I'm not sure what I can add save for this has been brought up before. It seems to be a new and baffling concept each time, but still.
But the real question is, will it impact your purchasing choice? If not, than it really doesn't matter anyway.
Winji said:
It's funny how it's perfectly fine for people to make problems about this subject when it's women that are being demanded, but dear gods could you imagine the shitstorm if someone went and had the balls to demand for Bayonetta or Tomb Raider to have a male character to choose from.
You would be laughed out of the internet for demanding such stupid things.
Well, except Bayonetta is already female Dante and Lara Croft was created largely as Indiana Jones with tits, so off the bat it's already an absurd claim[footnote]And as was already mentioned, Nathan Drake is basically Dudebro Lara Croft and that didn't meet any such response, but hey[/footnote]. And I mean, unless your argument is that men are woefully underrepresented and need more presence in gaming, that's false equivalence in the first place.
But I, for one, would welcome a male hero who dressed in sexy outfits he had to remove to use his superpowers. The response alone would be delicious. Preferably, he would be in heels and his ass would be shoved in the camera full-time, to get some actual equivalent effect.
I suppose the real question is, would you buy such a game?
BathorysGraveland2 said:
I haven't played any Assassin's Creed games before, so I'm unsure on it, but are the protagonists fleshed out characters with back stories? The option to play a female character is fine in a game with a character creation, but for a game that has a more focused, designed protagonist it's more restrictive. For example, could you think of anyway they could allow you to play a female character in The Witcher? You can't fuck with the protagonist much because he's a detailed, focused character with history and a back story. So having the "option" isn't really viable if the protagonist is well-defined. As I said, I don't know if Assassin's Creed has very well thought-out protagonists, or if the gender would not matter whatsoever, but it's a point to think about.
When you've got four player co-op, the formula changes a little.
You'll notice this wasn't a big deal for prior AC games. Of course, from brotherhood on, the multiplayer let you play as women, to boot. I'm not sure you would have even needed a fleshed out backstory to satisfy people. I'm pretty sure they just want different co-op avatars. On a similar note, if The Witcher ever gets a multiplayer mode with selectable avatars, I imagine people will want to keep said avatars in future versions. They won't need fleshed out stories, or necessarily to be fully voiced. They may even be assets already in the game.
I mean, there's also no reason they couldn't have a story that could address both men and women, but I don't think they need to go that far to throw in a multiplayer avatar. And I think that would have satisfied most people.
I say most, because some people will clearly never be satisfied, but that's not unique here.