holy carp, the intro alone, the intro alone was worth showing up for. I'm going to have to both watch it over and over and also burn the vision out of my brain.
The fact that you didn't find it attractive, does not mean that the character was not objectified. Jack almost has no clothes on, except from a string to cover her nipples, but Miranda is naked even *with* her clothes on.Ukomba said:Ah, no, I believe you'll find that Final Fantasy X still holds that trophy.franksands said:(M)Ass Effect 2 wins the trophy for most objectified women. Aside from Jack, you have Samara, the justicar with high red heels. But the 1st place goes to Miranda, because the camera always focuses on her ass.
As for ME2. I don't know. I never found Samara attractive, like, at all. Not sure if it was her age, her design, or her personality, she just never came off as an object of desire to me. Same goes for Miranda. Sure she's got a good body, but I just couldn't get over her being an infertile, cloned, gender switched man. Jack didn't seem come off as objectified either. I couldn't romance her either, I just kept seeing her as a wounded child. She was great in ME3.
No one is evil for liking or hating these characters. The only bad thing about them is that they are used too much.Nurb said:In video games, both are equally objectified in the sense male and female game characters are objects that do what we want for our entertainment and fantasies, whatever they may be because it's fictional escapism.
Women are pretty and nice to look at, and men are fodder for the player to wade through with any given weapon weilded by a perfect looking protagonist. Men are not evil for enjoying sexualized fictional characters, nor are we evil for enjoying laying waste to thousands of enemies that want to stop our character.
Now please, no more forced gender debates!
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Skimpy cloths doesn't equal objectified. Jack very nearly has the physique of a young man, has a shaved head, and is covered in tattoos. Jack's outfit isn't supposed to be titillating. I'm sure some people do find it provocative, but there are some people who really get off on a librarians over conservative look.franksands said:The fact that you didn't find it attractive, does not mean that the character was not objectified. Jack almost has no clothes on, except from a string to cover her nipples, but Miranda is naked even *with* her clothes on.Ukomba said:Ah, no, I believe you'll find that Final Fantasy X still holds that trophy.franksands said:(M)Ass Effect 2 wins the trophy for most objectified women. Aside from Jack, you have Samara, the justicar with high red heels. But the 1st place goes to Miranda, because the camera always focuses on her ass.
As for ME2. I don't know. I never found Samara attractive, like, at all. Not sure if it was her age, her design, or her personality, she just never came off as an object of desire to me. Same goes for Miranda. Sure she's got a good body, but I just couldn't get over her being an infertile, cloned, gender switched man. Jack didn't seem come off as objectified either. I couldn't romance her either, I just kept seeing her as a wounded child. She was great in ME3.
When women objectify men(in media) it is USUALLY more subtle, involving something I can only describe as 'emotional objectification'. Twilight is a good example of what I am talking about. The men in that movie aren't men, or even characters. They are things, teddybears, furbies... made entierly to be pleasurable to women; things to acquire with no personality of their own. They are not people in any sense of the word. This is why while the twilight movies have haters and fans of both genders, they are typically more jarring to men then women.Jimothy Sterling said:A common argument in the ongoing debate over gender and videogames is that women and men both are equally objectified. Is that really true?
We have solved one of the greatest mysteries in the world! Now for the other one.Orekoya said:There you go.1337mokro said:Can Superman's powers harm himself? His hair is basically indestructible if not he'd have his glorious mullet burned of every single time a heat based enemy was encountered. So why should there be an exception for his own heat vision which still works on the same principles and does not seem to be all that strong, compared to other heat powers in the same universe.Clovus said:Like, maybe he just uses his breath to freeze his own leg and then just brushes them off. Or maybe he just, like, burns them off with this eyes.1337mokro said:Question!!! Why does Superman shave his legs? HOW does Superman shave his legs? I mean Greenlantern I can get, Human with alien technology. How does Superman manage though? Industrial strength polymer leg waxing?Ashoten said:I have heard this argument before when people talk about comic book women being objectified. This is the best response I have seen.
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Make of it what you will.
Kryptonite razorblades?
Funny that this example has been brought up. These fat slobs, like Homer Simpson, or Peter Griffin, tend to have hot women at their side, who not only settle for fat, lazy and stupid men, but dutifully endure all their shenanigans and take care of them.DVS BSTrD said:For from objectifying men, this other person seemed to think that men were unfairly stereotyped as fat idiots who were completely dependent on women to save them from themselves. Now I want you to look at these pictures and ask yourself
http://www.bundyology.com/bal2.jpghttp://4.bp.blogspot.com/-oJk4uH5eXdY/TVylPQrTwnI/AAAAAAAAAFw/whLXMmyXaOE/s1600/peggy.jpg
Which standard is harder to live up to?
I'm stating that most of the female protagonists in video games tend to lean more on the Playboy of the Month centerfolds rather than something more 3 dimensional. I'd like to see more games that cater towards other designs and personalities other than the latest model to test out "Jiggle Physics".Gorrath said:Starting off by presuming that an argument comes from self delusion isn't going to change hearts. Some arguments do, in fact, stem from delusion, but I tihnk one should consider that there may be an argument here that does not.Mr. Q said:The following response is towards the "fine gentlemen" that believe they are being objectified just as badly as women are in video games, comic books, etc...
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I can never fully understand the level of self-delusion that some people have to truly believe that males are treated like sex symbols or objects of desire on the same level as women. I hate to break it to you, but its not the same!
And don't give me the B.S. that topics like these fall under the "beating a dead horse" category. Regardless of what Monxeroth might have to say about it, these topics keeping coming up is because they are still a problem within the games industry and in other forms of media. I don't care how big of a blanket you've got on hand, using it to hide the elephant in the living room does not make it go away. These are serious problems that need to be addressed and resolved with urgency. It's a problem that neither side cannot ignore forever.
What Jim did today, and what he does every week on the Jimquisition, is taking the first step in solving a problem... and that is admitting there is a problem.
The majority of female characters in games are not properly portrayed in video games.
This whole argument was purely about sex or sexual attraction, but about objectification, sexual or otherwise. Also, simply claiming, "...it's not the same," also doesn't provide any insight.
What is a 'proper' portryal of a female character in a game? What is the 'proper' portryal of a man? Is a sexualized female body improper? What about a sexualized male one? Is a female character without agency improper? What about a psycopathic male who can only solve problems by shooting it with bigger guns? What about a 'nerdy' male scientist who also has no agency whatsoever and needs the thick-necked meat-head with guns-a-blazin' to save him too? Is he objectified because of his lack of agency?
I'd argue that there is no proper way to write a character. I would argue that there is much greater room in gaming and other mediums to expand to other tropes and characterizations.
As I recall, Clark shaved with his own fingernails in Smallville.1337mokro said:We have solved one of the greatest mysteries in the world! Now for the other one.Orekoya said:There you go.1337mokro said:Can Superman's powers harm himself? His hair is basically indestructible if not he'd have his glorious mullet burned of every single time a heat based enemy was encountered. So why should there be an exception for his own heat vision which still works on the same principles and does not seem to be all that strong, compared to other heat powers in the same universe.Clovus said:Like, maybe he just uses his breath to freeze his own leg and then just brushes them off. Or maybe he just, like, burns them off with this eyes.1337mokro said:Question!!! Why does Superman shave his legs? HOW does Superman shave his legs? I mean Greenlantern I can get, Human with alien technology. How does Superman manage though? Industrial strength polymer leg waxing?Ashoten said:I have heard this argument before when people talk about comic book women being objectified. This is the best response I have seen.
![]()
Make of it what you will.
Kryptonite razorblades?
Why DID he shave his legs?![]()
Exactly,Oskuro said:Sorry if I'm late to the party, but videos on this subject always result in a million replies per second.
Funny that this example has been brought up. These fat slobs, like Homer Simpson, or Peter Griffin, tend to have hot women at their side, who not only settle for fat, lazy and stupid men, but dutifully endure all their shenanigans and take care of them.DVS BSTrD said:For from objectifying men, this other person seemed to think that men were unfairly stereotyped as fat idiots who were completely dependent on women to save them from themselves. Now I want you to look at these pictures and ask yourself
http://www.bundyology.com/bal2.jpghttp://4.bp.blogspot.com/-oJk4uH5eXdY/TVylPQrTwnI/AAAAAAAAAFw/whLXMmyXaOE/s1600/peggy.jpg
Which standard is harder to live up to?
In other words, even comedic parodies of male stereotypes objectify their women, portraying them as the "prize" that all men, fat, lazy or stupid, are somehow entitled to.
On topic, have a read: 5 Ways Modern Men are Trained to Hate Women [http://www.cracked.com/article_19785_5-ways-modern-men-are-trained-to-hate-women.html]
Did you just call Marge Hot? :OOskuro said:Sorry if I'm late to the party, but videos on this subject always result in a million replies per second.
Funny that this example has been brought up. These fat slobs, like Homer Simpson, or Peter Griffin, tend to have hot women at their side, who not only settle for fat, lazy and stupid men, but dutifully endure all their shenanigans and take care of them.DVS BSTrD said:For from objectifying men, this other person seemed to think that men were unfairly stereotyped as fat idiots who were completely dependent on women to save them from themselves. Now I want you to look at these pictures and ask yourself
-img-
Which standard is harder to live up to?
In other words, even comedic parodies of male stereotypes objectify their women, portraying them as the "prize" that all men, fat, lazy or stupid, are somehow entitled to.
On topic, have a read: 5 Ways Modern Men are Trained to Hate Women [http://www.cracked.com/article_19785_5-ways-modern-men-are-trained-to-hate-women.html]
Well i don't live a life on the internet so i haven't seen these topics discussed ad nauseum.Monxeroth said:It does if there is nothing new brought to the table in a long time then yes, that does make it less relevant since its blown out of proportion and not as equally urgent as it is true yknow >_>MaxwellMouse said:Monxeroth, it is not everyone has seen all internet videos before. Even if it is a covered topic, that does not make it any less valid or relevant. I see people saying things like this all the time, as recent as the whole Dragon`s Crown issue.
Less valid, most likely not