While that certainly is true we should not forget that men also build, invented and fought for most of the stuff mankind enjoyed over its existence and that they are capable of kind deeds.hanselthecaretaker said:snip
Yet that seems often ignored for a narrative. For example: In Terminator 2 Sarah lectures the engineer who's going to invent Skynet how he knows jack shit about creating stuff because he has no womb.
While the movie is good this sentiment is IMO just stupid. If you go by that logic its back to the cave...
In video games most villains are men. Most cannon fodder are also men. We accept this as it kind of reflects reality to some degree. Soldiers are mostly men and gangsters are mostly men etc.
Until a few years back this would not have been worthy of discussion.
Now it kind of is because some people started to complain about the portrait of women in video games aimed at mostly men. A killable female hooker (GTA) became outrageous while killable random dude on the street (GTA) was ignored. It's just that the same game mechanics apply to every nonessential NPC but that apparently is beyond comprehension for some people.
So of course people on the other side of the street would start to point out that it goes the other way as well. That's why there is an article that points out that HZD seems to portrait men in a mostly bad light.
Strong and independent women I think are not the problem. The problem is them being written in a way that flies in the face of the usual target audience. Men buy most core video games after all.
It became a trope that a women rejected simple curtsey help, e.g. a hand to get up, just to make the point she is strong and independent. Or how they went on to prove their credentials by randomly spouting about their mostly unlikely achievements. E.g. Years back I saw a cop TV show and the women was rejected from some mission so she flew in the face of her commissioner how she served in Iraq or Afghanistan in the military... The rejected wonder woman TV show is another example of this. Or the writing in a lot of the recent gender swapped Marvel comics like Thor...
These type of strong and independent women should not be considered a good thing because they are IMO bad writing.
Like I said I have no problem with Aloy the way she is because she is a power fantasy after all. I prefer her to Geralt in fact because while she is a bit too empathetic, considering she was shunned by her tribe for all her life, it is better bearable then the "I don't get invested at all"-attitude Geralt has 95% of his games?