cerveza_fiesta, on 12 March 2013 - 03:38 PM, said:
Tapper, on 12 March 2013 - 02:06 PM, said:
cerveza_fiesta, on 12 March 2013 - 01:42 PM, said:
Y'know, I thought the same. And then I saw the sheer amount of body-mods (usually wit no censorship of the private parts and oversized boobs) and see through/ sexy armors that are downloadable, community-made mods for Skyrim. And they hit pretty good download numbers, too. The funny thing is that Skyrim is an intelligent game with a storyline that's actually fairly equal in gender portrayal as both males and females share jobs, function as antagonists, shopkeepers, smiths, et cetera.
EDIT: so it seems there is at the least a part of the gaming base that seeks to introduce sexualisation/ one dimensional portrayal of women as sexual objects/ pin ups into their games.
That's pretty disturbing and shows that even if developers move on, part of their fan base doesn't, sadly.
Yes, there will always be a segment that wants pin-ups in video games and will go to great lengths to modify games to satisfy the desire. Hell, I did it back when the "NudeRaider" mod came out for Tomb Raider 1.....but then again I was like 15 years old and CGI boobs were the best I could do - sue me.
The fact that the segment exists shouldn't deter those wanting to make a difference however. Since it's a self-serving community, I say let them do their thing. You're not going to stop it anyway, so as long as the original game content is making a shift from ridiculously dressed, weak and idiotic female characters then at least everyone else is better off.
Right. If the below terrible little ASCII graphics represent a spectrum of game appeal by gender, the goal is not to go from
M |o------------| F
to
M |------o------| F
ala you're not allowed to enjoy your toys because they are sexist! Everything must be as rigidly equal and balanced as possible or it is banned! All games must have ambiguously gendered protaganists!
The goal is to get to:
M |oooooooooooo| F
saturation of the market so that there is something for everyone. There will always be people who make and play games that don't necessarily depict women very favourably. There will probably also be the opposite, a niche sub-culture of people who make and play games that don't necessarily depict men very favourably. But when the balance and variety of games is, well, balanced, a person can choose an option other than {a} playing a game with awful depictions of women, or {b} not playing at all.