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Games Entertainment

10 Gateway Games 167

The title of 1up.com's feature is Top-Ten Girlfriend Friendly games, but the titles they suggest are generally intended to get a non-gamer interested in the gaming passtime. From the article: "...it is possible to bring non-gaming significant others over to the dark side, through a number of games designed to grab those who couldn't care less how many frags you got in Counter-Strike last week."
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10 Gateway Games

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  • by Hast ( 24833 ) on Tuesday April 26, 2005 @08:57AM (#12347056)
    IMHO if it weren't for sentimental reasons games like Centipide and Ms Pac-Man wouldn't be on that list. Personally I'm not too fond of Tetris (Dr Mario) either, but Centipede?

    That game almost killed the mobile phone gaming market. Too boring to even play on the toilet!
    • by Anonymous Coward
      Some people would rather have simple games, whether they be a 1980s arcade game, or a modern dopey flash game. My sister for one seems to prefer simpler games (with the notable exception of Tekken Tag Tournament)
    • We play Dr. Mario on an XBOX NES emulator. It's probably the game we play together the most.
    • by frikazoyd ( 845667 ) on Tuesday April 26, 2005 @09:58AM (#12347532)
      I have to say, my significant other loves Ms. Pac-Man and Centipede, and Animal Crossing, and The Sims. She loves DDR, and she plays so many Pop-Cap games it's a wonder she gets work done.

      Thing is, these aren't necessarily good games to introduce people to. You are absolutely right about the Atari games. She loves those games because they are old, and she remembers playing them when she was little. Same with Dr. Mario, it was an accessible classic (certainly an easier concept than Tetris). And the Pop-Cap games are mostly variations on the theme.

      Now, I can see where they get the Sims kind of, as well as Animal Crossing. My SO (much like many of her age) are big into the Trading Spaces type of show, and so the Sims is a nice little escape to design a really awesome house, or just play with design ideas. And on top of that, she liked to get the people involved in complicated relationships with the whole neighborhood, to see the social repercussions. I can see many other women of her age group getting into it for similar reasons, but other than that I think the whole "girl gamer" (or intro gamer) analogy stops there.

      You see, there is such a variety out there, there is no set way to introduce any set of people to games. You're not going to lure the sports nut dad to video games with Ninja Gaiden (unless he is an armchair martial artist as well), and at the same time you're not going to lure most women in with a lot of the current popular games. This is because a lot of these games are aimed at men specifically, games like Grand Theft Auto and the afore-mentioned Counter-Strike. All this article did was pick a handful of pretty good games that weren't particularly aimed at the 13-34 male demographic. This list could have included any number of old Atari games, or a plethora of NES games. Nothing particularly insightful, they inductively deduced that many women who don't play games now probably don't because they consider them "boy toys". And lets face it, some women just aren't going to like your typical modern game fare that uses sex to sell. Video games are competitive by nature, and there are people who don't like competing, even with themselves or a computer. Video Games are not for everyone.
    • I'll give you Centipede is no fun without proper controls. Women love that game though. Me too.

      Pac-Man on the other hand can be played with simple controls on just about anything. Women love that game also. It's simple.

      I enjoy simple games. I hate things that suck all my time away with no pupose. I like games that don't pretend to be anything other than a distraction (eg. most 80's arcade games and most of the games in that list; also simple online deathmatch like Q3/UT).

      If anything should not be o
      • It's just a time stealer designed to trick people into thinking they are accomplishing something when in the end your are left with nothing (see Everquest et al).

        You discovered this after playing it for hours and hours and hours, didn't you? I sure did. Don't care for the game now though -- I tried playing the Sims 2 (borrowed a copy) and just couldn't get into it at all.

        My gf never played games before I bought my playstation, save for Myst on her PC (it came with her PC .. she never even finished it).
  • What? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by WordODD ( 706788 ) on Tuesday April 26, 2005 @09:00AM (#12347073)
    No Pikiman or Pikiman 2? My girlfriend who HATES games with a passion(or maybe just hates me playing rather then spending time with her) loved both of these games so much I actually had to give them to her little sister to get them out of the house and away from her.
    • I wouldn't consider Pikmin a good choice for people who don't play many games. You need to have *very* good control of the analog stick to play it. Move the stick a little and it moves the selection cursor. Move the stick further and it moves your character. Generally people who don't play games much are going to get frustrated with the controls very quickly.
      • Pikmin is exactly what I was gonna say. My girlfriend hadn't played a game in 15 years (since her dad literally threw the NES out the window). She loved my Pikmin so much she went out and bought a gamecube for it.

        We play Pikmin 2 together.

    • No Pikiman or Pikiman 2?

      Spell-check has detected errors leading to ambiguity. Did you mean:

      • Pikmin or Pikmin 2
      • Pokemon or Pokemon GS
      • Pac-Man or Pac-Man 2: The New Adventures
  • by jvmatthe ( 116058 ) on Tuesday April 26, 2005 @09:00AM (#12347078) Homepage
    I thought a non-competitive, abstract game like Marble Madness would be a nice introduction for my wife. So I fired up the NES and let her try. She got through several levels, eventually, and suppertime was nearing. So I went to the store to get some food, and when I returned she was angrily swearing at the screen and shaking her dainty fist at the NES itself. She glared at me, tossed the controller down, and said "Never ask me to play a videogame again."

    Oh well. At least she lets me go fishing in Animal Crossing with our son.
  • by Dr.Opveter ( 806649 ) on Tuesday April 26, 2005 @09:05AM (#12347111)
    My wife likes playing games like the ones on orisinal [ferryhalim.com]
    What she doesn't like is me playing endless hours of FPS on my own. So to spend time together we play team deathmatch games.
    Good enough for me.
  • Missed one (Score:5, Insightful)

    by cgenman ( 325138 ) on Tuesday April 26, 2005 @09:05AM (#12347118) Homepage
    Karaoke Revolution [konami.com]

    Not that I'm partial or anything :).

    P.S. I agree with the sentiment that the article, while trying to be inclusive, comes off a bit like a bunch of sexist men who are trying to be inclusive. Most of the female gamers I know are Everquest players, Counterstrike addicts, Katamari Damacy lovers, die-hard Ninja Gaiden fans, Sims players, Castlevania afficianadoes... Basically players with tastes as varied as any others, who like good games and maybe not so into the grossly overt sexualization thing. While there are some things you can do to make a female audience walk away, the only thing you can do to really attract them is to make a great game.

    • Re:Missed one (Score:2, Informative)

      by pnice ( 753704 )
      Karaoke Revolution was a great game to get everyone playing...and for the first time ever it had my parents handling an Xbox control. For the most part Karaoke Revolution puts everyone at an equal level and no one feels like they could possibly suck any worse than the person that went before them. It goes great with beer and helps loosen people up. Great choice as a game for the non-gamer.
  • Missing Genre (Score:5, Insightful)

    by tprime ( 673835 ) on Tuesday April 26, 2005 @09:07AM (#12347131)
    It was curious that there were no COOPERATIVE games on there. My wife really enjoys playing the cooperative action/RPG games with me. Baldur's Gate:Dark Alliance and the like have eaten MANY hours of our time.

    While that genre of games is pretty saturated, it provides a good scenario where I can help her learn the game and pick up the slack with killing the enemies until she gets the hang of it.


    Rather than just giving her the controller, try plugging in controller 2.
    • Please post more :) We recently finished BG:DA, BG:DA2 and X-Men Legends (unexpected but very good), and I'm currently at a loss regarding what to play next.

      I know about Champions of Norrath, but we don't have a PS2 (just an Xbox and a Gamecube).

      • I'm also curious about this. I'm thinking about the Diablo series (both 1 and 2 have *great* coop modes). FreedroidRPG [sourceforge.net] also has a coop mode, but I haven't played it yet (only single player). It's very Diablo-ish, and can be a relaxing hack-and-slash RPG (even though it's not finished, it's got a fair bit of fun content).
      • Re:Missing Genre (Score:2, Informative)

        by brienv ( 144297 )
        If you enjoyed BG:DA and X-menLegends, you must check out Dungeons&Dragons:Heroes! My friends and I had an absolute blast playing that game. We actually enjoyed it much more than Champions Of Norrath, even though Norrath seemed to get a lot more press. Norrath had way too much inventory management and a fair number of bugs.

        Brien Voorhees
        • Second for D&D:Heroes. The wife and I loved it.
          Halo's great too if FPSs are fair game. Similarly with Outlaw Golf. Not exactly coop, but close enough where the competition isn't really against each other, but against yer previous bests and the course itself.

          More games need coop.
      • If you happen to have 2 computers, then there are a lot more available. Given a couple fo the beta events, I've gotten my gf into GuildWars - and I've heard good reports that it plays well on older machines as well. There's also a nice range of Baldur's Gate games, Diablo II, and the like. Unfortunately, I only have a PS2 and PCs, so I can't add anything for Xbox or Gamecube...
    • second that (Score:3, Insightful)

      by mckwant ( 65143 )
      My wife's the same way. One big (HUGE) key for her is that she be able to pick up the controller and go. Hack and slashers are fine, but if (as in Return of the King, which you can play coop) you start getting into combos like Square-Triangle-L2-Triangle, you lost her at Triangle.

      She LOVES the Diablo series, at least on the PC, and has a decided weakness for the Civ family of games (even relatively crappy ones like Pharoh). She doesn't play from the strategy, "kill your enemies" standpoint, but she real
      • Re:second that (Score:3, Informative)

        by cowscows ( 103644 )
        I find a lot of the driving games are good for sitting down and going. Discounting something like Gran Turismo, driving is something most people are familiar with, and can be pretty simple. Mario Kart is a classic example, but another one that my girlfriend really gets into is Burnout 3. The only Xbox game I've found that she'll play for more than a few minutes. Nintendo really is the best for her interests. She's all about the Donkey Konga Bongos games as well.
    • Best coop games I played with my wife?

      Bubble Bobble and Bomberman.

      And a definite improvement to Pikmin would be multiplayer.

    • Yes, 100%. Baldur's Gate: Dark Alliance, Diablo 2 multiplayer, Dynasty Warriors! All these are great hack and slashes.

      I've found that FPSes are almost death. It takes a lot (a lot) of coordination to get the hang of them. 3rd person games almost always work better.

      m.
  • a shiny new xbox (Score:5, Interesting)

    by nb caffeine ( 448698 ) <{moc.liamg} {ta} {enieffacbn}> on Tuesday April 26, 2005 @09:07AM (#12347132) Homepage Journal
    And SSX3. My girlfriend (never a gamer at 27 years old) was hooked. Then Soul Caliber 2 (dont challenge her if shes playing as ivy). Shes not as hardcore as me, but she does obsess over whatever game she is currently playing. Right now its the buffy sequel. She calls me up, "how do i get past this one part". No hi or nothing. Ive created a monster.

    she didnt know hardcore gaming till gt4 came out though... heh heh.
    • my girlfriend can kick my ass in most fighting games, I don't know how or why, but she just can. We played soul caliber on my dreamcast the other day and I was just like whoa... wtf just hit me
      • Truthfully? It's 'cos they don't have a clue what they are doing and mash the buttons mindlessly, a strategy that seems to pay great dividends in 99% of fighting games out there.
    • SSX 3 is definite.

      I have gotten girls of all ages really really interested in the DOA fighting series, as sexist/fetishist as they might be. I think it's because DOA works at a much slower pace and is a bit more interactive than other fighting games.

      Still trying to have the SO get better at Halo... :)
  • by Anonymous Coward
    The gamer-girlfriend equivalent of a crackwhore...

    (Posted anonymously? You bet!)
  • by segal_loves_pandas ( 849758 ) on Tuesday April 26, 2005 @09:18AM (#12347220)

    The space below is reserved for all vain /.ers who actually have girlfriends even though they spend their days frantically searching the site for the opportunity to show off:

    ... mine likes Mariokart double dash: She *knows* the blue sparks.

  • No monkey ball? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by antifoidulus ( 807088 ) on Tuesday April 26, 2005 @09:22AM (#12347251) Homepage Journal
    While the article is sexist, you can just think of it as, "games for non-gamers", but still, no Monkey Ball? I'm not really a huge video game fan, I like toying with them a bit, but I quickly lose interest. However, when I have a couple of friends over, there is nothing quite like some monkey ball and "pre-gaming" before we go out. It has no learning curve, fun as hell, and it can be put down wherever without having to worry about your "progress".
  • ...OK, so they were only 20% correct, but my wife simply LOVES Bejeweled (and now, Bejeweled2) and Centipede. I simply could never peel her away from a Centipede console back in the 80's, and whenever we pass one today, she has to play it. She also enjoyed the whole Zork series.

    But her REAL passion is word games like "Text Twist" and "Bookworm" from Astraware for the Palm.

    OT: As for me, my downfall is the old Roadblasters console game. It is so addictive, and I can frequently get the High score.
  • Eye Toy (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Xian97 ( 714198 )
    The Eye Toy for the Playstation 2 has been what I have seen grab the interest of more non-gamers than anything else. I have seen many people that wouldn't touch a game controller waving their hands and moving around having a blast with the Eye Toy mini games.

    My wife only plays one on the article list - Bejeweled. Her favorites are the Hoyles series, mostly the Card and Board games.
  • by Strange Ranger ( 454494 ) on Tuesday April 26, 2005 @09:29AM (#12347311)
    Replace "girlfriend" with "grandma" and they might have something.
  • Resident Evil 4 (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Gulthek ( 12570 ) on Tuesday April 26, 2005 @09:35AM (#12347347) Homepage Journal
    My wife is not really into video games. (Except Tetris with a passion, and webboggle.) But she loves to watch me play RE4. So much so that we only play it together. She makes popcorn and watches it like a movie, I blast away shambling villagefolk.

    It's actually one of the more watchable games that I've come across. It's a pretty decent horror movie. Actually given the length its more like a horror series in one package.

    Previously she watched me play through Grim Fandango (after I knew all the puzzles of course, otherwise it'd be boring as hell while I do the throw the inventory at the puzzle and wander around trying to figure things out). That game is hands down the best game/movie I've seen.

    A good portion of the Wing Commander games are good too, but the space battles get repetitive for the view unless they are a player as well.

    She also likes watching parts of Splinter Cell, but the sneaking around is less fun to watch.
    • As fun as it is to watch someone playing a good game, it takes the fun out of playing that game yourself.

      Case in point: Final Fantasy X. When my husband and I were still dating, sometimes I would be over at his place and he would be playing that game. It's really pretty to watch, so I'd occasionally sit and watch him play. I also started playing that game, but since I didn't have my own PS2, I could only play at his place when he wasn't playing. I wound up watching him play a lot more than playing myse
    • She'll love it even more with a decent controller! [lik-sang.com]
  • Survival Horror (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday April 26, 2005 @09:37AM (#12347361)
    It's slightly at a tangent to the discussion here, but I remember an incident last year regarding women and gaming which really made me laugh at the time.

    I moved away from where the parents live about 6 years ago, after my student days came to a close and I got a job at the other end of the country. I'd never been much of a gamer before then. I mean, I guess I've been playing games on and off since I was about 10, but computers and games were never my "main" hobby, until a couple of years ago. Therefore, gaming was never actually something I'd particularly talked to my parents about. Sure, I'd done the usual tech-support-over-the-phone-and-at-holidays thing that most slashdotters seem to get roped into, but that was usually just with stuff like printing documents in Word.

    Then one evening last year, around September or so, I get a phone call from my mother. She wants to pick my brains over a puzzle. This isn't particularly unusual; she's called me before when stuck on a crossword or something. Anyway, she describes this puzzle to me; it's basically a number-puzzle, based around finding a combination on a keypad from a series of clues. As I listen to the description, I get this weird sense of deja vu. I cut her off half-way through the description and say "The answer's 8631" (or whatever the answer really was; I can't remember now). There's a pause and she says "oh, you're right. How did you know that?" "You're playing a computer game, aren't you?", I say. "More specifically, you're playing Silent Hill 3." Cue an embarrassed pause and a very quiet "erm... yes". (For those who know the game, it was the "hard" difficulty puzzle to find the combination on the hospital door).

    To be honest, this was a real shock to me. I guess I'd always shared a lot of the preconceptions demonstrated in this article; that if women played games, it was likely to be "simple" games, like Tetris, played for relatively short periods. Big-budget, high-profile survival horror games would not have been my pick for a "Gateway" game. To be honest, I find the idea of "Gateway" games a bit naff and artificial anyway. Either people like playing games or they don't.

    Anyway, it turned out that my mother had already played Silent Hill 2, after being loaned it by a friend and fellow horror-movie buff at work. To tell you the truth, knowing her general level of IT literacy, I was pretty amazed she'd even managed to install and run a PC game. It did, however, get me thinking. Perhaps people outside the normal "gamer" demographic (which I probably just about fall into), are more likely to play a game if it's connected to other interests. My mother is a huge horror movie buff, so the Silent Hill games would have an obvious appeal that something "simple" like Tetris probably wouldn't. Moreover, the extremely realistic graphical style of the games helps to break down the barrier between games and movies. I'm pretty sure the original Silent Hill wouldn't have had the same effect; to somebody who isn't aware of or interested in the context for that generation of games, all that matters is that it doesn't "look" real.
    • With respect to the "Gateway" part of the post, it would be interesting to know if this is the game that got her started on gaming, or if another game was the gateway that led her to this one.

      The reason I ask is that SH3 is an unusual game for someone to cut their teeth on when they have very little computer knowledge.
  • Final Fantasy (Score:2, Informative)

    by KtHM ( 732769 )
    Hands down, Final Fantasy. It's what got me into games. You don't need reflexes, there's menus. They ease you into playing pretty well. And the stories are great. FFX and X-2 would probably be best for a fledgling female gamer - pretty, and there's a love story.

    Before the calls of sexism come, I don't care who the girl is, all girls like romance. Even when they say they don't. They only say that to see if you'll be romantic anyways. (Yes, girls are sneaky.)
    • My wife hates the Final Fantasy games. She's become remarkably keen at identifying the glowing "save points" in FF and similar titles. When she points at them it means, "You're 29. Turn this off now"

      That said, there are a few games she doesn't mind. She loves Monopoly Party for the PS2. Animal Crossing didn't click, but Pac Man World 2 for the Xbox did. Any of the old Spyro games are big hits as well. The first game she ever really enjoyed was Jumping Flash on PS1.

      The problem is that I can't watc
  • You know what I need a list of? Co-operative games.

    My wife and I are both very competative, and I find that anything in which we are pitted head to head is bound to end with one of us getting upset.

    What I need is a list of games we can play together toward a common goal. And as long as I'm making requests, let's have only console games, PS2 and GC specifically.

    Currently our solution is to play MMORPGs, but I'm dying to actually get some damn use out of my GC.
    • Here is two good (but rarely updated) webpages for co-op games:
      http://gamefork.com/content/view/21/54/ [gamefork.com]
      http://charon.sfsu.edu/corey/ps2coop/index.shtml [sfsu.edu]

      I guess my girlfriend isn't girly enough for 1up's list - the only thing on there she likes is Katamari.
      Her co-op favorites:
      GC - Phantasy Star Online
      PC - Diablo
      PS2 - Baldurs Gate, Champions of Norrath.
      Shrek 2 is suprisingly a decent co-op game too.
      Cookies and Cream is an old good co-op game for PS2 - but it's for hardcore puzzle/action fans only -

      • Lord of the rings, return of the king, on the gamecube is a pretty good co op game. If shes a lotr fan then it's a big plus too.

        I think everyone else pretty much covered all the decent co op games out there. That's a pretty small list isnt it? I find that sad.

        Oh, perhaps animal crossing, you guys could make characters in the same town and play when your so isn't around and leave some surprises for them.
    • Also consider: LEGO Star Wars (PS2), X-Men Legends (GC, PS2), Zelda: Four Swords Adventures (GC + GBA), Final Fantasy Crystal Chronicles (GC), and maybe Donkey Konga (GC) if you're up for buying two sets of bongos. All co-op but not truly competitive.

      And about Cookies & Cream (PS2), at least the first half of the game is fine for neophyte gamers. My wife handled it fine until the second half, at which point I had to bring in my sister to finish the game with me. Lots of complicated timed jumping in th

    • But you need to have GBA's as well.

      Zelda: Four Swords (Hands down, one of the best --if not the best-- co-operative games I have ever played.)

      Final Fantasy: Crystal Chronicles (very good co-op game, but can cause some stress if you're combat styles aren't complimentary during boss battles.)

      Pac-Man Vs. (while it's not co-operative, it is hours of fun for just about any skill level of gamer. It comes packed in with Pac-Man World 2.)
  • by sense_net ( 755855 ) on Tuesday April 26, 2005 @09:43AM (#12347405)
    This article implies that the single biggest hurdle to involving more women in gaming entertainment is the subject matter of games. This is incorrect. I have found that the reason women are reluctant to play games is because culture pressures women not to play.

    -Male gamers create an enviornment hostile to female gamers, both actively and passively. Examples: telling women that they wont like Doom 3 but they will certainly like DDR (AHEM!); Asking a women who's gaming if she actually likes games (of course she does you dope, she's playing one now!)

    -Game creators and especially marketers create disincentives for women to play through sexist or oversexualized portrayals of females. Examples: Hijacking Lara Croft's image from female Indy to Drips-With-Sex-Balloon-Boobs; Bloodrayne; too many to list.

    -Women in positions of influence tell young women not to game because it is "not a girl thing to do." I still see (younger and older) mothers tell their daughters not to game (in whatever form) and to play with Barbie. And at the risk of getting shot, I tell them off every time.

    To be honest I'm getting sick of the way women are treated and portrayed by the gaming community. From a social standpoint, I want to see games exoand into a major culture-spanning entertainment, and that can't happen without the other half of the species; from a business standpoint, the game industry is ignoring signifigant potential sales on the games they make by being sexist; and from an equality standpoint, what we as gamers and game industry professionals are doing to women is morally objectionable.

    Drew Nolosco
    Chief Game Designer
    Riot Media, Inc.

    • Disclaimer: I'm not female

      Male gamers create an enviornment hostile to female gamers, both actively and passively. Examples: telling women that they wont like Doom 3 but they will certainly like DDR (AHEM!); Asking a women who's gaming if she actually likes games (of course she does you dope, she's playing one now!)

      This is all assuming girls do online gaming. Plenty of gamers are just as content to play against (or with) the AI. How do they relate? If you are referring to the way society treats female
      • > P.S. I'd love to be a game designer! What do I need to do to become one?

        Didn't slashdot recently run a series of vignettes from game industry insiders, who didn't exactly play it up as a funhouse? You can try searching for them ... good luck.
      • P.S. I'd love to be a game designer! What do I need to do to become one?

        Take David Perry's Design Challenge [dpfiles.com].

        100 games may sound like a lot to sample, but that's just 2 a week for a year. I've basically done this the past two years in a row, not to mention before college...

        And I disagree with pretty much all of your statements WRT female gaming. Hang out with female gamers, watch them, listen to how people treat them and interact with them, and watch most modern games through their eyes. Watch how quick
    • Game creators and especially marketers create disincentives for women to play through sexist or oversexualized portrayals of females. Examples: Hijacking Lara Croft's image from female Indy to Drips-With-Sex-Balloon-Boobs; Bloodrayne; too many to list.

      Are they being sexist? It seems like they oversexualise their portrayals of males too (all muscles, no brains, etc), but no one seems to complain as much about that. From what I've heard, it's just a male thing to oversexualise everyone. Now, if there were

      • There are already some games with very realistic characters, both male and female. Interestingly, the two best examples I can think of are both adventure games: The Longest Journey (and its sequel) and Syberia (and its sequel.) It would be great to see more of these, and in more genres.

        My personal gripe are games where your sex doesn't matter to the story of the game, and yet there's still no way to select 'male' or 'female' avatar. This was the only weak part of System Shock 2, that you're assumed to
        • And some games are historical games in environments where there were simply no women around, like pretty much all WWII games.)

          False. In WWII, the army of the USSR made heavy use of female soldiers, who got rifles like everyone else. Other nations, such as France, recruited women to a lesser extent.

          For an example in movies, look at Iron Cross. Or for an anti-exmple, look at Enemy At The Gates, where a woman who had really been a sniper was changed into a clerk, because USA audiences wouldn't believe a
    • -Game creators and especially marketers create disincentives for women to play through sexist or oversexualized portrayals of females. Examples: Hijacking Lara Croft's image from female Indy to Drips-With-Sex-Balloon-Boobs; Bloodrayne; too many to list.

      It's not like women don't oversexualize men too. I'm guessing you haven't run across any romance novels lately.

  • by grub ( 11606 )

    My girlfriend lovesSuper Monkey Ball Deluxe! We had a party a few weeks back and most of the women gravitated to the basement to play that game on xbox. Fine by the guys, the fridge with the beer was upstairs.
    If you don't have the game, rent it, buy it, download it, whatever it. It's a blast.
  • by fondue ( 244902 ) on Tuesday April 26, 2005 @09:49AM (#12347459)
    Firstly, it is, of course, hilariously sexist garbage.

    Secondly, you don't want to introduce your s.o. to Animal Crossing if you ever want to get near your Gamecube again.
  • This one worked quite nicely for my girlfriend...

    almost not in my favor in that it is now all she does...

    be careful the dark side...
    • Haha, I got my wife hooked on WoW too.. and now she's demanding I upgrade her computer or otherwise make it so we can both play at the same time. What's funny is that she's made comments like yours, scolding me for addicting her to it, especially when she loses track of time.

      Works for me - I get an AMD64 upgrade, she gets my old rig, and we both get to game.

      Hope you two get lots of quality time together with it. I'm looking forward to it myself.
  • I'm surprised Mario Kart wasn't on that list. It was always the best game I had in my collection to break the ice with. When I was living in the dorms in college I found that the N64 version was quite popular. They were always knocking on my door asking if they could come in to play Mario Kart (which I of course obliged). Their favorite track would always be Moo Moo Farm.
  • by robbway ( 200983 ) on Tuesday April 26, 2005 @10:03AM (#12347571) Journal
    One thing you to which you have to give women credit is that they are not easily swayed by video images and the "kill! kill! kill!" mentality. Most, but not all, women tend to like a game that gives them their money's worth. That means a lot of depth with a simple concept, usually.

    Although I disagree with Centipede and Suikoden, I think I can sum up with a brief history of games that accidentally or on purpose were of general interest to women:

    1) Pong. It's just not fun anymore, though.
    2) Breakout, Super Breakout, Arkanoid, and all those other block busting games (many currently released). Very little actual violence.
    3) Pac Man/Ms Pac Man. The first one was a hit with women because it was the first game with a personality and a lot of soft colors. The second one was just an all around better game and it had Pac Man in drag!
    4) Dig Dug/Mr. Do! I'm not sure why. I saw more women playing Mr. Do! than Dig Dug back in the day. Dig Dug should replace Centipede on the list IMHO.
    5) Galaga and Moon Cresta. Colorful and varied was the key here, I think.
    6) The Legend of Zelda. Only the first one had the simplicity and depth ratio right.
    7) The Adventures of Lolo. The graphics were particularly hard on the eyes, but the trilogy of Lolo was some of the hardest ever. The key to this puzzle game was in failure--it gave you a clue as to what went wrong.
    8) Puzzle games. Bust-a-move/Puzzle Bobble, Tetris, and even Lolo counts. The appeal is a simple concept/difficult play combination and the "pick up game" quality.
    9) Solitaire. After all, PC solitaire is the most popular PC game. I suggest Solitaire Antics Ultimate and Hardwood Solitaire (PC and Xbox Arcade).
    10) Pitfall/Jungle Hunt/Safari Hunt. Something about vine-swinging. I don't know why, except they're all about survival in a jungle.
    11) Megatouch/touchscreen games. These are popular with the ladies.
    12) Multi-game arcade cabinets. Probably the smartest move if you have to sate your Soul Calibur urge while on a date.

    I should end my list by saying it is not scientific in the slightest. My qualifications to these observations is playing Pong when it was first released.
    • 5) Galaga and Moon Cresta. Colorful and varied was the key here, I think.

      my wife is really good at galaga. She also loves Centipede and Warlords. I don't get all the centipede bashing on here.. it's the best shooter ever made.

      But I'd have to say that Animal Crossing is the one game she'll play for hours on end. She even breaks out the gameboy and makes clothing for the animals.

      My memory cards are filled with her animal crossing towns.
      • I don't get all the centipede bashing on here.. it's the best shooter ever made.

        Centipede is fine with a trackball, or a mouse. But the problem is that it was re-released for portable devices a few years ago, and playing it with arrow keys makes no more sense than using those controls for Half-Life 2.

        Therefore, many people today only remember Centipede as an unplayable cell-phone offering.
  • Games for girls (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday April 26, 2005 @10:09AM (#12347627)
    I'm a girl gamer, and one of the biggest draws for me is having a female avatar. I'll play GTA and Zelda and other games that have only male avatars, and enjoy them, but there's something special knowing that your character is also a woman and she's kicking some ass. That's why I love the Buffy games and No One Lives Forever...

    Also, not one adventure game listed on that page? From King's Quest to Loom to Myst, those were the first games that drew me. Since they're all story-oriented and tend to have no violence, surely those would be a hit with most non-gamer women.
    • It's not very well-known, but you might enjoy Beyond Good And Evil. Female protagonist, good story, great voices, excellent game in general. It didn't, apparently, sell very well. I'm rather perplexed about that, because I really enjoyed the heck out of it. I think it's available on pretty much everything, including the PC (where I played it).

      If you're into adventure gaming, the single best one I've ever played is The Longest Journey. Grim Fandango is a very close second. Both can be quite difficult.
  • To bring non-gamers into the fold requires, I think, a game that is easy to get into and enjoy with a minimum of initial skill. Grand Theft Auto is the poster child for this. I can't recall another game that has so fired up non-gaming friends, male and female. I just hand them the controller, tell them which button is the accelerator, and they go nuts, laughing it up as they run into cars and people.

    Nintendo has the right idea in this sense, as they always espouse games that the average person can enjo

    • You have got to be kidding. GTA has some of the most diabolically complex control schemes out there, and I say "some", because it has several control schemes. Although GTA:SA finally gives you characters with real motivations and not charicatures, it's still a really violent game that constantly punishes you for slipping (you get run over, shot, crash, etc).

      Funny thing, I think my GF would like Burnout ... something about a game where you're supposed to crash spectacularly would probably bring out someth
  • From my experience it is possible to get girls into videogames however for that to happen the game needs to have extremely simplified controls consisting of no more then 4 buttons and having basically no story or learning curve. Fusion Frenzy happens to be a popular title among my girl friends mainly cause you usually only have to press a or b. Marble Madness and Tetris were always favorites of my sister and those games require you every so often to press a single button. People seem to think getting girls
    • I don't think it's a simplified control scheme that's needed but a well designed learning curve. A complicated interface is fine if it's not all needed at the very beginning. Much of what people are saying here to get girls into games applies to new gamers rather than girls specifically. Fighting games often have this kind of learning curve where advanced techniques and good timing are not needed until you face the CPU at higher skill levels. More than one poster here has mentioned that women like the f

  • Simple Games have a great value. They are easy to learn, simple to play and are extremely effective at being a diversion.

    I have effectively dropped all gaming in my home on the simple fact that all the games are the same:

    • You are some Joe Dude or Super Guy.
    • You must Kill, Kill, Kill
    • You must solve stupid riddles of some form or another. Which button to press, What's the code, where's the remote? That kind of crap.
    • You win by Killing

    they are also all very dark, literally. The screen displays are only

  • If you want to play a game with your significant other, how about a game that's based on two player teamwork? (Actually, that might apply to Dance Dance Revolution; I've never played it).

    In particular, if your girlfriend likes puzzle games, cooperation and extremely cute cats (mine certainly does), it's worth giving Uo Poko a try on MAME. Um, assuming you live in Japan and own the arcade game. Otherwise you'll be prosecuted to the full extent of the jam.

  • Wrong link! (Score:4, Informative)

    by antdude ( 79039 ) on Tuesday April 26, 2005 @11:21AM (#12348349) Homepage Journal
    it should be here [1up.com] since the original link starts with #5.
  • by superultra ( 670002 ) on Tuesday April 26, 2005 @12:14PM (#12348906) Homepage
    I saw an interesting side of this when working at EB.

    As far as EB sales, I can't deny that the Sims and Animal Crossing did very well with women. But many of the the women that actually walked into our store (and it was admittedly rare for one to walk in save Christmas and Valentine's Day) tended to like - surprise - fighting games. Not sure why they liked fighting games, but it definitely goes at odds with the traditional viewpoint that games that sell to women are non-violent and don't advertise big bouncy breasts.

    Among PC owners, adventures games did very well. I remember having several female customers that we would see every few months who would come in and lament the decline of the genre, poke around the shelves, pick up a few of those subpar European adventure games, put them down and then sadly leave. Longest Journey would whet their appetite once, but it raised the bar for them and there was little more to offer.

    Then there were the few women who were excited about games only because their man's enthusiasm was so infectious. Those were the most fun, because it was always weird to have one of those few come in and excitedly put preorder money down on Def Jam Vendetta or something like that.

    It was surprising to me how many males came in wanting, so desperately, to find a game that their girlfriend would play. I wonder about this; why we work so hard to get the women who (kind of) love us to love our games. I've lost count of the number of times I've called my wife into the living room to try to get her to play. Maybe it's a form of validation?
  • Games girls like (Score:4, Insightful)

    by RogueyWon ( 735973 ) * on Tuesday April 26, 2005 @12:22PM (#12348990) Journal
    It seems there are some pretty fundamental misunderstandings going on, looking at the comments so far in this thread. The answer to the question "what sort of games do girls like" is quite simply "good games".

    Honestly, all this talk about "simple" games, "real" games and so on is just patronising and untrue. Two of the most commonly cited "popular with females games" are complex and menu driven (The Sims and Final Fantasy X). By and large, with variations for individual taste and genre preferences, female gaming preferences are basically along the same lines as male. A good game in any genre will be recognised as such by players of either gender. Final Fantasy X, Resident Evil 4, Half-Life 2, Halo 2 and The Sims are good games; their appeal is fairly universal, although there are always a few fanboys (and it's almost always boys), who define themselves as "real gamers" and consider it somehow obscene to profess a liking for those games.

    Indeed, if there's one big difference between male and female gaming habits, this is where it lies. By and large (and yes, I'm going to stereotype here, even though I don't like doing so), girls are brought up in an environment in which it's less acceptable for them to play games. They're less likely to have spent their childhoods talking about them with friends and they'll generally come to them later in life. For this reason, I've generally found women games less likely to be involved in, or impressed by, the willy-waving that characterises so much of the "male" gaming discussion. There's a trend among male gamers, particularly noticable here on slashdot, to attempt to accumulate Kudos by professing deliberately archaic tastes ("What, you like Final Fantasy X? Disgusting. They've not made a good installment since 2, when everything was in text and you controlled the game by throwing rocks at the screen!") or claiming to be a "real gamer" ("I only play Nintendo games because only Nintendo make REAL GAMES for REAL GAMERS").

    By and large, if you exclude the small but unfortunately noisy demographic that think like this, male and female gaming tastes are the same. The same considerations of gameplay, graphics, sound and story all come into force, with the specific balance varying between individuals
  • by identity0 ( 77976 ) on Tuesday April 26, 2005 @12:31PM (#12349081) Journal
    If they'd done a list of only current games, I think Nintendo would have come out on top in terms of consoles. Probobly the best system to get any new gamer, male or female, would be a GBA. In my opinion, it has a better game library than the Game Cube or any other console.

    A lot of guys make fun of Nintendo for being "kiddy", but they aren't really childish. It's just that they lack the uber-macho posturing stuff you see in a lot of other consoles/games. Some guys are put off by that, but obviously girls are not. In fact, most of the people saying "Nint3nd0 iz k1dd3" are probobly pimply teenagers, not men.

    IMHO, while girls can like blowing away people in GTA as much as any guy, they're not as swayed by the macho feel of those games so much as by the gameplay.
  • Its already hard enough to get video game time with all the "Great" Lifetime TV movies on, the last thing I need to do is fight over who gets to use the console tonight.
  • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )
    It's the only game you can take into the bedroom!

    For those not in the know, the PS2 version of Rez was released in Japan with a special device that vibrated. A bit like a rumble pack, except that this one does not connect to the pad, but rather you place it on your... er... body/lap/in your pants. Basically, it's a vibrator controlled by the game. Brings a whole new meaning to the phrase "two player".
  • It's not just girlfriends who don't give a flying fuck about CS, there's also anyone else who has a working brain, and therefore got sick and tired of CS years ago.

    CS fanboys, mod me troll if you must, I just had to say it.
  • Back in the day when Earth and Beyond first came out, I was one of the people who bought it and gave it a whirl. It was fun for a time. More importantly one time a girl (a friend) was over at my place who sat down and watched it. I don't know what it was about the game, the simplicity of control, the accessible content, etc... but she almost literally shoved me out of my seat and started her own character to play. Next thing I knew she was coming over to play the game.
  • Here a few more observations I've seen about games that have a good draw on Real Women(tm) I know:

    Heroes of Might and Magic 3- Something about this series has a strong draw on my women friends. Could be the sparkly graphics and sound... maybe they also like the flow of gathering up resources and even making armies? I know several of my women friends who don't play that many games but played the Heroes 3 games like ("male") power gamers.

    Caeser III, Pharaoh, Zeus Something about these citybuilder games ha
  • by bjb ( 3050 ) *
    MAME. Show her. If she's of the age where she can remember Ms. Pac-Man, Centipede, Burger Time, etc. then she'll have a passing interest.

    ...Then she'll want to play one for old times sake.

    ...Next thing you know, she's addicted!

    Well, that was my story, anyway. Almost 4 years ago, I put MAME on my girlfriend's computer with a few classics (notably Mario Bros., Donkey Kong, Burger Time). Eventually I noticed over time that the play counter on her MAME installation was reaching into the hundreds, and that

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