erttheking said:
Father Time said:
erttheking said:
Father Time said:
I'd like to point out that just because one piece of media can be inclusive and not lose any of it's appeal doesn't mean the same is true for everything else.
I give you 12 Angry Men (if you've never seen it, it follows the journey of 12 men on a jury as they argue over whether or not a boy murdered his father, it's one of my favorite movies).
If you had some women jurors in 12 Angry Men the character interactions and the dialogue would play out noticeably differently for the simple reason that (as a general rule of thumb) men interact with each other in different ways when they know there's a women listening.
I don't mean they'd try to hit on her or that they'd kill all sex jokes but that they'd be less hostile with each other, and less blunt. Yes there's exceptions like if the woman is someone they've known for a while and consider one of the guys but that's not going to happen in a room with 12 strangers.
And the way the characters interact is the film's strong suit. So altering that for the sake of inclusion/appealing to people might've hurt the movie.
There might be a similar effect if you gender swapped one of the protagonists in GTA V.
I can give another example too. Taming of the Shrew by William Shakespeare. Long story short, a man wants to marry a woman for her money. The woman is incredibly hostile and insults people a lot (hence shrew). He tames her by out-performing her in a 'be a terrible spouse' competition while pretending he's doing it all in the name of love. And he's the hero of the story.
You can guess how that's been changed to make it more inclusive. And you can't tell me with a straight face that that wouldn't have stifled creativity if Shakespeare had made it today and had been pressured to make those changes.
That's an interesting argument that kind of loses some of it's weight because Shakespeare's works were a product of their time. He specifically wrote them to be about the then modern day world, basising them on the then values. If Shakespeare lived in modern day, he would never write anything like that. He would write plays based on modern values.
No one is saying that developed should be forced to go in and change what they wanted to do. They're saying that they want more variety
I disagree. There is a ton of variety now and yet we have this argument every time a games comes out with blatant sex appeal aimed just at men (unless it's a series that's been doing it forever like Dead or Alive).
erttheking said:
and for people to step out of their comfort zone. When people criticize Call of Duty for doing the same thing over and over again, people don't rush to it's defense, saying that people should stop trying to oppress Infinity Ward's creative vision. Why is it ok for people to criticize call of duty for doing the same things over and over again, but not to criticize the gaming industry as a whole for doing the same things over and over again.
Nobody proclaims that Call of Duty is sexist/racist/bigoted whatever for doing the same thing all the time. Nobody says they have to change their tropes in the name of "moving the game industry forward" or "not alienating people (as if they shouldn't be expected to just avoid series they don't like)".
Eh, I have to disagree with you on the variety. In the last few years the only games that I can think of that have a female playable characters are Tomb Raider, Fuse, and Remember Me. The Last of Us kinda, Borderlands 2 kinda and Bioshock Infinite again kinda. The only games I've seen recently with an African American protagonist are GTA V, Walking Dead, Fuse and again Remember Me. And I don't think there have been any games in recent years where the main character was gay or transexual, unless you count a game where you can customize your character and I don't. Sure, supporting casts have been flourishing and there have been a handful of progressive games but the problem is that they're in the overwhelming minority. For every game with a female or black main character there are five more with straight white men for main characters. Even Borderlands 2, Fuse, Last of Us and Bioshock Infinite force the female characters to share the spotlight with straight white male characters. There's nothing wrong with this and with the exception of Fuse they were all really good games but female main characters are still heavily unrepresented when it comes to them getting a solo game. Come to think of it the African American character in GTA V has to share the spotlight with two other white guys too. And that doesn't make it a bad game, I really like the prospect of the trio of characters in GTA V. I'm just saying that games with stand alone African American and female main characters are very scarce.
No one said that Call of Duty is racist? Um...it's been awhile but you might want to check the comments under the Zero Punctuation Black Ops 2 video.
Here's the thing though. I love video games but that doesn't mean we can't criticize them. Metro Last Light. Came out early in the year. Excellent atmosphere, likable characters, interesting conflicts and a wonderful universe. And the way it treats women is absolutely atrocious. Every last female character is either a house wife or a victim. The only exception to this is the lone female soldier, who helps you out in one mission, disappears, reappears, gets kidnapped, has to be rescued by the main character, has sex with him, then drops out of the story again.
I still love Last Light, but truly loving something means accepting and acknowledging its flaws, not ignoring it.
Sorry, but you flat out don't play (or aren't familiar with) enough games.
"In the last few years the only games that I can think of that have a female playable characters are Tomb Raider, Fuse, and Remember Me. The Last of Us kinda, Borderlands 2 kinda and Bioshock Infinite again kinda."
Let's see, this is just off the top of my head: Torchlight 2, Diablo 3, Dragon's Crown, ANY game that lets you choose to be a female or a male (I don't see why that wouldn't 'count', and that right there adds dozens, if not hundreds of games), the entire cast of Skullgirls (actually any fighting game), all 3 Mass Effect games, both Dragon Age games, and Gears of War 3. Like I said, that's what I thought of just sitting here not even looking anything up.
"The only games I've seen recently with an African American protagonist are GTA V, Walking Dead, Fuse and again Remember Me."
Again, ANY game where you can customize the characters skin color (which again adds dozens of games), and you can also add "Prototype 2" and "Rise of the Triad" to that. Also, the protagonist in "Remember Me" isn't African-American, she's living in Paris, nothing American about her (I'm assuming, I didn't play the game but I'm gonna guess there isn't some storyline about how she was born on this side of the pond).