The Samus Mystique 77
Gamers with Jobs contributor KatarinLHC has an interesting piece looking at what she calls 'The Samus Mystique', the need for more female characters in games with the chutzpah and level-headedness of Metroid-killer Samus Aran. From the article: "Her independent streak is legendary: Samus always works alone. She explores caves, shoots enemies, and investigates secret passages, all on her own initiative. Her story does not revolve around her being kidnapped or needing rescue. Instead, she is a proactive force in a dynamic world; she does not react to her circumstances but instead interacts with them. She demonstrates a lesson not often taught to young girls, which is that working by yourself can be powerful, gratifying, even joyous."
How far we have come... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:How far we have come... (Score:2)
Re:How far we have come... (Score:1)
Re:How far we have come... (Score:1, Funny)
Re:How far we have come... (Score:2)
Has it occurred to the Feminazis that some of these women might dress the way they do because they like it?
Re:How far we have come... (Score:1)
Re:How far we have come... (Score:2)
Re:How far we have come... (Score:2)
What was the last non-Metroid game you played where the heroine didn't show any cleavage before the ending, if at all?
Re:How far we have come... (Score:2)
Also Final Fantasy X.
Re:How far we have come... (Score:2)
>>Final Fantasy X
Lulu had enough cleavage to make up for any Yuna didn't show.
Re:How far we have come... (Score:2)
Re:How far we have come... (Score:1)
Heroines who are actualy female. (Score:2, Insightful)
If they're going to be heroines who both look an act like women, then yeah, I'll take that. But if they're going to be men with tits then I'd rather just have a male avatar.
Re:Heroines who are actualy female. (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Heroines who are actualy female. (Score:2)
1. It's that lots of kids play video games, and some of those play Metroid (including some young girls -- especially the cool ones). People get their views of the world and themselves from many sources, and video games are a potentially influential one since they're often targeted towards the formative years. Whether they actually influence a damn thing is up for debate, but it's certainly possible. A r
Re:Heroines who are actualy female. (Score:1)
I'm not sure what to think about this one... (Score:2)
Hmm. (Score:5, Funny)
I think it would be pretty hard to teach that lesson without taking off her suit...
Re:Hmm. (Score:2)
I know. Teaching young girls the "powerful, gratifying" joys of working by themselves just doesn't sound right...
Re:Hmm. (Score:2, Insightful)
I'm all for people being equal (though that does NOT mean
Unecessarily Specific (Score:1)
She says she wants people not to judge others based on gender, than says Samus is THE ideal of womanhood. I mean, what's so great about rugged individualism? It doesn't seem so great to me, and it doesn't seem feminine either. I don't want women to become men any more than I want nem to become women, and I certainly don't want women to become Ayn Rand...
Just stick with the ridiculous clothing complaint, that one makes much
Re:Unecessarily Specific (Score:2)
2. Samus isn't Randian, thank god. She might look like it at first, but there is nothing she says that can allow us to make any assured statements about her own views. We don't know what the heck Samus thinks. She does her job, she gets out, if you did it fast enough she takes off some clothes, SEE YOU NEXT MISSION. As near as we can tell from this, she believes in Speed Nudism and
Re:Unecessarily Specific (Score:2)
Aww... Oh, wait. That's not the same word. Nevermind.
Re:Unecessarily Specific (Score:1)
Re:Unecessarily Specific (Score:2)
Re:Unecessarily Specific (Score:1)
Re:Unecessarily Specific (Score:2)
BTW, isn't it funny how many writhing masses of hate we see these days?
Re:Unecessarily Specific (Score:1)
I was mostly kicking myself for missing something in plane sight that I should have seen. It's also a good thing to admit one screwed up in a public forum like this so you dont get too full of yourself (IMO).
Re:Unecessarily Specific (Score:2)
Something plain like that?
(Ducking, running, crying "Whoo-hoo-hoo" like Daffy Duck)
Samus is a woman? (Score:2)
Re:Samus is a woman? (Score:2)
Re:Samus is a woman? (Score:1)
And Zero Mission had a section where she ran around without her suit.
Re:Samus is a woman? (Score:2)
Re:Samus is a woman? (Score:1)
I don't think I encountered the spiderball boss but that's because the boost ball boss annoyed me so much I stopped playing.
Re:Samus is a woman? (Score:2)
Samus Versus Alis (Score:5, Interesting)
What I find to be more of an interesting character are the Phantasy Star Alis characters. The original is prolly the first RPG female lead. She's avenging the death of her brother, and does it in a pink dress. She's the swordswoman of the party and has more hp then the other characters. PS1 was also created by a lead female designer.
Then in PS4 Alys is strong older sister character who teaches the main character everything he knows, and is the strongest character until she dies saving the rest of the party.
Strong female leads don't have to conform to single feminist view, they can wear pretty pink dresses if they want, and still kick ass.
Re:Samus Versus Alis (Score:2)
I bet you'd like that wouldn't you?
Re:Samus Versus Alis (Score:2)
Why's there a girl.... (Score:2)
I'll never forget that friend of mine who played Super Metroid unknowingly, up until he died and Samus' suit flying off death sequence appeared.
"Why's there a girl in Samus' suit?!"
Classic.
Samus' gender has sweet FA to do with how good or bad a game Metroid is, and whether or not female gamers will like it. Female gamers, like males, will pl
Better than the rest, but... (Score:2)
However, as has been pointed out, there is still the "hidden" (I use this loosely, since it's pretty much standard in every entry of the series and is well known) reward of beating the game in a short time frame which gives you Samus sans suit. This is nothing more than a fan service, and I have no idea where to place this. Is this objectification? Or not?
On t
Re:Better than the rest, but... (Score:1)
We base our entire choice of sex-partner, mate and societal/species evolution and propegation on objectification. You think women (and society in general) don't pick and judge males on a certain set of objectified traits such as height, weight, income, profession and posession? Men and women and society objectify each other in every way possible - especially when choosing who we're interested in sexually and who we are interested in as characters. Why do yo
Re:Better than the rest, but... (Score:1)
Re:Better than the rest, but... (Score:5, Insightful)
Umm... People are things. So are trees. So are rocks. So are pieces of paper, houses, shingles on the roof of a house, shingles still in stacks at the hardware store, and boobies. And when I say boobies, I mean... well, about 4 or 5 different things. Red-footed, blue-footed, masked, udders, teats, and a HUGE RACK.
Things are things. See also: Noun.
This is why I hate people that gripe about objectifying other people. Our brains perceive everything as an object, including other people! That's just the way we as humans work. We even have names for objects that represent groups of objects. Words like "traffic" or "galaxy". We have names for objects that represent groups of people, like "race" and "nationality". Our brains identify, clarify, and categorize everything around us.
And then someone gets all touchy-feely and has a fit because they don't like how they're being treated by someone. Here's my advice to that person: walk away. Just walk away and ignore it. They're either clueless or they're baiting you. If you throw a fit, more people will notice, then there will be larger doses of people baiting you, while the rest of everyone who still doesn't give a rat's ass about your problem will begin finding ways to hate you. And the more the baiters get you to gripe, the more people hate you, and the haters' numbers will grow. And then you'll whine and cry and bitch and piss and moan until everyone hates your guts and/or pokes you with a stick to get you to make more fuss. And then (hopefully) someone will shoot you and put you out of our misery. Yes, that's your choice: walk away and shut the hell up or die a miserable death.
Erm... sorry. I got a little carried away there.
Re:Better than the rest, but... (Score:1)
Reducing someone to an object means just that - you might as well be treating them like rock.
Games pander to and are created by men who "tend to" objectify women - duh! It's a boyz club and the girls want in.
Re:Better than the rest, but... (Score:1)
Damn, that would be hot.
Joking aside, perh
Re:Better than the rest, but... (Score:2)
On a somewhat unrelated note, yay for Mother 3 almost being done!
Joyous? (Score:2)
Re:Joyous? (Score:2)
I do, muthafucka!
Indeed, I can't think of a more appropriate adjective to explain Katamari Damacy. Sometimes, the word fits.
Re:Joyous? (Score:1)
Re:Joyous? (Score:1)
If the only emotions in the games you play are anger and rage then you are really missing out.
Metroid Makes the Gender Arbitrary (Score:5, Insightful)
Another and better example is Alyx from Half-Life 2: Shes dressed sensibly and while cute, is not super-hot or a walking example of anatomical disproportion. Her lines are ones you'd expect from an intelligent person in her situation and shes more than capable of fending for herself as she does many times in the games, sometimes it seemed better than yourself as Gordon. Other than Alyx, its hard to name a female character that is like her in her sensibilities and generally realistic interactions; she was a person. Even Cait Archer is a purposeful stereotype for all her interactions & cleverness.
I look forward for the day that females in games are representated as people and not simply as women.
Re:Metroid Makes the Gender Arbitrary (Score:2)
The idea is that women can do the same things as men can, right? So you've got various male characters in the Castlevania series kicking zombie butt through various locales, and you've
Re:Metroid Makes the Gender Arbitrary (Score:2)
It's more likely to be indicative of the designers being influenced by the Alien films but not being able to feature a pixelated woman wearing underwear. I suppose that It was progressive enough of them to keep the character as a woman instead of using generic male action hero #3.
As for the bigger breakthrough of
Re:Metroid Makes the Gender Arbitrary (Score:3, Insightful)
These same women almost never have an issue with men having to play the stereotypical bread-earning, work from birth to death, live shorter lives, provide stabilitiy and security roles, do they? And these same women (I've been around them in g
Two words... (Score:1)
Re:Two words... (Score:2)
Re:Metroid Makes the Gender Arbitrary (Score:2)
Little correction, in the NES and Gameboy parts its only revealed in the end and only if you beat the game fast enough, in SuperMetroid, MetroidFusion and MetroidZero its already revealed when you die, since then the suit explodes away and you can see who is in there.
Beside from that you are right, the female in Metroid is nothing more then a running gag, it doesn't matter to the game itself at all.
Re:Metroid Makes the Gender Arbitrary (Score:1)
You mean, perhaps in a game that makes a female character's gender completely arbitrary and irrelevant to the plot?
It seems to me that you've just asked for exactly what you criticized Metroid for delivering.
Samus? (Score:1)
I've been ripped off. Call my IP lawyer!
PS: I don't care about gender in a game. I care about gameplay and character development. And no, I don't necessarily want to play a fat chunky ugly female character rather than a hot big-titted one, but I don't want to play a fat ugly chunky loser male character either. Male characters in games are just as "stereotyped" and generic and unoriginal as the female ones. So what? So are magazine covers. So are movies. So are characters in most books. So are most an
Re:Samus? (Score:2)
But what if we don't want to play more, because of all the afore-mentioned steretypes? Because we have the same opinion on those movies, books and (especially) anime characters?
Flat characters DO have a role to play, even in good writing. But most h
Re:Samus? (Score:1)
So you can have games where you play a balding middle aged chunkster in his mom's basement or a weflare queen with six kids and four ex husbands liv
Re:Samus? (Score:2)
I already do. But the economics of opportunity are getting in the way; companies can make more money by sinking it into dreck than into the next Katamari.
You go to see a movie, becuase Angelina Jolie is in it - not because Kathy bates is in it.
NO comma I DO NOT period
Indeed, over time it seems to me that the "hotness factor" of the lead actress is mattering less and less.
Movies have attractive, stereotypical characters in them, because that's what sells.
Actually, they se
Re:Samus? (Score:2)
Wow. I've never had to defend my opinion of sexy before. I'm almost happy.
Re:Samus? (Score:1)
Power suits do not role models make (Score:1)
The best thing about Samus (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Dammit... (Score:1)