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Female Sexualization vs. Empowerment in Games - How do you determine which is which?

dramatis

Member
It's immaturity and insecurity that determines the threshold. I can go to carnival and see tons of women in outfits more revealing than anything you'll find in any game. I don't get upset and start lecturing people on gender roles and whatnot. Anyone that does so is a gigantic toolbox. Don't go to carnival if you don't want to see flesh. Don't buy a game if you think the character designs are too impractical. Vote with your dollars instead of constantly shitting up every goddamn thread where an artist had the nerve to draw a female character with exposed flesh. Just fucking stop. There is nothing being changed by the constant complaints, because many of the complainers go out and buy the fucking game anyway. So what was accomplished in the end? Nothing but destruction of actual gaming discussion.

Maybe there's room for a third gaming forum on here. The gaming politics/issues forum. So we can get all the manufactured controversies as far the hell away from actual gaming discussion as possible. Seriously, it's beyond tedious. PEACE.
I think it's the reverse, that it's immaturity and insecurity that plagues those who want no discussion of these topics at all. What does it matter that you see a lot of flesh at a carnival? That's the context of the setting. Do skimpy outfits at a carnival in your real life experience mean a female warrior going out to kill in a battle wearing a chainmail bikini is entirely legitimate? Does that mean a female soldier in a scifi game should be wearing no armor to block bullets/lasers and instead just some skintight spandex?

The desire to see this discussion separated from your 'gaming discussion' is a desire to be insulated from words or opinions that you don't care about, which just speaks of apathy for even ideas that could contribute to elevating your gameplay experiences. Games like The Last of Us or Papers Please didn't happen because their creators ignored issues. Calling valid discussions about portrayals and character designs of females 'manufactured controversies' indicates a lack of connection to the world, and especially a lack of understanding that there is a large population of females out there with money in their pockets that can help convince publishers to fund and to continue funding good games. Or are you saying that people's opinions and concerns are all 'fake' anyway?

At the very least the people who are discussing have something to say; guys who don't want to see or hear about it have nothing to say at all.
 

Lime

Member
What is this incessant need to have content creators bend to the will of the vocal communities? Criticism is fine, it's warranted. But what are you criticizing? Hey this guy drew this character in a way I don't like, therefore it should be changed. Ignoring the fact that it is probably what the creator intended.

Games are a business. Games are heavily marketed and it's a billion dollar industry that analyzes every aspect of itself. They know what sells, what their demographics want and what they don't want. What people just cannot seem to fathom is that someone wants to do something for the complete opposite reason of someone else.

Also, sex sells. Sexualization sells. It's why even when they try and tone down over sexuality of characters, they are still what people would consider attractive or beautiful. James Cameron spoke of in Avatar why Zoe Saldana's Na'vi character looked so much like her. Because he knew that the male demographic needed to build an attachment to her character, a "my waifu" type relationship. If the alien looked menacing or hostile, it wouldn't work. So he settled on a look where she looks feminine, humanized, attractive, etc. It's why certain companions in games are dressed a certain way or act a certain way. Why Cortana looks the way she does in Halo 4. Why Anya looked the way she did in gears of War.

It's crazy how downright prudish/puritanical some of the criticism becomes during some of the debates. It seems everyone should be covered in loose jackets, hoodies, jeans and t shirts with basic casual shoes etc.

1. Vocal community - CHECK
2. The horror of developers bending to the will of their customers - CHECK
3. Games are a business - CHECK
4. Sex sells - CHECK
5. Male demographic only wants sex - CHECK
6. You're all just puritanical / prudish - CHECK
7. All female characters should cover themselves up - CHECK

Seriously, no one is arguing or claiming anything of what you just wrote. Perhaps it would be best if you sit down, listen, and educate yourself before inserting yourself into a discussion or a conversation?
 

Amneisac

Member
This is such a wonderful post and the bolded is especially significant.

The truth is, sexualized characters isn't the problem. The problem is that many of them are just that and there's little variety for female characters. Either they're sexualized or the generic strong type. We need more female characters with depth and goals so that even if they're sexualized, it's still obvious that they're more than that.

As an industry, when the vast majority of female characters are sexualized, you don't have the benefit of the doubt. His post about cultures that wear less clothes isn't valid in this discussion. Naked is not necessarily sexualized. Tight-fitting clothes, high heels, fish nets, sexy walking, etc. - these are the problems. We're not just talking about realistic portrayals of humans that wear little clothing.
 

Ophelion

Member
The base rule for how I determine sexist or empowered is really simple...though it requires doing something that certain people on the internet seem incapable of doing.

Right, so you've got a character and she's dressed up sexy and you're worried it might be cheesecake. Alright, so what you have to do is take a look at the character: not just what she's wearing but who she is as a person. If you cannot determine who she is as a person, default to yes, it is sexist. Ok, done that?

Now, presuming you've discovered the character is a person beyond her skimpy outfit, what you have to do is pretend that you are her (go with me, go with me) you put yourself in the mindset of the character. You imagine the world through the lens of who that character is. You imagine yourself as them. In your mind, you become who they are inside and out. Alright, done that? Look down. Are you pleased about how you are currently dressed? If the answer is no, then you have a problem.

I realize empathy is not everyone's strong suit, so if you are incapable of that exercise, I'd say just err on the side of caution. Especially in the world of video games and comic books, if you're worried that something is sexist, it probably is. Sad, but true.
 

aeolist

Banned
What is this incessant need to have content creators bend to the will of the vocal communities? Criticism is fine, it's warranted. But what are you criticizing? Hey this guy drew this character in a way I don't like, therefore it should be changed. Ignoring the fact that it is probably what the creator intended.

intent is meaningless, results are all that matter. everyone intends to make good games but a lot of the industry's output still ends up sucking. should we no longer judge them for that failure?

also i'd wager you have no issue with criticism directed at gameplay systems. if that's true why are character designs so unimpeachable?

Games are a business. Games are heavily marketed and it's a billion dollar industry that analyzes every aspect of itself. They know what sells, what their demographics want and what they don't want. What people just cannot seem to fathom is that someone wants to do something for the complete opposite reason of someone else.

Also, sex sells. Sexualization sells. It's why even when they try and tone down over sexuality of characters, they are still what people would consider attractive or beautiful. James Cameron spoke of in Avatar why Zoe Saldana's Na'vi character looked so much like her. Because he knew that the male demographic needed to build an attachment to her character, a "my waifu" type relationship. If the alien looked menacing or hostile, it wouldn't work. So he settled on a look where she looks feminine, humanized, attractive, etc. It's why certain companions in games are dressed a certain way or act a certain way. Why Cortana looks the way she does in Halo 4. Why Anya looked the way she did in gears of War.

capitalism doesn't justify everything, and in this case myself and others are customers of the games industry and our needs and desires are just as valid as yours. why is it so wrong for us to ask for things that satisfy us?

It's crazy how downright prudish/puritanical some of the criticism becomes during some of the debates. It seems everyone should be covered in loose jackets, hoodies, jeans and t shirts with basic casual shoes etc.

this is a lazy argument that depends on a near total ignorance of people's actual statements. i am personally fine with sexualized characters so long as they are not objectified, and even if they were i wouldn't be as upset about it if they weren't the vast majority of female designs in games. give me variety.
 

Crocodile

Member
My rule-of-thumb for anything in life: Dress practical for the situation.

Flat bottomed footwear and armour that covers the body without leaving 'choicely' positioned armour-less areas is most likely the most practical thing to wear in combat.

I'm not a fan of the "practical" argument. These are games where people often wield magic, have super powers, can leap 20 feet in the air if they are normal 12 year olds, etc. Often times the universe these games are set in go our of their way to be impractical. Impractical designs in the name of "The Rule of Cool" or "The Rule of Sexy (for both genders)" is fine. I think whats more important is internal consistency within the world that doesn't betray suspension of disbelief. As an example, Bikini armor (and no option for anything else) isn't a problem because its impractical but more because it is often just gross & overbearing or makes no sense when compared to male armor (if they are given full armor in that game) within that game universe.
 

Scrabble

Member
What bothers me most is the notion of what a "real woman" is supposed to look like. I've seen that phrase ascribed so many times that I find it really unsettling. Apparently only real women look like Elena from Uncharted. If a female character has C cup boobs she's not real, cause I guess women with above average boobs don't exist. Women have boobs, sometimes big boobs, get over it.
 

Lime

Member
Why can't we have both.GIF

We definitely can. The OP is using the wrong terminology - what is meant is "objectification vs. empowerment", not sexualization and empowerment. Sexualization is fine, objectification isn't (well, to the degree that we are experiencing in popular entertainment).
 

Amneisac

Member
The base rule for how I determine sexist or empowered is really simple...though it requires doing something that certain people on the internet seem incapable of doing.

Right, so you've got a character and she's dressed up sexy and you're worried it might be cheesecake. Alright, so what you have to do is take a look at the character: not just what she's wearing but who she is as a person. If you cannot determine who she is as a person, default to yes, it is sexist. Ok, done that?

Now, presuming you've discovered the character is a person beyond her skimpy outfit, what you have to do is pretend that you are her (go with me, go with me) you put yourself in the mindset of the character. You imagine the world through the lens of who that character is. You imagine yourself as them. In your mind, you become who they are inside and out. Alright, done that? Look down. Are you pleased about how you are currently dressed? If the answer is no, then you have a problem.

I realize empathy is not everyone's strong suit, so if you are incapable of that exercise, I'd say just err on the side of caution. Especially in the world of video games and comic books, if you're worried that something is sexist, it probably is. Sad, but true.

To me this sounds like you just admit that the character is over-sexualized and then you try to rationalize it.
 

Tigress

Member
I understand that what you're saying Is essentially true, but does that mean we can't have cultures who wear very little clothes in their games? As an anthropologist, I love a variety of fictional cultures, and a very significant portion of real cultures are mostly naked. If you want to depict tropical people, they will almost certainly wear little more than a loin cloth/bikini. Those cultures are real and significant. If we want either depict them or realistic fictional cultures, you need to have that or else you're white washing their culture to fit western sensibilities. That's wildly culturally disrespectful.

Here's the thing, those cultures are wearing simple clothes because they don't put much thought into it because they don't normally wear much.

What fran wears? Is obviously very catered to a society that is used to clothes and designing them. It is designed to look sexy and accentuate the things our culture finds sexy. It is very obviously catered to us, not to represent a culture that doesn't see the need for clothes.
 
I feel like there's a fairly clear distinction between the two. Some characters are both a little empowering while also dressed ridiculously, but that doesn't really make them the same thing. Like can't you also have the empowering character without them being obviously sexualized to the point where it's offensive?
 

pantsmith

Member
I'll respond to this part.

The fallacy of this argument is that one culture is real and one isn't. Nonexistant people from fantasy stories are not the same as an actual population of actual people with cultural roots that are traceable beyond some game designer's imagination.

That character is 100% fetishization. She's a sexy tribal bunny amalgam of ideas designed specifically to appeal to you sexually. If she is ALSO something else, that doesn't change the fact that she is ALSO a sexy tribal bunny girl. These characters are reverse engineered to explain their sexualization which does not change the fact that they're sexualized.

It's the same argument people use to defend Tifa from FF7. In "her lifestyle," she is on the run a lot and wears her clothes to aid fast movement. Except you know what runners don't wear? Suspenders and boots. The extent of Tifa's sexualization basically boils down to an exposed midriff and huge breasts, which is really tame by sexy tribal bunny girl standards, but pretending "it's because she has to move fast!" is pretty lame.

Is it fair to say she is 100% fetishization?

I bring up the example of "beach trips", predominantly featured in Japanese games; we get to see the cast of characters in revealing clothing, clearly the setup is for fanservice reasons, but that revealing clothing is 100% appropriate given the context- and its not like you have to force a character to want to go to the beach. Who doesn't love a relaxing day at the beach? Its both sexualized and honest to that games universe , hardly 100% sexualization or not sexualization. A range.

Unless we're just flat out seeing a character in a revealing, submissive position for no reason other than viewer satisfaction it is unfair to say what is or what is not appropriate to a story without taking everything into context. The Viera, and Fran, made me uncomfortable when I was first introduced to them, but that was as a viewer looking through my own cultural lens. Fran is an empowered, borderline amazonian (the strongest type of female figure) huntress and by no means submissive to anyone. Sure, her character designer might be grounded in some kind of fetishy fanservice (I would disagree because Akihiko Yoshida is generally extremely tasteful and grounded in his fantasy influences, the rest of the game and his portfolio would back this up), but the rest of the game's art design and the way the game treats her never acknowledges it as weird, and Fran herself seems very comfortable. She is also part of a universe FULL of half-naked beastfolk, not just bunnies but lizards and dog/donkey looking things, most of whom (we see) are male and all of whom seem to be divorced from sexual gaze.

To me it works. It totally depends on the context, and would not work for every other character in any other game.
 

aeolist

Banned
None of the characters in that game have terribly distinctive personalities, deep culture or nuance. You can't pick one out of all the shallow characters in the game and say that one! is the problem. The fact is that most game writers are just not good, which usually means we don't have a lot of meaningful emotional context to work with.

i agree, but that doesn't invalidate my argument. shitty writing makes vaan kind of a bad character but that's about the end of it. shitty writing did the same for the viera, but in their case it also ended up being sexist.

if you want to make a thread complaining about games writing for more general criticism, go ahead. in this thread and in response to these posts my statements make sense.
 

Servbot24

Banned
i agree, but that doesn't invalidate my argument. shitty writing makes vaan kind of a bad character but that's about the end of it. shitty writing did the same for the viera, but in their case it also ended up being sexist.

if you want to make a thread complaining about games writing for more general criticism, go ahead. in this thread and in response to these posts my statements make sense.

Why is it sexist when the male viera are also wearing scant clothing?



Gladiolus is sexualized too and I don't see the problem.

I don't know what this post means. I'm assuming that's a character. But just because you find that specific character to be okay does not invalidate this entire conversation.
 

Tigress

Member
It's immaturity and insecurity that determines the threshold. I can go to carnival and see tons of women in outfits more revealing than anything you'll find in any game. I don't get upset and start lecturing people on gender roles and whatnot. Anyone that does so is a gigantic toolbox. Don't go to carnival if you don't want to see flesh. Don't buy a game if you think the character designs are too impractical. Vote with your dollars instead of constantly shitting up every goddamn thread where an artist had the nerve to draw a female character with exposed flesh. Just fucking stop. There is nothing being changed by the constant complaints, because many of the complainers go out and buy the fucking game anyway. So what was accomplished in the end? Nothing but destruction of actual gaming discussion.

Maybe there's room for a third gaming forum on here. The gaming politics/issues forum. So we can get all the manufactured controversies as far the hell away from actual gaming discussion as possible. Seriously, it's beyond tedious. PEACE.

Here's the thing, those women chose to wear that. They wanted to wear that. That's the image they want to portray.

Characters in a game? Are designed specifically to market towards people. And when they are made to wear stuff like that, it's to make them objects to appeal to men. They are designed specifically just to be eye candy for the guys.

Do you not see the difference there?
 

Zoe

Member
Do you question every woman who wears a miniskirt on the street what her personality is?

I don't get the point of your statement.

People in this thread and the other have complained that Ashe shouldn't be wearing a miniskirt because it doesn't fit her personality.

So what would the appropriate personality be?
 

Seik

Banned
Which is which...in a simple way I would say DoA Extreme Beach Volleyball vs. Bayonetta 1-2 would be the best example.
 

Zoe

Member
Here's the thing, those women chose to wear that. They wanted to wear that. That's the image they want to portray.

Characters in a game? Are designed specifically to market towards people. And when they are made to wear stuff like that, it's to make them objects to appeal to men. They are designed specifically just to be eye candy for the guys.

Do you not see the difference there?

That reads as if characters should never be sexualized because it's impossible for them to choose to do so.
 
Different opinions.

No one knows, it is safer to not voice an opinion. If you think it is empowerment, don't say it. Double standards and political correctness will destroy your reputation if you express your opinion. It is better to lose your freedom of speech.

Interesting post

Its compelling what the realities of commentary are and scary that I consider this a reasonable action in my mind
 

Nairume

Banned
To me it works. It totally depends on the context, and would not work for every other character in any other game.
The problem is that there isn't any context to pull from. The game doesn't address why the Viera or Fran specifically dress in the fashion they do. Even the amazon comparison doesn't fly because, when they aren't depicted as being naked (which, at least they aren't then wearing highly impractical fantasy armor), they are depicted as wearing armor that would make sense.

Fran is otherwise a great character in a really great game, but her design is really not defensible. And it's even weirder because, as you said, the artist in question is usually muuuuuch better about this kind of thing.
 
Why is it sexist when the male viera are also wearing scant clothing?
In what context are you taking about? Because like in the picture of the dude in the OP, he's not wearing a lot of clothes but at least it makes some functional sense. You don't get the impression that it was just there to be hot if that makes sense.

Like I've seen people wearing a jacket without anything underneath in real life, I've never seen anything like those girls in the OP
 

Zukuu

Banned
People in this thread and the other have complained that Ashe shouldn't be wearing a miniskirt because it doesn't fit her personality.

So what would the appropriate personality be?
Maybe use the quote function. I can see where you're getting at.
 

The Technomancer

card-carrying scientician
Intent is sometimes tricky. I've been learning a lot over the last few years and I'm starting to arrive at some, hmm, procedures for how I handle things like this: look at how various aspects of the media are working to generate an effect.

What's important is that this encompasses two areas: both what effect is actually being generated, and what effect the work seems to be trying to generate. Crucially this is not necessarily the same thing as "what the author/s intend the work to do" because a lot of this stuff can be subconscious.
 

Corpekata

Banned
Why is it sexist when the male viera are also wearing scant clothing?





I don't know what this post means. I'm assuming that's a character. But just because you find that specific character to be okay does not invalidate this entire conversation.

I don't think male viera have ever been in any of the games, though correct me if I'm wrong.
 

Tigress

Member
That reads as if characters should never be sexualized because it's impossible for them to choose to do so.

They shouldn't be if there isn't a good in story reason for it (as some one pointed out, some animes where the characters go to a beach). It's very disruptive when they are like that and it's obvious just to be fanservice to the guys. And hell, if they want to do fanservice to both, I admit it would bug me less. But still, I prefer a story that actually makes sense and doesn't have disruptive elements like that that are obviously designed for our culture, not theirs. It really does break my immersion to see stuff like that (as I said, personality wise I liked Fran but it bugged me the whole story how she was designed as it was obviously a design so that guys could drool at her).

At the very least, come up with a good explanation (Even if you do just want to throw in fan service). Not just throw it in there and make it obvious all it is there for is fan service.
 

Ophelion

Member
To me this sounds like you just admit that the character is over-sexualized and then you try to rationalize it.

Only if you're dishonest. If you're actively lying to yourself in order to justify this sort of thing you've got bigger problems than just not being able to tell one from the other. Literally the only time I've run this exercise through my mind when questioning this and come out with the thumbs up was Bayonetta. Everyone else has failed the test thus far.

And like I said, if you really just cannot tell the difference, just default to yes. It's more reasonable to assume something like this is problematic than not, especially if you're in a position to do something about it (like the member of a creative team, for example.)
 

Zoe

Member
They shouldn't be if there isn't a good in story reason for it (as some one pointed out, some animes where the characters go to a beach). It's very disruptive when they are like that and it's obvious just to be fanservice to the guys. And hell, if they want to do fanservice to both, I admit it would bug me less. But still, I prefer a story that actually makes sense and doesn't have disruptive elements like that that are obviously designed for our culture, not theirs.

At the very least, come up with a good explanation. Not just throw it in there and make it obvious all it is there for is fan service.

It's fanservice for women too. I always had Fran as my main.
 

AlexBasch

Member
image.php
Do people feel really clever doing this shit? Honest question.
 

The Technomancer

card-carrying scientician
That reads as if characters should never be sexualized because it's impossible for them to choose to do so.

Well okay so this is kind of the thing about fiction in general: no characters ever actually choose to do anything, sexuality related or not. But in good fiction you're able to kind of forget that, to lose yourself in the "fantasy". The problem, and this isn't exclusive to sexuality either but its where it most often rears its head, is when things are handled clumsily and we're yanked out of that.

"Suspension of disbelief" basically
 

Zukuu

Banned
In what context are you taking about? Because like in the picture of the dude in the OP, he's not wearing a lot of clothes but at least it makes some functional sense. You don't get the impression that it was just there to be hot if that makes sense.

Like I've seen people wearing a jacket without anything underneath in real life, I've never seen anything like those girls in the OP
He looks straight like a stripper lol.

You have never seen a costume before?
 

Nairume

Banned
do male viera actually appear in any games? genuinely curious
Pretty sure they never show up and GIS seems to be supporting me on this one.

That they live separately and they are super secretive is all the game ever really says about them.
 

Tigress

Member
It's fanservice for women too. I always had Fran as my main.

I did too, cause I liked her character/personality.

But... that doesn't really refute my point. I said it would bug me less but I'd prefer they just don't do it or at the very least come up with a good explanation so it actually fits within the story and doesn't stand out. It really does mess with my immersion when they do obvious fan service.
 

Ishida

Banned
Usually it goes like this:

If you like the game or the company that makes it, it is empowerment.

If you dislike the game or the company that makes it, it is sexualization.
 

Mesoian

Member
Hmm, dunno. I had assumed so (been a while since i played it) but now that you mention it all the google images for male vierra are fan art.

I thought there were no male Veira, or it was like a ganondorf situation where there's one every 50 years or something.

I haven't played FF12 in years.

Usually it goes like this:

If you like the game or the company that makes it, it is empowerment.

If you dislike the game or the company that makes it, it is sexualization.

Eh, only if you're being reductive about the conversation. I like DOA and Tecmo, I'm not going to stand here and try to defend the costume choices Team Ninja has gone with for DOA5.
 

Fawoosh

Banned
Whenever the topic of sexualized male characters comes up it's always immediately slapped down and discredited, "male power fantasy."

Batsuit-Reveal-Coming-for-Batman-vs-Superman.jpg


"Well male figures are also unrealistic and sexualized. There's an entire medium that consists almost exclusively of incredibly handsome, charming, and impossibly muscular men wearing skin-tight spandex."

"Oh that doesn't count, that's a male power fantasy not sexualization."

Okay. I can see where that's coming from. But what about female characters like Lara Croft?

3907025-lara_croft_render_by_ashish913_by_ashish913-d5qa3vs.png


"Lara Croft is a horribly sexist character. Her proportions are impossible and she's just there to be oggled."

Yeah Lara Croft has a very sexy design, but that's not all there is to her. We've seen throughout an entire series that Lara is strong, tough, intelligent, etc. How is Lara not a female power fantasy? Are they not allowed to have sex appeal?
 

aeolist

Banned
Hmm, dunno. I had assumed so (been a while since i played it) but now that you mention it all the google images for male vierra are fan art.

i can only speak from the games i've played but in ffxii and the tactics games the viera are basically the definition of fanservice

saying "oh yeah male viera exist and dress in scanty clothes too" seems like shitty window dressing
 

Mesoian

Member
Yeah Lara Croft has a very sexy design, but that's not all there is to her. We've seen throughout an entire series that Lara is strong, tough, intelligent, etc. How is Lara not a female power fantasy? Are they not allowed to have sex appeal?

To be fair, Lara's design has gotten MUCH better across her evolution over the years.

i can only speak from the games i've played but in ffxii and the tactics games the viera are basically the definition of fanservice

saying "oh yeah male viera exist and dress in scanty clothes too" seems like shitty window dressing

To be fair, their tribe does exist in a tropical rainforest.

The question is, why do they STILL dress that way when they're, you know, in the snowy mountains?
 
I think we are going to have to figure out the what a "female power fantasy" is first.

because according to various gaf topics, any character regardless of sex, clothes,job is always a male power fantasy of some sort.
 
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