Is this about the Tosh thing?GunsmithKitten said:it is not overly PC to refuse to laugh at humor that is meant to simply be offensive and isn't funny.
Is this about the Tosh thing?GunsmithKitten said:it is not overly PC to refuse to laugh at humor that is meant to simply be offensive and isn't funny.
Right, I'm just unsure why the Tosh and Akin controversies have anything to do with the "Sexism in Gaming" flame wars.GunsmithKitten said:Among others.
This has all the hallmarks of a self-fulfilling prophecy. Games have, by and large, been developed by men and sold to men. In those spaces where "girl games" have been stuffed, it's historically been built on a male-centric understanding of women (fashion, horses, shopping, yay!).Spirit356 said:Well lets be honest here there's a reason that sometimes women aren't on the gaming radar and that is because throughout gamings history the biggest demographic in the industry was men.
I'm not sure what you're trying to argue here. The reason movies had "universal appeal" is because studios made action/suspense movies "for guys" and drama/romance "for girls." The medium was used to target both demographics from the get-go... of course, not equally. See, cinema suffers from many of the same problems we attribute to gaming -- most movies seem geared toward men, and most of the female characters in them conform to any of several male-centric sets of expectations.Games aren't like music or cinema in which there was an instant universal appeal.
No it's not. Read what I said. I said that it should not protect you from criticism, not that you shouldn't say it or make jokes like that in the first place.Signa said:Hold up, hold up. Obviously, there's going to be a line somewhere, but saying that is saying certain issues can not be funny, or never taken in a non-serious context.Lieju said:Maybe at times. But saying something is 'just a joke' should not protect you from criticism.
And I never said that.Signa said:It's the whole "rape and Muhammad jokes are NEVER OK" mentality that is kinda dangerous.
I think it's the fact that he didn't think it would be offensive that's the problem. It's not a big deal in itself, but it's just one sign that the 'woman aren't gamers'-attitude still exists, and it's worth pointing out because of that.Signa said:Making things into taboos has never helped anyone. In the case of BL2, this was far closer to a joke than an insult. Even if it was insulting, the correct response is to just say "Hey, I know you were joking, but watch it, because that was kinda insulting." Even asking them to take it back is being too forceful for the situation.
How is taking criticism for a joke different than saying they shouldn't joke about that thing? I see no difference. There can be a "too soon" moment, but if you're calling someone out on a joke, that means you think they shouldn't have joked about it. At all.Lieju said:No it's not. Read what I said. I said that it should not protect you from criticism, not that you shouldn't say it or make jokes like that in the first place.Signa said:Hold up, hold up. Obviously, there's going to be a line somewhere, but saying that is saying certain issues can not be funny, or never taken in a non-serious context.Lieju said:Maybe at times. But saying something is 'just a joke' should not protect you from criticism.
But if you do say something, just saying 'it was a joke' is not really a defense by itself.
One of the biggest threads on here in the last 2 weeks was the Girlfriend Mode thread. Not all of the posts were calling for the guy's head, but it shouldn't have caused the stir that it did. It didn't even register with me as a controversy until everyone else started posting about it.But how many people are really demanding the guy's head on a plate here?
Aren't most people criticizing the sentiment and attitude more than the guy?
I'm sorry I reckon I'm probably missing something here: What exactly is your point?MelasZepheos said:Yes, exactly. That's exactly what my last statement was meant to do, and your response seems pretty angry to me. Maybe not all caps insulting my family angry but calling me ignorant and questioning my motivations?MelasZepheos said:Now maybe it would be very hard to make a joke about you (I'm assuming caucasian, Western, 16-24, middle-class man) but the evidence would suggest that if someone started to, you suddenly wouldn't think it was very funny. Now obviously since this is the internet you can pretend all you want, and maybe you personally genuinely wouldn't be offended, but here's a nice basic rule to live by.
If you're not one of the people being joked about, don't just assume the joke didn't cause offence.
Because frankly, what exactly do you know about being talked down to simply because of your gender/class/race?
You very obviously didn't do that for the comments that the Borderlands developer made, you just assumed they were a joke, but the second I make an assumption that targets 16-24 white males I get a response within seconds telling me how wrong I am.
What?Signa said:How is taking criticism for a joke different than saying they shouldn't joke about that thing? I see no difference. There can be a "too soon" moment, but if you're calling someone out on a joke, that means you think they shouldn't have joked about it. At all.
Perhaps you should talk to women, then not just girls.Signa said:Every girl I've met since only plays games like Farmville, Bejeweled, and maybe Nancy Drew mysteries. AAA games just aren't made to be interesting for girls. That is a fault of the industry, but it's also a lot to do with the mentality of females.
I think that holds true to people in general.Signa said:I'm far more likely to run into a girl that says "you play games? When are going to grow up?" than someone who would do Baal runs in Diablo 2 with me.
Agreed. I thought it was clever. It was kind of obviously he was just kidding around.Kroxile said:My god, this a thousand times, this.TaintedSaint said:I'm sick of this overly PC crap, everyone too easily offended learn to take a damn joke.
I'm alright with being overly polite, it doesn't really bother me.razer17 said:You really don't have to apologise for being rude, I'm not about to get offended by your use of the word crap. I mean, what happened to the days when sticks and stones was true? People these days ARE just too soft. I'm not saying we should never be offended, but we're getting to a point where everything anyone says is offensive to SOMEONE. If I make an offhand sexist or racist joke, does that mean I am either of those things? No. I've made jokes about all these "taboo" subjects, including jokes about whites and men, both of which I am. Strangely making jokes about yourself are fine but not about someone else.
Let me give another example. I have a friend who is Asian. We used to joke about him being a terrorist, and he would make a joke about if I had killed any minorities lately, or if I've taken up heroin (because I'm half Scottish, and apparently Scottish people all tkae drugs). We both knew we were joking, and neither of us were offended. However, at one point, on a night out, someone called my mate a "Paki sand ******". IT was obviously not a joke, and he was very offended, I was offended because that's just not on, and all our other mates were pretty offended by this racist jerkoff.
My point being, that there is a difference between joking and standing on a soapbox shouting about blacks shouldn't be allowed in the country, gays are evil or whatever other prejudices people have. I'm not saying we should never be offended, I'm saying we shouldn't feel offended when people don't mean to cause you offense. I'm not even saying that ALL comedy is harmless. There's a difference between, say, Jim Davidson, who's racist and sexist, or Al Murray who is both of those things, but in a way that you know he's obviously joking. You might find DAvidson offensive because he probably believes half of what he said, it's hard to get upset in the same way with Murray because it's obviously a ruse.
While I don't think you are personally guilty of this, you have to realize that a lot of critics *are* saying this. Where something that is offensive in nature should be censored if not outright banned. Unfortunately they make the most noise and get the most press making the moderate discussion that it should be difficult.Lieju said:I seriously try to think the best way to explain this...
Let's say someone paints a picture of an apple. I criticise it, maybe say that I don't like it because it's badly painted, or just not my taste. Am I, by saying that, saying that the painting should not exist? That people shouldn't paint apples?
Now let's say someone tells a sexist joke.
I criticize it, pointing out I didn't think it was funny (which is just my opinion, and comedy is subjective) and point out the joke is based on a sexist assumption (which the person telling the joke might not even have thought about).
Am I making myself clear, at all?
Hum....what? if women were not very good at playing games then why in the fuck not only the thing is called "GIRLfriend Mode" but also the NPC or whatever that is going to help is a woman?MelasZepheos said:Apparently when confronted with needing a word to mean 'not very good at games' the first thing this guy thinks of is 'women.' And that shows the deeper underlying problem with his outlook.
Ok, I get what you are saying, but it seems like splitting hairs to me. If I made a joke or a painting and someone said "your work is bad, and you should feel bad" I'm going to take it as a sign that they think I shouldn't do it at all. That's why we have constructive criticism. It lets the creator know that they aren't hated, just that they should do better. I wasn't talking about constructive criticism, just the cold, hard "you suck!" type of responses. You say that to an artist, and the best response you could hope from them is "you just don't get it," and the worst is just going be them being completely demoralized.Lieju said:What?Signa said:How is taking criticism for a joke different than saying they shouldn't joke about that thing? I see no difference. There can be a "too soon" moment, but if you're calling someone out on a joke, that means you think they shouldn't have joked about it. At all.
So if I have anything negative to say about something, it automatically means I think it shouldn't exist?
Do you realise what you're saying?
That any criticism automatically means you think the person doesn't have the right to voice their opinion?
Or that criticising a joke automatically means I think the whole subject should be out of bounds?
I seriously try to think the best way to explain this...
Let's say someone paints a picture of an apple. I criticise it, maybe say that I don't like it because it's badly painted, or just not my taste. Am I, by saying that, saying that the painting should not exist? That people shouldn't paint apples?
Now let's say someone tells a sexist joke.
I criticize it, pointing out I didn't think it was funny (which is just my opinion, and comedy is subjective) and point out the joke is based on a sexist assumption (which the person telling the joke might not even have thought about).
Am I making myself clear, at all?
Semantics confusion. I was including my female adult coworkers in there too.Signa said:Every girl I've met since only plays games like Farmville, Bejeweled, and maybe Nancy Drew mysteries. AAA games just aren't made to be interesting for girls. That is a fault of the industry, but it's also a lot to do with the mentality of females.
Perhaps you should talk to women, then not just girls.
But that's my point, girls (or women if you prefer.) around me are completely allowed or encouraged to play games with guys, but they still don't (my brother's GF being a perfect example). It's not like games are controlled with penises, and girls just simply can't participate, they just don't want to. That says to me that they have completely different thought processes. That's not a bad thing, but it's a thing that shouldn't be ignored.We aren't some weird species with totally different thought-processes.
And isn't that the point? If people treat gaming like a boy's club, women are going to be less inclined to be interested. If you only cater to men, is it any wonder women are going to feel excluded?
Yes and no. You can't call my dad a gamer if he likes to play online cards. You don't call someone a real bookworm if they read Twilight. You aren't a movie buff if you enjoy Transformers. You're not an audiophile because you heard a song on the radio you liked. Are casual games still games? Hell yeah! But it's not those games we are talking about here. I'm talking about games of skill and reaction, games that challenge the players to create tactics, games that make the players understand the metagame so as to maximize their competitiveness, or games that tell a story with well developed characters that you would love to share with someone. The casual games we are speaking of offer almost none of that. Anyone is fully welcome to enjoy those games, but if that is all you play, you'd best consider what the label "gamer" means to you.Also, casual games are games too.
But that doesn't mean you shouldn't criticise.DevilWithaHalo said:While I don't think you are personally guilty of this, you have to realize that a lot of critics *are* saying this. Where something that is offensive in nature should be censored if not outright banned. Unfortunately they make the most noise and get the most press making the moderate discussion that it should be difficult.Lieju said:I seriously try to think the best way to explain this...
Let's say someone paints a picture of an apple. I criticise it, maybe say that I don't like it because it's badly painted, or just not my taste. Am I, by saying that, saying that the painting should not exist? That people shouldn't paint apples?
Now let's say someone tells a sexist joke.
I criticize it, pointing out I didn't think it was funny (which is just my opinion, and comedy is subjective) and point out the joke is based on a sexist assumption (which the person telling the joke might not even have thought about).
Am I making myself clear, at all?
I see. For you, criticism means automatically mean spirited, and you differentiate by saying that non-mean spirited criticism is 'constructive criticism'.Signa said:Ok, I get what you are saying, but it seems like splitting hairs to me. If I made a joke or a painting and someone said "your work is bad, and you should feel bad" I'm going to take it as a sign that they think I shouldn't do it at all. That's why we have constructive criticism. It lets the creator know that they aren't hated, just that they should do better. I wasn't talking about constructive criticism, just the cold, hard "you suck!" type of responses. You say that to an artist, and the best response you could hope from them is "you just don't get it," and the worst is just going be them being completely demoralized.
Or, you know, it's cultural.Signa said:But that's my point, girls (or women if you prefer.) around me are completely allowed or encouraged to play games with guys, but they still don't (my brother's GF being a perfect example). It's not like games are controlled with penises, and girls just simply can't participate, they just don't want to. That says to me that they have completely different thought processes. That's not a bad thing, but it's a thing that shouldn't be ignored.
Maybe you aren't the authority on all womankind? Just a thought.Signa said:As a guy, I don't know how to cater to a woman when designing a game. I would absolutely love a series of games that has some sort of crossover into "guy game" territory, but is aimed at women. I don't know what that would be like, but I think we should have it. I'd love to have a girl that I could game with and watercooler chat about the virtual adventures we shared. My perception of the girls around me doesn't leave that as a likely possibility.
I'm curious as to why it came up in the first place, as you have left us devoid of context. I have little interest in terms of downloading this podcast just to hear the context, so I'm afraid I might have to let this one drop, but it seems dubious this came from nowhere.Uriel-238 said:Of equal interest to me (in the same podcast) was the unquestioned acceptance that Borderlands [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Borderlands_%28video_game%29] was a particularly misogynistic game, the justification of which I do not comprehend.
I'm not sure why one would think that he couldn't think of a better term for BFF, since it already stands for "Best Friends Forever," a much more acceptable line to use. He calls it the BFF tree at the same time.Getting back to the girlfriend mode issue, granted, there are better terms that could have been used, but we're talking about a developer's own nickname for the BFF skill tree, perhaps for want of a safer term coming to (his) mind (sweetheart mode? spouse mode? noob mode? muggle mode?)
Hmmm...friends and paramours. Yet it was called specifically girlfriend mode.The prejudice I personally read from this is not that girls can't shoot but that friends and partners of gamers can't shoot, which is sometimes the case. Some of us have buddies and paramours that aren't as accurate as we are, possibly because they're playing on an Xbox (ka-ziiiing!)
(apologies for the clipping, but I didn't want to have to edit out 900 tags)It may even be useful to have a standard scale
The US is, of course, the country that has more votes for American Idol than for the Presidential elections. While I find this appalling, it's not specific to this sort of deal. I think more people should care about politics in this country, and I especially think that more people should be thrown off by a guy on a science committee who thinks vaginas are magic, and to an only slightly lesser extent that this isn't that far off from the platform of one of the major parties, but this is also the country where a Vice President candidate's workout plan tends to trend significantly higher than tje candidate himself.That said, a developer's poor choice of non-official terminology for a skill tree, I'd think, is hardly a blip in the maelstrom that is brewing, especially when juxtaposed to a representative running for senator using pseudoscience as justification to deny rights to women in the US.
Again, it'd be nice if there was a single definitive standard, but there isn't one.Of course, to attack scrutiny of the sexism-in-gaming tapestry bravely, more questions will have to be asked (and answered), one of which is Exactly what amount of sexism in a game is enough about which raising a stink is appropriate? At what level is it obligatory? And at what point is it so mild that a commenter would be regarded as "too sensitive"?
"Beefcake" is usually aimed at men, just like cheesecake. The idea that these idealised males are aimed at women is folly and false equivalence.Does beefcake balance out cheesecake? If not, what does?
Yes, but I think this is largely the difference between Daniel Tosh and George Carlin. George Caarlin's "rape can be funny" was an absurdist notion for the sake of example while Tosh's was "hey, imagine this specific chick who I'm annoyed by getting raped five times in a row."Are rape jokes (jokes that mention rape or imply rape) ever appropriate?
Vagina Dentata can be interpreted multiple ways, and frequently has. Can you be more specific?How can vagina dentata really be a thing in a society in love with fellatio?
Sarkeesian's videos spend way too much time on the Bechdel test, for one. I think this itself ties right back into the notion of a hard scale for sexism and how it can easily become an issue. While the concept of the Bechdel test was never really intended to be a hard rule, it still has become one (and worse, represents multiple things to multiple people) and it gets a lot of attention when more pressing issues could be discussed.From what I've seen so far of Anita Sarkeesian's Tropes vs. Women series on YouTube, and her Kickstarter project on video games, I'm not impressed.