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Thread: Positive Portrayals of Women in Video Games

  1. #16
    Newbie Administrator Loony BoB's Avatar
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    Which women in gaming are actually good characters ie. not brainless beauties in need of saving or some skankified "badass"?
    Almost every female character I've ever seen in a game, to be honest.

    Many people out there think that females are treated unfairly in video games because they are portrayed as brainless beauties or skankified badasses. I say that it is how players interpret the character that is wrong, and perhaps if the characters were male they would not be so upset about their characters. Essentially, the sexism is still in the head of the player, not the character. FFXIV's official forums were a great example of people jumping to conclusions of sexism. When gladiator gear was released, some people were upset about how incredibly revealing the female's gear was. Others, in retaliation, laughed - because the male's gear was just as revealing, if not more so.

    It's not sexist to put girls into ridiculous and revealing attire for a role if the guys are wearing equally ridiculous and revealing attire. It's just a design choice. I don't see anything wrong with the "skankified badass" because people generally assume they are skanky because of what they wear, not their actual attitude. I've not seen many skanks in video games.

    As for brainless beauties, I don't see all that many of them, either. Some of them are ditzy, sure, but most lead male characters I've come across have their moments, too. Vaan and Bartz are great examples of this.

    Every portrayal of a woman in a video game tends to be just fine as far as I'm concerned. Not every character has to be the perfect role model - like in the real world, some women have different strengths than others and being constantly serious doesn't somehow make someone better than someone who is capable of being silly or following their heart.

    If I had to pick a positive portrayal of a character in general that happens to be female, I would probably echo krissy's sentiment and say April Ryan, or perhaps Zoë Castillo from Dreamfall. They can be serious, but they don't have to be. They have their "duh" moments, but they're intelligent. They can beat people up, but they're not superpowered. They're genuine people. I like them. Tifa, from Final Fantasy VII, is one of my favourite characters of all time (although I don't know how much of the Compilation I would include in that, I'm more focusing on the main game).

    Ignoring Liara because she needed to be saved? What, because no guy has ever needed saving? Or perhaps because needing saving makes you a terrible, weak person? Pretty sure the majority of characters in video games get saved at some point. I would say someone who is always the hero and never needing to be saved is not being portrayed realistically.
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    Quote Originally Posted by Skyblade View Post
    Attachment 39908

    Frimelda Lotice, from Final Fantasy Tactics A2: Grimoire of the Rift.

    Her femininity plays a fairly important role in her story, and yet she's never sexualized, and plays against most of the common stereotypes of female characters.
    I couldn't agree more. I really liked Frimelda.


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    Going with the MGS train, Mei Ling and Para-Medic. Not Rose.
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    Quote Originally Posted by Cim View Post
    Quote Originally Posted by Skyblade View Post
    Attachment 39908

    Frimelda Lotice, from Final Fantasy Tactics A2: Grimoire of the Rift.

    Her femininity plays a fairly important role in her story, and yet she's never sexualized, and plays against most of the common stereotypes of female characters.
    I couldn't agree more. I really liked Frimelda.
    Indeed. She had an awesomely deep character for a side mission
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  5. #20

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    Quote Originally Posted by Loony BoB View Post
    Which women in gaming are actually good characters ie. not brainless beauties in need of saving or some skankified "badass"?
    Almost every female character I've ever seen in a game, to be honest.

    Many people out there think that females are treated unfairly in video games because they are portrayed as brainless beauties or skankified badasses. I say that it is how players interpret the character that is wrong, and perhaps if the characters were male they would not be so upset about their characters. Essentially, the sexism is still in the head of the player, not the character. FFXIV's official forums were a great example of people jumping to conclusions of sexism. When gladiator gear was released, some people were upset about how incredibly revealing the female's gear was. Others, in retaliation, laughed - because the male's gear was just as revealing, if not more so.

    It's not sexist to put girls into ridiculous and revealing attire for a role if the guys are wearing equally ridiculous and revealing attire. It's just a design choice. I don't see anything wrong with the "skankified badass" because people generally assume they are skanky because of what they wear, not their actual attitude. I've not seen many skanks in video games.

    As for brainless beauties, I don't see all that many of them, either. Some of them are ditzy, sure, but most lead male characters I've come across have their moments, too. Vaan and Bartz are great examples of this.

    Every portrayal of a woman in a video game tends to be just fine as far as I'm concerned. Not every character has to be the perfect role model - like in the real world, some women have different strengths than others and being constantly serious doesn't somehow make someone better than someone who is capable of being silly or following their heart.

    If I had to pick a positive portrayal of a character in general that happens to be female, I would probably echo krissy's sentiment and say April Ryan, or perhaps Zoë Castillo from Dreamfall. They can be serious, but they don't have to be. They have their "duh" moments, but they're intelligent. They can beat people up, but they're not superpowered. They're genuine people. I like them. Tifa, from Final Fantasy VII, is one of my favourite characters of all time (although I don't know how much of the Compilation I would include in that, I'm more focusing on the main game).

    Ignoring Liara because she needed to be saved? What, because no guy has ever needed saving? Or perhaps because needing saving makes you a terrible, weak person? Pretty sure the majority of characters in video games get saved at some point. I would say someone who is always the hero and never needing to be saved is not being portrayed realistically.
    What's your justification then for things like Bayonetta?
    New Bayonetta posters play on her ample assets | Lazygamer .:: The Worlds Best Video Game News ::. | PS3

    No doubt there are whackos of every sort who jump the gun and scream FOUL at any ridiculous thing. For instance, I have no problem with a female being madly in love or stuff like that. Some people consider Elly from Xenogears to be the ultimate female stereotype but I never thought so because she was an interesting character and I don't get the impression the writers designed her to be some massive sexist cliche.

    But characters like Bayonetta were intended from the start to be nothing but objects of teenage hormones.

  6. #21
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    Bayonetta is as much a woman as the main characters in Priscilla.
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  7. #22
    Newbie Administrator Loony BoB's Avatar
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    I didn't say there were no skanky badass women, did I? I'm just surprised people seem to think that positive portrayals of women in games are something that is not standard.

    Bayonetta was very witty and outrageous, although perhaps skanky isn't the best word for her. She seemed comfortable with nudity. She loved to tease. She wore provocative clothing. But it seemed to me that this was her choice - I know girls who really enjoyed the character of Bayonetta, but she was clearly not adored as a role model. I don't think we've seen many people jumping nude down the streets, beating up people and whipping their hair around. xD

    I don't know. Perhaps it just doesn't sit right that there should be such a thing as a "positive portrayal of a woman" because it suggests that women should be a certain way, and I disagree with that.
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    You know, there are a bunch of really mean guys in video games, i think its an unfair portrayal of men.

  9. #24

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    Quote Originally Posted by TrollHunter View Post
    You know, there are a bunch of really mean guys in video games, i think its an unfair portrayal of men.
    Well undoubtedly there are many masculine stereotypes in gaming that are bad as well.

    I don't think anyone is gong around seriously saying Duke Nukem is how men are and should be.

    Quote Originally Posted by blackmage_nuke View Post
    Going with the MGS train, Mei Ling and Para-Medic. Not Rose.
    I liked Rose.

    If any women in MGS are bad portrayals of women, it's the Beauties.

  10. #25
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    The point i was making is that this unfair representation is ridiculous
    There are strong women, weak women, attention obsessed women, vain women, wise women, dumb women, smart women, skanky women, nudist women, kind women

    See what im saying?

    EDIT: Removed the last sentence because it was a baseless attack that made absolutely no sense in the context of this thread. Don't even know why I said that.
    Last edited by TrollHunter; 02-04-2013 at 02:08 AM.

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    absolutely haram Recognized Member Madame Adequate's Avatar
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    Bayonetta is a very complicated character to examine from a feminist perspective.

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    programmed by NASIR Recognized Member black orb's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Forsaken Lover View Post
    brainless beauties in need of saving or some skankified "badass"?
    >>> I dont see the negative part on this, after all these are the kind of girls that most of the fans love and idolize..
    >> The black orb glitters ominously... but nothing happens..

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    BoB, you are disillusioned. But I don't want to get into it with you. I also assume you have never played Super Mario Bros.

    I think Commander Shepherd from Mass Effect is a good example. Sure, the default character is male, but female Shepherd plays the exact same way with the same abilities and is treated the same throughout the plot. Only your romance choices differ, and even then not in all cases.

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    disc jockey to your heart krissy's Avatar
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    faith's great

    Not all women in games are walking sex toys pr damsels in distress, thats just your paranoia talking.
    i don't think anyone's saying that all sorts of females and males AREN'T represented in gaming. but the extent, and the kind of impact it has is probably worth a discussion, isn't it? if it's all just moot and there's a legitimate argument that gaming as a medium isn't, on average, disingenuous to specific groups of people in terms of portrayal and storytelling, then we'll just show it and be on our merry way. i actually think that gaming is a more refined look at society than popular film, for example. but whether we're talking gaming or film, there's areas that could be good to analyze and even improve.

    a positive portrayal is just a non-negative or a neutral portrayal, i guess, and there's all sorts of ways to be positive. but like, let's take a peep at a thread just above this one, the one with the 'best games', and see what kind of females those games have, imo:



    1 Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time - barring a stint as a secret warrior, princess needs to be saved, fairies have the pointiest boobs i've ever seen outside of a madonna movie, but let's excuse that due to pixels. i am stretching this, because i always thought zelda was a great character with a lot of strength, but for the majority of the game, she's a 'ptntbs'V

    2 Super Mario 64 - princess that needs to be saved

    3 Tetris - which block is the best block? THE LONG PHALLIC ONE DUH

    4 Final Fantasy VII - hero solves problems with a sword, heroine solves problems by praying. actually i thought ff7 did a lot of things right; the sex trade/trafficking segments put it and the people running it in a negative light, and honey bee inn wasn't a terrible place the way don corneo's mansion was. i liked that tifa leads, but, you know, only until cloud gets back, BECAUSE HE DID SUCH A GREAT JOB LAST TIME ... well, wait, sorry, lucrecia is a princess that needs saving, aeris is a princess that needs saving (but you can't even do that), cloud is a princess that needs saving (at least they get another girl to save cloud from his coma or whatever)

    5 Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past - save the princess

    6 GoldenEye 007 - i never played this tbh

    7 Super Mario Bros. - princess? saving?

    8 Half-Life 2 - alyx vance is placed there to get you to continue because she continuously is attracted to gordon/the player. she's a love interest, and i think her other purposes (plot progression, help, etc) are overshadowed by this. it's been a while since i've played it though. does she make any particularly important decisions in the game? the other woman in the game is a semi-bad guy, isn't she?

    9 DOOM - OF COURSE the space marine is a giant burly man. i'm not going to argue that leaving out women entirely out of a game is an indication of anything, especially one of the first games to really make an impact on the art form. i mean, pong didn't have gender at all, and look how well it did.

    10 Super Mario World - bro love


    this is pretty fun let's keep going


    11 Super Mario Bros. 3 - threee bros! actually, one of the mario games, and certainly the recent ones, allow you to play as the princesses, don't they? was it world? anyway,

    12 Resident Evil 4 - women are either girls in need of escort/rescue or have their own agenda and will use you. or they're not fit for combat roles and do mission support remotely.

    13 Super Metroid - a woman's role is as a mother. im just kidding i don't think that's what the game meant to convey.

    14 Chrono Trigger - i really want to say there's a princess that needs saving in here someplace. or like, multiple princesses. doesn't matter though, because we have a girl that is good at math/technology, which i think is great!

    15 Metal Gear Solid - "She had such a cute way of walking. She kind of wiggles her behind." "Way of walking, huh?" I liked sniper wolf way more than meryl as a character.

    16 Street Fighter II - are there girls in this that don't have 90% of their legs showing? i'm all for wearing what you want but i think the intent is pretty clear with that. DISTRACT YOUR OPPONENT THEN BEAT HIM SENSELESS. it's interesting to note, however, that chun-li is a high ranking interpol officer, while ryu is like, what, a vagabond?

    17 Call of Duty 4: Modern Warfare - no idea never played it.

    18 Final Fantasy III (IV) - i'm having a hard time trying to find something here in terms of how it portrays women, other than celes is usually depressed, but i mean, look at friggin shadow. i actually think this game could be gender reversed and there wouldn't be any issues.

    19 Grand Theft Auto IV - shruggin. ALTHO, when will they make a gta with a female lead? i can do it in saints row, why not yet here?

    20 Legend of Zelda - the master sword is a phallic symbol and the tri force is a vagina. well guess who's got both in the end

    i would say the ratio of games that have positive role models in this list is not super great. but keep on reading before you attack me. i actually didn't expect the ratio to be this good, so i am aware i have preconceptions of gaming and gaming culture too.

    reading through this myself, i end up thinking that maybe to be a really good character that most people will agree on, the character has to be a lead character (lara, faith). most of the characters mentioned in this thread to support a 'positive portrayal' are leads. otherwise you just do not get enough exposure to a character and you end up making assumptions, or just straight up forgetting them later on when discussions like these come up. also, it'd be interesting to see how the list changes with years... most of the characters we mentioned are from _fairly recent games_, so perhaps it's a bit unfair to even try to analyze a list like this that spans a few decades. story writing has improved in gaming, i like to think.

    one of the reasons a lot of the games that are well rated remain in memory is because you can identify with the lead in some way. and it's easy to put a young male into the picture because the majority of the market is just that. so it's a business decision to have a strong male lead, and now that the market's shifted, it might be a business decision to introduce other options. so while the audience is changing, character portrayals will also change.

    i think the issue is that when people talk about video games, they talk about master chief and classic mario games, where the females are digital objects or goals to rescue. yes, there's great representations of women in gaming. but they're not the popularized characterizations you talk about when talking about gaming at large. why are the other games more popular? i can argue that gameplay is the reason; mario is just more fun to play than mirror's edge. halo is more fun than block puzzles in tomb raider.

    i think we should actually make another thread titled 'Positive Portrayals of Men in Video Games', and see where the conversation takes us in that one, if anyone actually thinks it's necessary. i don't very often stop to think 'hey, this is weird' when beating up on stereotypical male grunts. on the other hand, when im fighting female soldiers or whatever i always feel a little weirded out by it. is it because i was raised in an environment where fighting boys was a-ok but hitting a girl never was? obviously i'm programmed somehow too.

    MILF, is there an analysis piece we can read about Bayonetta?

    tldr: i should not post at 4 am in the morning.

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