Journalist Cries About Sexy Polygons In His Video Games

RaspberryFitted

Boyz In Motion Member
Joined
Apr 9, 2017
Messages
7,892
Reputation
2,465
Daps
43,913
Reppin
G-Co
The video-game business has a long and troubled history of sexism and gender stereotypes. A round of scandals at multiple gaming companies offered a sad reminder that the industry has a lot more to do to fix its culture and, eventually, repair its reputation.

But the situation isn’t hopeless. As a hit release from Sony shows, there is a big market for games that portray women as smart and resourceful actors rather than as pawns, victims and objects of male desire.


An incident at a conference about a decade ago has become the poster child for the industry’s cultural issues. “I love the fact you have a lot of very strong female characters,” a woman said to an all-male panel of developers from Activision Blizzard Inc., maker of megahits World of Warcraft and Call of Duty. “However, I was wondering if we can have some that don’t look like they stepped out of a Victoria’s Secret catalog.” A smattering of applause was quickly drowned out by a sea of boos. Instead of defending her, the developers ridiculed her suggestion.


Despite an outcry at the time, the industry continued to struggle with hostile attitudes toward women. After Microsoft Corp. hosted a party five years ago with scantily clad female dancers on platforms, head of Xbox Phil Spencer was forced to apologize. More recently, League of Legends maker Riot Games Inc. has been sued for gender discrimination, while Ubisoft Entertainment and Activision Blizzard Inc. have let go several executives amid allegations of widespread sexual harassment.

Yet amid these painful episodes, there are also signs of progress. In particular, Sony Group Corp.’s 2017 blockbuster release, Horizon Zero Dawn, shows that there is a huge market for games that don’t denigrate women.

Zero Dawn’s main protagonist is a female character who doesn’t look like a supermodel. Set in a post-apocalyptic time far in the future, the character, named Aloy, battles robotic dinosaurs and aims to stop a rogue artificial intelligence system from destroying life on Earth.

The game’s developers said they wanted to create a “believable and inspirational hero for everyone.” And it worked. Players loved the character and the game’s engrossing narrative and production values. Horizon went on to become one of Sony’s most popular games, with more than 10 million units sold.

The sequel, Horizon Forbidden West, is poised to be one of the biggest releases of 2022 after it launches in February. If successful, it should encourage other publishers to move beyond superficial female appearances and focus on better storytelling and game quality. The positive response to the title among female gamers on industry websites and social media suggests it might help bring more female gamers to console games as well.


Characters like Aloy remain too rare among mainstream games. As a video-game enthusiast, I find it uncomfortable playing leading titles like Tomb Raider, Genshin Impact or Bayonetta, all of which feature female characters in skimpy outfits. But for now, gamers are stuck either watching sexist depictions of women or avoiding many of the gaming world’s top franchises. Of course, plenty of best-selling videogames don't rely on cringe-inducing portrayals, but familiar gender tropes of the damsel in distress and the use of overly sexualized characters turn up far too often.

One obvious path toward reform would be to improve diversity among those who create games for deep-pocketed developers. Earlier this month, Activision released a report showing that only about one-quarter of its employees were female, a share it said was similar to its industry peers. A prior study found that women are even more underrepresented in executive roles in the industry. It’s hard to imagine that some of the worst game-design decisions wouldn’t have been avoided if there were more female voices participating in the process. Reeling from its own scandal, Activision says it will do better and hire significantly more women within five years.

The treatment of women in video games, both behind the scenes and as characters within them, is nothing short of scandalous. Hopefully the latest round of outrages, as well as the example of Sony’s Horizon title, will spur publishers to change their culture. It’s well past time that they did

Video Game Industry Struggles to Shake Sexist Attitudes

The portion about underrepresented women in gaming roles is solid, but there was no reason for Bayonetta and Genshin to catch a stray. Him tying this to the Activision Sexual Harassment controversy dilutes his point even further.
 

Gizmo_Duck

blathering blatherskite!
Joined
Aug 15, 2018
Messages
72,243
Reputation
5,369
Daps
153,008
Reppin
Duckburg, NY
:ehh:

c7c1d976-d52a-4302-ac27-83e644ae1e70_PS4WomensDayTheme.jpg
 

Moose_Greyjoy

I DO Not Sow
Joined
May 7, 2012
Messages
6,054
Reputation
536
Daps
14,730
I’ve always thought platformer characters were too “cute” and had unrealistic unattainable characteristics features.
 

Womb Raider

movin' thru the city streets
Joined
Aug 23, 2014
Messages
27,429
Reputation
7,426
Daps
93,365
Reppin
Fo Nem
Complain about spank material brehs


Dude needs to go to rule34, bust a nut and shut the fukk up
 

Lord Beasley

Veteran
Supporter
Joined
Aug 2, 2012
Messages
41,776
Reputation
2,359
Daps
78,426
Reppin
469 x 972 x 702
He's "literally shaking," while playing Tomb Raider.


49obpL.gif
is this new limpwristed generation that would rather see greased up men

but i will agree with what they said about genshin impact, i just think they focused on the wrong thing. Geshin characters look like scantily clad kids, it's mad sus and :sitdown: i think they should focus more on that than alleged sexism, but that can open up a bigger can of worms.

last week i was behind some old neckbeard lookin nicca's car and he had a bunch of anime girl stickers on it. you can't tell me that's not sus behaviour

i bet the journalist was uncomfortable because they felt tingles in their loins
 

Batsute

The Lion Choker
Joined
Mar 11, 2013
Messages
8,769
Reputation
2,665
Daps
30,738
Reppin
#Hololive
Just another bytch ass take focusing on small section of gaming. He’d probably be the first one indicted of sexual assault allegations.

Chun Li
Samus
Jill Valentine
Clare Redfield
Sonya Blade
Alyx
That Rivers Edge
Aerith

All characters who were not sexulized or a damsel distress. Gaming journalism is a joke.
 

Khalil's_Black_Excellence

The King of Fighters
Joined
May 1, 2012
Messages
15,021
Reputation
1,505
Daps
26,279
Reppin
Phoenix, AZ
Just another bytch ass take focusing on small section of gaming. He’d probably be the first one indicted of sexual assault allegations.

Chun Li
Samus
Jill Valentine
Clare Redfield
Sonya Blade
Alyx
That Rivers Edge
Aerith

All characters who were not sexulized or a damsel distress. Gaming journalism is a joke.

Chun Li is fairly sexualized. But I hear you.
 
Top