero with no other "skills."Fumbles said:They all have realistic skills. Are all strong, they all can exist without men. You can argue that Gwen from Torchwood needs Jack Harkness, but after she learns the ropes, she is a strong female character. As far as games go, I will have to say Fear Effect is the only one that comes to mind.
I do agree that most of this thread is, unfortunately, correct.
Since "context" is an issue here, go up to any random person on the streets in the US and say "fuck."Loonyyy said:It's only a word. Like any number of swear words. I mean, we still use words like "dick" or "jerk" or "jackass" to describe peopl, and these could be considered offensive to men. Most of the time, when people are using swear words, it's just an expletive, generally used without reference to the historical context or the origins of the word.z
Any context is fine for swearing.
To be fair, there are those that do. To portray them as the rule for feminism, though, is just outright false. Then again, since most complaints about feminism appear to stem from the fear of women "gettin' uppity," I stopped being surprised at that a long time ago.Phasmal said:Thats... not what feminism is.psijac said:Feminist make bad feminist. anyone who claims to speak for all women on every topic has their head so far up their own as they can taste their own breathe
Nobody claims to speak for all women. At least no feminist I have met.
This.Suicidejim said:Why does this sort of topic automatically turn normal, sensible people into complete arseholes? I'm not even sure which side of this discussion I want to slap more.
If they can't provide meaningful representation what they state is reduced to only one persons opinion.Phasmal said:Thats... not what feminism is.psijac said:Feminist make bad feminist. anyone who claims to speak for all women on every topic has their head so far up their own as they can taste their own breathe
Nobody claims to speak for all women. At least no feminist I have met.
Obviously. Swearing gets a reaction. I'm not denying that, you seem to be deliberately misunderstanding me, and then attempting to sound scientific. Protip: 100 people you find on the street aren't a sample, and you need a scale for measuring reaction (No idea what scale, I'm an engineer, not a sociologist or psychologist).Zachary Amaranth said:Since "context" is an issue here, go up to any random person on the streets in the US and say "fuck."Loonyyy said:It's only a word. Like any number of swear words. I mean, we still use words like "dick" or "jerk" or "jackass" to describe peopl, and these could be considered offensive to men. Most of the time, when people are using swear words, it's just an expletive, generally used without reference to the historical context or the origins of the word.z
Any context is fine for swearing.
Then go up to another and say "****."
See which gets a worse reaction.
Now, repeat a hundred times or so to minimise sample bias.
Odds are, you will notice that one draws a more vehement reaction than the other.
Of course feminists don't all agree. Neither do Christians, or any other group for that matter.psijac said:If they can't provide meaningful representation what they state is reduced to only one persons opinion.Phasmal said:Thats... not what feminism is.psijac said:Feminist make bad feminist. anyone who claims to speak for all women on every topic has their head so far up their own as they can taste their own breathe
Nobody claims to speak for all women. At least no feminist I have met.
Catholics, Republicans, Democrats pretty much any politically active group have an official platform. Even if an individual member disagrees with parts of it (Democrats that are pro second amendment or a Republicans that is pro-choice) they recognizes that they have a difference with their group. The only common theme among feminist is women empowerment, and no one has a clear path to that goal.Phasmal said:Of course feminists don't all agree. Neither do Christians, or any other group for that matter.psijac said:If they can't provide meaningful representation what they state is reduced to only one persons opinion.Phasmal said:Thats... not what feminism is.psijac said:Feminist make bad feminist. anyone who claims to speak for all women on every topic has their head so far up their own as they can taste their own breathe
Nobody claims to speak for all women. At least no feminist I have met.
And if you think it's based on personal opinion, then don't make generalisations like the one above?