The Escapist on Women In Games 72
The ever interesting Escapist has an entire issue concentrating on women in gaming this week. Particularly informative is a Chris Crawford penned piece on the subject. From the article: "I have long since given up participating in discussions on women in gaming. The games industry is so out of touch, such discussions are a waste of perfectly good electrons. When Microsoft wanted to publicize an event for women at a Game Developers' Conference a few years back, they splashed around banners showing a woman in a low-cut dress. Some people just don't get it."
I like this... (Score:5, Insightful)
And therefore, I shall now declaim a pompous, long-winded pulled-out-of-my-ass speech on that very same subject, about how evolution has shaped men as a hunters and women as nurturers -- an idea no one has *EVAR* thought of before!
Honestly, we get this story here literally every week. (This is sort-of the second one this afternoon.) Have any of them ever made a single useful point?
Cavemen Did Not Have Gender Roles (Score:3, Insightful)
This idea is one of those great uncontested theories that seems to make sense on first glance, but as soon as you delve into it it quickly falls under its own weight. From TFA:
The biggest difference was men were hunters and women were gatherers. This gender specialization did not
Re:Cavemen Did Not Have Gender Roles (Score:2, Interesting)
I'd also add that he did bring up evidence, such as certain physical characteristics; only women can feed babies and me
Re:Cavemen Did Not Have Gender Roles (Score:2)
I was pointing out that this assumption, which is quite common, was in fact a gross simplification, as were the majority of the points in you rebuttal.
Essentially you are arguing that human beings have specialised roles based
Re:Cavemen Did Not Have Gender Roles (Score:1)
Re:Cavemen Did Not Have Gender Roles (Score:1)
I agree that we are adaptable creatures, and as such you would not expect extremely large differences between men and women. Indeed, there aren't extremely large differences, but there are significant differences.
However, saying that you'd expect men to be useless at social interaction and women useless as spatial reasoning is making a strawman (and a very ridiculous one at that). You'd expect men to be worse at navigating social difficulties
What's your point? (Score:5, Insightful)
Pick up a womens' magazine sometime. What's on the front of it? That's right, a beautiful woman in sexy clothes. Look at television adverts specifically targeting women. What's in them? That's right beautiful women in sexy clothes.
Believe it or not, advertising weenies aren't complete idiots. If you want a high response from men, you use an image of a beautiful woman in sexy clothes, and if you want a high response from women, you use an image of a beautiful woman in sexy clothes too. It's not the advertising weenies' faults that this is what women respond to.
Does it seem like these guys are completely clueless at first glance? Sure. But when you compare it with other markets, and, most importantly, compare it with what works in other markets, it seems not only sane, but the obvious choice.
Re:What's your point? (Score:5, Insightful)
Put a women in an attractive evening gown, and both men and women of all sorts will prefer to look at her as opposed to a not equally attractive figure.
But put a women in a thong and fetishistic apparel and you have something quite different. It's the difference between a man in a smart suit on the one hand and a man in a pair of assless chaps, a cowboy hat and leather armbands on the other. The first is attractive, while the latter is overtly erotic. Many men would be uncomfortable dressed in the latter, and many men would have a hard time imagining themselves as being a character dressed in the latter. And men need to grasp this.
Not all characters benefit from being eroticised. It may simply not fit their character at all. And this is a problem in game design presently - sacrificing all believability in the name of exposing skin. And regardless, not everyone wants to look at erotic images constantly whilst gaming.
They could make a version of Hamlet in which the main characters consistently walk around nearly nude, in thongs, bikinis and lingerie. But it wouldn't be very believable. And on the whole, audiences tend to favour believability over eroticism in cinema where the two are in contention. They are not always in contention, by any means. But frequently when they contend against each other in gaming at present, eroticism gets chosen over believability.
Being dressed in erotic clothing feels fundamentally different from being dressed in merely attractive clothing. And playing a character dressed in erotic clothing does similarly, for those who understand that distinction.
Re:What's your point? (Score:2, Funny)
Wait... the poster's name is
Yup, it's slashdot.
Re:What's your point? (Score:1)
Re:What's your point? (Score:3, Interesting)
But there's a specific reason for that - those magazines are saying "Look at this woman! She's prettier than you, sexier than you, and looks better in her clothes than you! BUT - if you buy this magazine we can teach you how to look like her and tell you what products to buy to be just as sexy, we promise!"
Same for TV ads for beauty products. However, if you watch daytime TV, where the ads are for cleaning products and targeted at housewives, you don't see that - yo
Re:What's your point? (Score:1)
And why wouldn't a woman want to identify with the 'She's prettier than you, sexier than you, and looks better in her clothes than you' woman?
on a side note, how many spotty geeks in anoraks do you see portrayed as male characters in games? not many, there all well build, good looking etc...
Re: (Score:2)
For those interested (Score:2)
Re:For those interested (Score:1)
Samus Aran.
This has proven to be a trend in the issue of female game character analasys. I've not seen a single article on the subject in recent memory that mentions Samus in any signifigant way. Why is that? She has iterations in both histo
Re:For those interested (Score:1)
Dump the Games Section (Score:2)
Most comments/replies repeatedly number less than 100 (including trolls and basementers) and there are more focused places for the subject, it's just not here.
Uh uh. (Score:1)
It's a good move for Slashdot, and there's really no other place to put that content.
Re:Uh uh. (Score:2)
Since the section was started, it has never gotten more than ~25 +3 responses.
The slashdot crowd is getting older and they know where to go to discuss games.
Just my opinion.
Re:Uh uh. (Score:2)
IGN Talks Games Industry Salaries (On October 20th, 2005 with 348 comments)
Jack Thompson Under Investigation (On October 20th, 2005 with 214 comments)
TransGaming Releases Fast Software 3D Rendering (On October 19th, 2005 with 256 comments)
Nintendo & McDonalds Providing WiFi (On October 18th, 2005 with 296 comments)
You are looking at a lull between storms right now. You'll see 1000's of comments once the nex
Re:Dump the Games Section (Score:2)
Rather than asking for the games section to be dumped, why not just set your preferences to not show Games articles? That way you can have what you want, without the rest of us having to see your griping.
Re:Dump the Games Section (Score:2)
Good idea. Checking just two minutes ago though, indicates that slashdot has set about 20 cookies. Although I have "excellent" karma I wonder about a site's need to set that many cookies and I often browse the site while not logged-in.
I confess that I am not a subscriber and therefore have no say in anything, but I reserve the right to gripe.
A lot less "Bad Request" ["Your browser sent a request that this server could not understand. Request header field is missing colon separator"] errors would also be
What do they really want to play? (Score:3, Interesting)
I know that my wife does not speak for all woman-kind for the type of games that need to be created, but the stuff she enjoys to play is just so incredibly different than what I would ever conceive of creating. There's no desire for competition and winning (although I know there are many women that are indeed very competitve and really want to win), and she's content with just driving around or just having the sims do stuff. It's hard to make a game when you don't really have an objective.
I could see some women enjoying more of a game where you are more defensive than something like a FPS where you go on the offense and attack everything.
I seriously think the hardest part about finding a game that women would enjoy is just finding out what the women want to play. Any of the answers that I see in the articles is so vague (an my suggestion was vague too) because there is no real set answer as to what women would enjoy.
Re:What do they really want to play? (Score:2, Interesting)
Sadly, I think this is exactly the problem preventing game publishers from being more successful at tapping into the female gaming market. No-one really understands what women want in games, and I think this is largely because there are not many women involved in game creation. The reason that gaming is popular for guys is that the games are written by a bunch of guys who w
My mom... (Score:2)
When I was younger, I got the SNES, after I have had the NES. Both consoles where a big part of my infancy.
My mother used to see me play, I played Ninja Gaiden, Contra, and some other games.
Now, there were some titles that she actually played, and when an Aunt visited us, she also tried to play (I am speaking about 35 AND 45 yr old women). The games they enjoyed where: "Mario Kart", "Pilot Wings" and "Where in time is Carmen Sandiego". Of course they didnt play
Re:My mom... (Score:1)
Kill, robb everything
save the world!
Re:My mom... (Score:1)
The game is called Warlords, available on the
Re:What do they really want to play? (Score:2)
If you can find a copy - get Beyond Good and Evil, based on your other game choices, I think you'll really like it. Also Animal Crossing nearly resulted in us getting a second game cube so both my husband and I could play it at the same time. We are thinking of getting to DS untis when it finally ships of DS. :)
Re:What do they really want to play? (Score:2)
I find it hard to get an intelligent conversation about women in gaming happening on Slashdot, but I would concur with the above statement about cooperative vs. competitve gaming. I like playing games where I'm cooperating with my husband -> it's something we can do together; as opposed to competitive gaming -> where it's something we do against each other.
Even team events against other players really doesn't do it for me - I play on a WoW PvE server for a reason - I have not desire to do PvP. I mig
Re:What do they really want to play? (Score:1)
Actually, I just thought of a game that does take a lot of cooperative efforts. Muppets Party Cruise. I think Mario Party (haven't played it) is the game that is similar t
Re:What do they really want to play? (Score:1)
I didn't respond to your WoW comment though, so back on topic, I agree with you there too. I don't like doing PvP either, only PvE. I don't really play MMORPG's, but for instance, playing Starcraft on the network I'd rather team up with my brothers and fight 2 or 3 computer AI groups than fight each other. That way it helps each other out with defending one an
Reinvent (Score:3, Funny)
Perhaps if we wait long enough this medium will show some teeth, female teeth.
This guy doesn't know anything about psychology (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:This guy doesn't know anything about psychology (Score:2)
"The ideal game for women, according to this simplified model, would be some sort of interactive soap opera or bodice ripper, presenting the player with complex social problems as she seeks the ideal mate."
We play games because we WANT MEN. I and all my female clanmates had a good laugh at that one.
Re:This guy doesn't know anything about psychology (Score:2)
Re:This guy doesn't know anything about psychology (Score:2)
To get back on topic, I don't think we're going to see any major releases aimed at women gamers for quite a while... the same reason we don't see many non-derivative games aimed at the traditional (male) game market -- the industry has become pretty risk-averse.
What the game industry really needs to do if they want to target the women
Low Cut Dress (Score:1)
Buy a GameCube (Score:2)
Re:Buy a GameCube (Score:2)
WTF (Score:3, Insightful)
I just ignore them. As for the sorts of games that I play I love RPGs, the cute Japanese puzzle games, MMORPGs, Action/adventure, and other puzzle games. I also love games like Mario Kart, Monkey Ball, and Dynasty Warriors. I play games either becuase I love the storyline and gameplay or becuase I can pick them up and have some fun as a means to kill my time.
I'm generally happy out (Score:2, Insightful)
I also play other types of games but I devote most of my hours to rpgs.
As long as the clothes and attitudes the women have aren't ridiculous (wearing pieces of string, having to be rescued in a patietic way, signing over the men like a women in a frank miller comic) I have no problem with it.
Exceptions to 'the having to be resuced' are of course Ico. That is truely fantastic. But in Ico it wasnt shoved in your face, she
No woman I know fits into this model (Score:2, Insightful)
The writer uses (outdated) information on what we (think) we know about the stone ages, uses it as a model of what is the most appropriate behavior model for both genders, and makes the assumption that us ladies would prefer games that are "interactive soap opera or bodice ripper, presenting the player with complex social problems as she seeks the ideal mate."
*shudder* If this is what "games for women" are supposed to be like, Im glad they dont make them.
Im a woman and I like games. Many
Re:No woman I know fits into this model (Score:1)
Has anyone thought to ask if there is a problem? (Score:2, Interesting)
http://www.theesa.com/facts/top_10_facts.php [theesa.com]
43% of gamers are female. In certain categories more women than men.
http://blogs.guardian.co.uk/games/archives/2005/06
The title says it all.
http://www.wi-fitechnology.com/displayarticle2212. ht [wi-fitechnology.com]
WTF (Score:2)
N3 (Score:1)
The portion arrives when the obligatory female character is displayed, and displayed she is. It is immediately implied she has nothing on, before she puts on what I can barely call armor (as so much is showing) with an entire camera shot showing nothing but her clamping her chest peice over he breasts.
Am I the only one insulted
Re:N3 (Score:1)
I also like the fact it has stayed that way.
Some of the other games have been known to start with a good character design, main character of metroid, main character of perfect dark and then do something very stupid.
EX Remove shamus mask and 'sex' her up, put the main character of perfect dark in fhm.
Which kind of destroys their crediability as tough characters.