Gender-Bending In Online Games Investigated 63
Thanks to Terra Nova for their article discussing the prevalence of gender-bending in online RPGs. According to statistics worked out in the piece, "[in EverQuest], every 1 out of 2 or 3 female characters is being played by a male player, while every 1 out of 100 male characters is being played by a female player." The article also notes that, according to the statistics, "The demographic that is most likely to gender-bend is not male teenagers, but men over the age of 25", suggesting one reason for this might be that "younger male players are probably less secure about their own gender identity."
You'd never fall for this (Score:4, Interesting)
As one of the few women posting to Slashdot, I wonder what the ratio of "gender-benders" is here?
Re:You'd never fall for this (Score:1)
So while there might be people who do that, I don't think it'd be all that common simply because you wouldn
Re:You'd never fall for this (Score:1, Troll)
Oddly enough, for many male Slashdotters, it's not only hard to identify around here, but even in person.
It helps to have tweezers and a magnifying glass handy.
It depends.. (Score:2)
I have on occasiona played female characters, if I come up with a really good background for the character.
But then I tend to play light, fast characters, rather than big, burly fighters. So it makes little difference to me.
As for females playing male characters, part of me wonders whether it's to avoid men being all sleazy?
Re:It depends.. (Score:2)
So not character classes like Fighters or Barbarians, more like Hair Dressers and Interior Decorators?
And preferrably Elf... or Fairy?
And you like to enter Dungeons with big, burly fighters, is that where this is going?
(Not that there's anything wrong with that.)
Re:It depends.. (Score:2)
I tend to play a half-elf theif-mage (in D&D terms), or dark-elf in Morrowind.
I just don't like being a fat bastard that's all.
Re:You'd never fall for this (Score:1)
Women are more level headed in combat or so I hear, and being an engineer I am far better in support anyways as I familarize myself with the skills and mobs more so than a brute force warrior.
Re:You'd never fall for this (Score:1)
hed.
Re:You'd never fall for this (Score:3, Funny)
Slashdot smells like testosterone and frustration.
Not to mention motherboard coolant and D&D-miniture-figurine paints.
(And mom's basement -- I guess it's obligatory for me to mention that.)
Re:You'd never fall for this (Score:1)
You should have submitted this as a line for the slashdot t-shirts.
Gender doesn't matter .. (Score:1)
Re:Gender doesn't matter .. (Score:1)
It's Because Men Are Pigs (Score:3, Insightful)
I see it like this. If Im going to stare at a butt all day, it might as well be female.
and
I've always felt female characters are treated a touch nicer, so I take advantage of it. Roleplaying a female is interesting and can be a lot of fun. Plus, I'd really rather look at the backside of a female character anyway. [nickyee.com]
Re:It's Because Men Are Pigs (Score:2, Informative)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:It's Because Men Are Pigs (Score:2)
I also would like to point out that perhaps the male to female player ratio is off, so gender bending might create some sense of equilibrium.
Further, the study would be helped if you checked a predominantly female-played online rpg (as if there was one!) and checked to see if more women than men switched the gender of their online characters.
Perhaps.. (Score:1)
Re:Perhaps.. (Score:1, Redundant)
makes sense (Score:5, Interesting)
As you would expect, I was helped out by others FAR more when I played as a female. People were nicer overall, but there definately was an increase in harrassment. Of course, I always told them I weighed 750 lbs in real life, that tended to end any requests to meet in rl.
I could see why most gender-benders would be over 25. I don't see very many male teenagers being secure enough to play as a female character, I know when I was 16 I wouldn't have. Today its interesting to play as a female, to see how other react, and to compare that to how they react when I play as a male. It is really a good mirror on how society, and those in it, treat men and women differently just because of their sex.
Re:makes sense (Score:2)
I've always wondered why they don't make games with like 20 genders...
Re:makes sense (Score:3, Funny)
What about text MUDS? (Score:3, Funny)
Requesting vote for gender-benders. (Score:1)
You always want what you can't have
Attributes (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm male, over 25 and have almost always choosen to play female characters in every video game I have played. Why?
Female characters in many games typically focus on attributes I prefer - such as dexterity, quickness and so forth. Example: Look at the Soul Caliber [soulcalibur.com] characters. Almost all are in the 100 pound range - they cannot compete with the male characters on strength. So, they are given other attributes to compensate, which, frankly I find to be more interesting in terms of game play.
I don't play online games - but would probably choose female characters in that forum too. Although, I think the advantages are different - namely, if it is more of a social game, you don't have to conform to male stereotypes and can actually get into playing the character more - and possibly more likely to avoid conversation, like who's in the World Series, that I'd rather not have anyway.
Re:Attributes (Score:2, Interesting)
Thank you for providing such an excellent illustration of my point.
Playing female characters doesn't make one a closet homosexual. Nor is it an indicator that one is sexually confused or one likes to manipulate other people by taking advantage of the anonymity and the fantasy that is part of role-playing a game.
Of course, there are people that play female characters in online games that are these thi
Re:Attributes (Score:2)
Similarly, I play Tekken 4 at the local arcade every once in a while. I only play "Christine" who is the Brazilian chick who inherited "Eddy"s moves (caipoera -- Brazilian slave "dancing" they told their masters, but it's actually an excellent martial art -- neat subversiveness going on there).
I love the control I have over the character, and it has nothing to do with her being female -- I used to play Eddy through Tekken 3.
'Course, the almost nipple s
The Awful Truth (Score:2, Insightful)
They played chicks for one reason - they could get losers to give them stuff for free if they flirted a little, i.e. "Oooh she said she's 21 and dumped her boyfriend, if I give her this armor and sword combo I'll bet I can get laid at the EQ-con she wants to meet me at".
The utterly sad thing is they were right and it worked - in spades. The
Trinity (Score:2)
But recently I've been thinking a lot about how much I'd like there to be a Matrix game that would allow me to play as Trinity, because she's my favourite character in the films. (In fact she's my favourite character in *all* films.)
So is it a gender thing or something else? I mean, I don't want to play as Trinity because she's female. I want to play a
Re:Trinity (Score:2)
> characters are in fact attracted to the strengths
> and perceived weaknesses of females
Not a bad guess, but you can hardly include "all" guys in such a claim.
I play female toons just for some variety in the game.. rank after rank of male characters gets dull. I also tend to go for the "ugly" races, whatever varient of halflings and gnomes the game in question implements.
So at least for me, it's more a quest for a bit of individuality. I don't t
Why I always play female characters (Score:2, Insightful)
For every game you find where you have the option of playing a female character, you can find countless other games that force you to play a male character. And even those games that allow you to play female characters often do not implement the female options as well as the male options. Female character
Re:Why I always play female characters (Score:2)
If there's graphics... (Score:1)
Of course, this is a different matter for games where you have a first-person view or in which you have a first-person view, or good old-fashioned textmode RPG games ( Angband [thangorodrim.net] anyone?) I don't really care.
and in the case of Virtua Fig
It's all about Role Playing.... (Score:1)
In other words, he's role playing as a Paladin.
If he acted any other way, he wouldn'
I know why there is gender bending (Score:2, Funny)
I think it's because younger male players are the ones more likely to put up a "No Girl's Allowed" sign on their treehouse (if they actually had friends to share it with).
Gender-bending (Score:4, Insightful)
Granted, I've heard anecdotal stories about male players experimenting with female characters to trick people or get free stuff from idiots, but I've known a lot of "gender-bending" male players and all of them are just doing the same thing that they've done when they've played as Chun-Li in Street Fighter or Kasumi in King of Fighters - choose a female character because they like them.
This entire article is based on the idea that playing a female character in an MMORPG is the same exact thing as dressing up as a woman and claiming to be one in real life, and from my experience with MMORPGs like Ragnarok Online, that's just way off base. MMORPG or not, most people do not consider their video game character to be a reflection of themselves. What's next, an article telling me that by choosing to play a Warrior in an MMORPG, I'm voicing my insecurities about my physique and fighting ability? Or that the 29% of Everquest players that play as Mages are indicating their desperate need to be the intellectual elite of the world?
Some of this MMORPG analysis just goes way too far.
Re:Gender-bending (Score:1)
Actual forum exchange:
Player - "Why can't we have both male and female characters on the same account?"
Gravity Corp. - "Maybe that way you will encounter less HOMOSEXUAL!"
That particular one is just cultural standards at work, I guess, but there are many other precedents of Gravity hardly giving a fsck about their US playerbase.
I played a chick in Q3... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:I played a chick in Q3... (Score:1)
When I got Q3A, I picked Hunter. Two reasons: 1) Cool name. I mean, very cool name. 2) Hey, a cool helmet or, um... whatever that thing is.
Took me several moments to realize the character was actually female. Not that it actually matters - my characters in online games can be of either gender because I'm equally braindead. Anyway, this was the first time I could honestly claim the choice was completely due to irrelevant, unrelated factors. =)
It's ROLE-PLAYING, Duh! (Score:1, Interesting)
Reflection on where society is going (Score:2)
The concensus among experts seems to be that society is moving towards a much more fluid concept of gender. This has been happening f
Re:Reflection on where society is going (Score:2)
While I generally eschew MMOs of all sorts, I know that back in the days of MUDing when I was indeed 16ish, I only played guys, mostly because I WAS too insecure to play a female character, I thought that their must be some signifigance to my gender role in a game.
Then... I realized that I play ROLE PLAYING GAMES, where the main part of the premise to to... PLAY A ROLE. At that point I realized that being a in-game female
Species Bending? (Score:2)
I want to be in another world. I don't want to hang out with the humans in Freeport, I want to skin them and hang their skulls from my belt.
If the game only has humans characters I usually play the one that is furthest away from me.
In fighting games I usually pick the Chun-Li character first, then the vamp.
one out of two OR three? (Score:2)
This topic has come up several times. Not only that, but kanga.nu polls [kanga.nu] would be the perfect place to ask this question. Or heck even a slashdot poll.
The commenters AFTER the article explain the prevalence of gender bending in moos etc. But the author really didn't
different reason (Score:1)
How did they get this data? (Score:2)
NEED MORE DATA (Score:2)
In order to draw the conclusions that they want to draw from this statistic, we also need to know the ratio of male to female players, and ratio of male to female characters. Otherwise, the skew is easily explained by a mostly male population!
Re:NEED MORE DATA (Score:1)
RTFA. They go through the numbers and explain how they came to the stats (your guess is right by the way).