Yes, Robin is very much a case where one has to say "comic book logic" and just go with it.Robert B. Marks said:4173: "It's funny you use Batman as an example, because the various Batgirls and Batwomen are usually more covered up than the Robins."
Yeah, that's what came to mind - I had just been reading the article about the comics, and reading all of those posts in reply that amounted to "Yeah, but men are oversexualized too!"
And, I'll concede what I've seen of Batman is pretty close to the way things should be done. Catwoman doesn't look like a stripper, and neither do the other female characters. But, you look at video game characters, and wow...just wow. There are female video game costumes that would require glue or double-sided tape just to work.
(And, speaking of Robin, well, I'm not a comic book fan, so what I've seen has tended to be on TV, and there the Batman and Robin combination freaks the hell out of me. Most of the time, Robin looks like he's around 12 years old - Batman should go to jail for endangerment of a minor. And that's not counting all of the other unfortunate implications of having a "boy wonder" actually being a boy.)
I'll give you the knees. No argument.remnant_phoenix said:It's not nearly as bad as some, but take note of the exposed upper thigh, the thigh-high boots, and the way she has one knee pulled over slightly in that coy flirtatious way.4173 said:edit 2: Huh, that second Dragon Age pic doesn't seem too poorly posed.
The first picture represents Leliana's confidence and combat skill.
The second picture is nowhere near as bad as Dead or Alive, true. But when you look it, you see that everything else that this picture could say about her character is down-played by the focus on Leliana being attractive/sexy, to the exclusion of anything else you could draw about her character. And that's exactly what Bob is talking about.
Objective does not mean that both sides are right. It is simply untrue that female characters get the kind of characterization and development that male characters receive. There are occasional exceptions, but nowhere near parity on how men and women are treated in most mediums.The_root_of_all_evil said:Nice to see we have an objective view on things here. *sigh* Shall we just lock this thread now before it gets to personal insults?Robert B. Marks said:The feminists are right on this one, and the gamers are wrong.
None of those things are considered exceptions - lots of bands have girls' names in them.Father Time said:Under that logic anything can be a rule.Princess Rose said:Yes, but the fact that their IS an exception proves that the rule exists, however mildly flawed. That's what the phrase means - you couldn't have an exception to a rule if the rule doesn't exist.Father Time said:God damnit Bob. Don't ever say something's an exception that proves a rule. Exceptions are evidence against rules.
For example I can make up a rule that bands don't have girls' names in their song titles.
Now here's a quiz with 99 exceptions to that rule
http://www.sporcle.com/games/g/womentitled_songs
But hey it's the exceptions that prove the rule exists.
It does mean not dismissing the other sides views out of hand though.Belaam said:Objective does not mean that both sides are right.
But there you go again. There is no point making these sort of statements because they're rude and unhelpful to an ongoing discussion. If you believe something like that then you need to at least provide proof - and preferably a way to resolve it.It is simply untrue that female characters get the kind of characterization and development that male characters receive. There are occasional exceptions, but nowhere near parity on how men and women are treated in most mediums.
Agreed on most of your points except there's a perfectly good reason why Aya's in a dress in the first few scenes: She was attending a fancy show, with a date who bails on her at the first sight of spontaneous combustion. I'd rather ask why did she bring her work gun to a date.Darmani said:I disagree. Half of the appeal of Aya Brea was her broken bird/heroin chic/artsty/angsty nude aesthetic. The entire first game is seduced by the dark power of lesbianism eliminating man (seriously a major plot is destroying the individual touch of men even in their own semen to have EVE create the perfect child) thing. She inescpicably spends the first level is tight dress.
But it was all still elegant and, especially for the time, stylish and new dichotomy of normalcy and posh with brutality and freaki-ness. Something that is mirrored with Melissa-Eve and her evolution into monstrous opera demon, living incubator, a raggedy afterbirth and finally mad naked fairy queen. Sexual imagery clings to the series something fierce.
PEII WAS a disaster where the art and post and semi-tyle went to just porn, we got a shower scene and Brea couldn't wear pants, in the desert while fighting doberman sized scorpions. She was dressed as a pandering playmate more more acurately the game seemed unable to find its legs stealing RE controls, Lora Croft's outfit, Squall Leonhart's sword...and the monsters just seemed more... contrived and dumb.
3rd Birthday seemed more a return to form. Even better. Less wain etheral half dumb stares more alert processing looks. Her powers don't have her having hot flashes before "sexy" fainting (in that way actual people don't actually fall) and the vest and torn jeans with emphasis on the gun. Okay its a model pose, but at least rock/grunge and I see worry but not dumbfounded etheral worry. There is a sexy there but like I could see on a street but not at the expense of me thinking there is a person facing some tough shit there.
And then the clothing mechanic (facepalm) sigh.
....Way to miss the champ like a pointDarmani said:I disagree. Half of the appeal of Aya Brea was her broken bird/heroin chic/artsty/angsty nude aesthetic. The entire first game is seduced by the dark power of lesbianism eliminating man (seriously a major plot is destroying the individual touch of men even in their own semen to have EVE create the perfect child) thing. She inescpicably spends the first level is tight dress.
But it was all still elegant and, especially for the time, stylish and new dichotomy of normalcy and posh with brutality and freaki-ness (great for a largely 'first' modern rpg unifying the conventions of modern movie and the pre-lotr fantasy rpg). Something that is mirrored with Melissa-Eve and her evolution into monstrous opera diva, living incubator, a raggedy afterbirth/caraccident and finally mad naked fairy queen. Sexual imagery clings to the series something fierce. but with some meaning and class even if only really stylish body horror clash
PEII WAS a disaster where the art and post and semi-style went to just porn, we got a shower scene and Brea couldn't wear pants in the desert while fighting doberman sized scorpions (seriously I face palmed at this as much as the damned tank control). She was dressed as a pandering playmate more more acurately the game seemed unable to find its legs stealing RE controls, Lora Croft's outfit, Squall Leonhart's sword...and the monsters just seemed more... contrived and dumb as to horrorific and unique and made even less sense.
3rd Birthday seemed more a return to form. Even better. Less wain etheral half dumb stares more alert processing looks. Her powers don't have her having hot flashes before "sexy" fainting (in that way actual people don't actually fall) and the vest and torn jeans with emphasis on the gun. . . Okay its a model pose, but at least rock/grunge and I see worry but not dumbfounded etheral mindlessness OR generic nothing but ass kicking here. There is a sexy there but like I could see on a street but not at the expense of me thinking there is a person facing some tough shit there.
And then the clothing mechanic (facepalm) sigh. No... just NO.
Just because it made me curious, I had to check out your claim for myself and you, sir, are wrong: http://rule63.paheal.net/post/view/13747?search=E._Hondagarjian said:wheres the rule63 of?![]()
they dont exist, probably because it wouldnt be attractive, to a mainstream audience at least...