piscian said:
Ugh pretty much. People keep mentioning side characters and NPC's, Chell like Gordon is essentially sexless but she is still attractive and people talking about Chun-li and Sonya Blade not being hot. Dude, you're gay and there's nothing wrong with that. Just accept it and move on.
As I stated two pages back in response to Zachary, Jim's criteria are meaningless. With a wave of his hand he disregards entirely legitimate female characters and entire genres like survival.
1. The notion that they can't be anything remotely close to pretty rules out every girl that isn't explicitly ugly.
2. The notion that their goal can't involve a man would rule out the vast majority of games in which the male protagonist's goal involves a girl.
3. The notion that they can't just be surviving rules out an entire genre.
4. The notion that customiseable characters do not largely meet this need throws out an entire character model that caters to everyone's need. With women having made up less than 20% of the AAA target consumer market, making a game that specifically caters to them would be potentially alienating 80% of the gaming market that would buy the game. Allowing character customization side steps that issue and becomes everything to everyone. Diregarding this throws out a significant number of games that do have that option available.
I'd also generally question who out there specifically wants to play as an ugly girl. How common is that want? Avatars are generally about attributes we want to possess.
The thing about male characters is that just looking handsome isn't all that can constitute attractive. Big and strong, rugged and capable, even dark and dangerous are all qualities that women are regularly drawn to and that mean want to be like. There's a reason why movies like Beastly performed well in the box office despite having terrible critical reviews. Movies with an ugly and damaged man. It is no secret that more than a few women are drawn to dangerous and broken men with the mindset that they, and only they, can tame or fix them.
So male characters like Venom and Sabertooth and all that aren't characters that people don't want to play with. But an ugly girl? Do girls want to play as an ugly girl? Plain? Sure. But ugly? The question is why? What is the goal of creating such a girl unless part of the story revolves around her looks?
I also listed a number of protagonists who were plain or even ugly.
The Cave
http://static.giantbomb.com/uploads/scale_small/0/1516/2508490-s4.jpg
She meets all of the requirements. Every single one.
Faith from Mirror's Edge is plain. She is not beautiful or anything like that. So the placement of her as beautiful is entirely subjective.
<spoiler= Screenshot of Faith from the new trailer>http://www.ps4site.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/06/maxresdefault.jpg
Thomas was alone has three female protagonists. Quick, tell me which block you think is sexy?
<spoiler=Thomas was Alone screenshot>http://samuelhorti.files.wordpress.com/2012/08/thomas-was-alone-1.jpg
I actually strongly disagree with anyone who says that Chell isn't beautiful. I would also place the female warrior from Dragon's Crown on the list of ugly females. But again, subjectivity is a *****. I wonder if the female sparrow from Fable II should be considered here. Attractiveness can be based on alignment rather than character customisation and even the good allignment isn't necessarily pretty.
I'd say that unattractive males are more common. Even given my statement that brawn, mysterious or dangerous looking is an attractor, there have been a few nerdy heroes. Take Bernard Bernoulli from Day of the Tentacle for example. Weak and nerdy. Wario is also a good example and I'd generally place any Mario character there as well, including the princess.
A better criteria here would be female characters that aren't explicitely sexually objectified by their clothing or body dimensions. For example, as I said earlier, a chainmail bikini would be an ideal example of one to throw away. All the unnecessary criteria that Jim throws around is very particular here and often subjective. Again, it fails to capture that male characters do not have to be pretty boys to be considered attractive as an avatar or even in real life.