The perspective of the panel was meant to come from players - this is what we want from female characters, and this is what we are or are not getting. Having a developer on the panel to perhaps explain *why* certain things happened or didn't would have been great, absolutely, but the conversation was meant to come from those of us consuming the content.Sir John the Net Knight said:Does anyone here remember the outrage that Lisa Foiles was welcomed with on this site? How people called her a "dumb, bimbo *****" amongst other things because what she was doing was "brainless" or "stupid" and clearly she "only got the job for being hot". Yeah, that's the kind of mindset you're dealing with on this site.Icehearted said:My blood curdles at the hypocrisy.
I simply cannot fathom the mindset of any group of people that thinks it is simultaneously okay and wrong to exploit sex and sexuality for sales. Maybe if this panel were made up of "booth babes" and anyone that's ever turned a buck on gamecrush at least willing to admit they're as much a part of the problem as we lascivious men, then maybe I'd feel less like throwing up in my mouth.
Or for that matter, I have yet to see a panel on how black people or homosexuals are depicted in games. Can't say I know anyone that thinks a black man with a bird's nest in his afro, or the boisterous token black they shoehorn into games like Gears of War were good ideas. As a black man, these are but a couple of things that have made me cringe in games, and I'm pretty sure there aren't black people endorsing this nearly as much as there are women standing around mugging for cameras to get coverage while they cosplay in outfits so tight they may as well have been painted on. Women deserve respect, women deserve to be thought of as intelligent beings, this I do not disagree with. As long as there are "booth babes" and any sort of "girls of gaming" websites, I just don't see how I'm expected to take the matter even a little seriously.
No offense, but I don't think Lisa Foiles cakes on makeup and shows ample cleavage because she's looking to be respected for her mind.
The only thing more offensive than the hypocrisy are the people that take even a modicum of this even a little seriously. I will never understand this mindset, and frankly, I don't think I want to.
If I can state one real imposing problem I have with this panel. It's that we have four members that are games journalists and one member who is a writer/actress for a gaming based comdey webshow. There were no industry insiders on the panel. Clearly there must be at least one woman who works in the gaming industry. Games journalism is not exactly a respected field, considering the fallout of the Gertsmann controversy is still being felt and the most well known games journalist is a foul-mouthed comic with a penchant for yellow. It makes me feel that this is more or less a group of people who have never designed a video game telling people how they should be doing their job. However if I'm wrong on that, please feel free to educate me. But I still feel it would have been a more acceptable panel if someone on it had been an industry insider.
I happen to agree with Sir John here. Sazh was a good character. He had an afro, big deal. I had an afro once yet i took no offence. Sazh's character and story were about a father doing everything in his power to find his son and protect him. Someone who did not succumb to revenge and shoot, was just an all around good guy.Sir John the Net Knight said:I think Sazh is a good character. But then I look beyond the afro with the bird in it to see he's actually well written and humanly relatable. You know that whole thing of being a scared father and being prejudiced against something he was always taught to hate.Icehearted said:Can't say I know anyone that thinks a black man with a bird's nest in his afro, or the boisterous token black they shoehorn into games like Gears of War were good ideas.
This is a point that I think should be stressed. As a non white gamer, it's easy to go to the knee jerk 'NO ONE HAS WRITTEN MY EXPERIENCE IN THE WAY I'D LIKE!!!'. Honestly, I've been playing games since I was 6. I'm 30 now. There are just a handful of characters I can really relate to or even want to dissect more to get what they are about. And a lot of those times, it's more the experience than the person.SnakeCL said:Most of what I dislike has already been covered (talking about good and bad female characters, without actually defining what is good or bad about them, and even having conflicting hypocritical views on different characters), but mostly, the issue just seems to be "we want well written and crafted characters", male OR female.
There's also a certain double-standard that we see in videogame (and other) media. Namely, women are sexualized, and men are hyper-masculine. In many ways, having male characters who make the argument that you're ONLY a man if you're the object of every woman's desire, you have a chest like paving slabs, and you show no emotion or gallows humor, is just as bad as having shallow female characters devoted to eye candy. They both play on each gender's psychologically sensitive areas. Namely, that women don't want to be viewed as objects with boobs and bum, and men don't want to be viewed as inadequate for showing emotion, or not being strong or fast enough to accomplish a task.
I'm a little confused. That's sexism in its worst form?Eico said:God damn it.
Get over it, people.
Who gives a crap if characters with or without certain genitals behave a certain way or not? Does gender mean that much to you?
We're all human last I checked. What's with this obsession to group everyone by gender, colour, language and sexuality? Can you not see through the genitals? The colour? The choice of partner? Do those things mean so much to you that you feel it needed to spend hours and hours of your life talking about them, pointing them out and comparing them?
Sexism in its worst form.
That wasn't my point. I thought the worst part of sexism would be something like honor killings, or domestic abuse (not uniquely male on female I know) or generally treating women as property to be bartered with. Seriously, complaining about the glass ceiling or Playboy doesn't really measure up.Eico said:Yes.4173 said:I'm a little confused. That's sexism in its worst form?Eico said:God damn it.
Get over it, people.
Who gives a crap if characters with or without certain genitals behave a certain way or not? Does gender mean that much to you?
We're all human last I checked. What's with this obsession to group everyone by gender, colour, language and sexuality? Can you not see through the genitals? The colour? The choice of partner? Do those things mean so much to you that you feel it needed to spend hours and hours of your life talking about them, pointing them out and comparing them?
Sexism in its worst form.
Sexism is treating sexes differently. It works both ways.
Pointing out gender and acting as if it matters, making a deal of it, spending all this damn time singling out characters who we think have a vagina and assessing their worth as a real person. Equality has turned from 'we are all human beings' to 'I am female. You are male. We are different. That matters.' I couldn't care any less what your chromozones look like. You wanna go around shouting about how pressing the issue of gender is? Well, I guess we better start caring about skin colour again. What about hair colour after that? I mean, when was the last time a character that looked like me behaved in a way I want, damn it?! These things are important!
But seriously, sarcasm aside, let's get the hell over gender. We're all human. No one cares what your downstairs looks like. No one cares what your hair colour is. No one cares what your skin pigment is. Move on. Stop judging and looking at yourself and others in terms of penis or no penis, and start seeing us all for what we are: imperfectly perfect humans. All of us different, all of us brothers and sisters, none of it mattering.
And I find people who can't take a joke to be annoying. The fact that people still take anything they see or hear on the internet seriously proves that they are overly-sensitive and whiny.Calatar said:Sometimes I wonder if tired jokes like these are counterproductive... I get the feeling that people end up believing stupid things like this merely because they're oft-repeated for the lulz.Mr0llivand3r said:my biggest question is how did they fit that whole panel meeting in the kitchen?
I think if I were a woman I'd start to find it offensive and annoying after a while. As it is, I just find it annoying.
EDIT: You can't even make an overused joke about systemic socially oppressive stereotypes without somebody finding it unfunny and obnoxious.Mr0llivand3r said:You can't even make a joke anymore without someone getting pissed about it.
You're making some fine distinction that I just can't grasp. Absolutely sexism goes both ways, but we are talking about which sex has it worst currently, and throughout history.Eico said:Not sexism. Stupidity.4173 said:I thought the worst part of sexism would be something like honor killings
Not sexism. Violence, anger and stupidity.4173 said:Domestic abuse
Treating women as property? Why women? Why not 'treating people as property'? Is the need to define people by their genitals that strong?4173 said:Treating women as property to be bartered with.
Sexism - it works both ways.
Or, you know, we are able of basic human emotions (*gasp* even on the internet *gasp*), and people like you are kind of acting like jerks by making the same tired jokes that are made so often you have to wonder if theyr are still jokes or if people actually believe them.Mr0llivand3r said:And I find people who can't take a joke to be annoying. The fact that people still take anything they see or hear on the internet seriously proves that they are overly-sensitive and whiny.Calatar said:Sometimes I wonder if tired jokes like these are counterproductive... I get the feeling that people end up believing stupid things like this merely because they're oft-repeated for the lulz.Mr0llivand3r said:my biggest question is how did they fit that whole panel meeting in the kitchen?
I think if I were a woman I'd start to find it offensive and annoying after a while. As it is, I just find it annoying.