Political correctness in games has just gone too far!

Recommended Videos

Pandaman1911

Fuzzy Cuddle Beast
Jan 3, 2011
601
0
0
Hmm... can you call something this ham-handed satire or parody? Probably not. Either way it elicited a chuckle, I guess. And if you've got a problem with people complaining about diversity in games, stop complaining about people complaining about diversity in games.

[small]I guess I'm not helping the situation by complaining but THAT'S ANOTHER STORY![/small]
 

Exhuminator

New member
Oct 14, 2013
218
0
0
According to this information:

http://www.gamasutra.com/blogs/MonicaMcGill/20130604/193603/Examining_the_Pipeline_Demographics_of_Undergraduate_Students_Studying_Games.php

Most of the people studying to make video games are actually white heterosexual males. If that is true, perhaps that's why the lead role in games they create is often a white heterosexual male...
 

nuttshell

New member
Aug 11, 2013
201
0
0
Hey, don't make fun of that other thread! Maybe some of the posters there will realize they are engaging in a pointless, stupid discussion and this will take my fun away! You are illiterally burning my books and insert another shitty analogy in here too.
 

freaper

snuggere mongool
Apr 3, 2010
1,198
0
0
Silvanus said:
This did make me laugh.

I'm not quite sure whether you're A) parodying the argument of those who believe 'diversity has gone too far', or B) making the point that the current representation of different demographics is realistic so we shouldn't complain. In short, I'm not sure which side you've got in your crosshairs.

(If that was your intention, to get everyone, then well played).
Yea, the satire could've gone either way. Which makes it better satire, I guess?
 

karma9308

New member
Jan 26, 2013
280
0
0
Ahh, thanks for the chuckle OP. Been a rough week and I needed it. Like others, I'm not sure who is being targeted with the parody, but I'll just take my laugh and move on.
 

Therumancer

Citation Needed
Nov 28, 2007
9,909
0
0
I have to admit I laughed. :)

Truthfully I think games are pretty well representative of society as a whole, not just the players, but the creators, and their personal preferences and escapist fantasies.

As I've said for a long time, the left wing generally has the wrong idea when it comes to "forced diversity" and making politically correct stunts. As times goes on things tend to naturally correct themselves when there is a problem. Right now we're seeing increased diversity within the media because your seeing more diverse creators getting involved in things like video games, comic books, etc, and creating more protaganists of a sort that they want to see. Basically for there to be real change you need to see thousands upon thousands of people trying to create things of a certain type, with the majority producing crap and failing, but that one in a hundred thousand person comes along for everyone who makes a serious effort and produces something worthwhile which then enters popular consumption. This in turn inspires more people to try and the more people that do the more often your going to see one of those rare creators that does something worthwhile come along, leading to greater diversity in the marketplace.

To put things into perspective for a long time computers, comics, etc... were largely dominated by whites and Asians (mostly Japanese inspired by Western culture). They were the only real groups producing vast amounts of material to get things published and form the trends. As many people would point out it was truly amazing how many blacks, Hispanics, etc... you saw in fiction/comics/games as it was given the lack of people from those groups trying to create anything within these mediums meaning you didn't see the huge pool of people needed to create the success stories. After all for every successful comic/manga/computer game creator out there, were probably hundreds of thousands of failures, with a lot of the successful creators pretty much telling people "what I do is nearly impossible to get into" and seeing people lining up by the droves to try anyway.

Right now we're seeing more diversity than ever before because your seeing more groups taking creation seriously. You have a growing European games industry, especially in Eastern Europe (companies like CDProjekt, or 4C), more people in The Middle East trying to enter into the area, and even some game development starting down in Mexico south of the US border. While it's a trickle now if the interest remains it will eventually catch up. For the last few decades most "fringe" creativity has come from the US, the UK (to a lesser extent), and Japan (which has a weird relationship with the US that comes through in what it produces).

If you try and force things you create backlash, ham handed attempts to be diverse for the sake diversity tend to misfire and invoke ire from a lot of people like me. On the other hand if you just sit back and wait for things to happen, they will indeed change at their own pace, and the results will be genuine rather than the result of people pursueing some political or social ideal.

In short things are already changing, but real progress and change is slow, raging about it just makes things worse.
 

Thespian

New member
Sep 11, 2010
1,407
0
0
I wanted to mostly refrain from replying because although I didn't make this thread to provoke a reaction, I did sorta make it hoping to observe the response? And it seems like we are still almost split down the middle.
There has been one view presented, however, that is particular polarising and intends to divert attention, making the entire diversity issue about the majority and not the minority. To me, this is an extremely toxic viewpoint. I really don't want to call anyone out directly nor do I want to appear like I am accusing anyone of being inhuman or racist or anything drastic like that, but I certainly posit that the viewpoint shared by four or five people here in this thread is toxic and harmful, though likely unintentional.

If I could share one observation? It's a biggie, but. Yeah.

Addendum to OP

It's not often that you see gamers, members of this website or otherwise, rally to the defence of a trend in gaming and justify it using marketability.
Often I see people on the escapist critique choices made by game designers on the basis that they were decisions made in favour of what sells. Games that market themselves to "casual" audiences instead, developers that enforce an annual release for franchises that could use extra time in development, developers cranking out carbon copies of a formula that works because it sells, developers turning down ideas with great potential because they are not marketable. We all recognise that these are problems, yes?

But honestly, if you ever want to see gamers FLOCK to the defence of what is marketable, just bring up diversity. "Oh it's just what's marketable" we say, "We can't help it basically all gamers are straight white dudes" we say without sourcing anything and perpetuate a myth even further, "Let's just stick to one demographic okay? Oh and it happens to be the one I am comfortable with and wouldn't you know it - included in?".
"Nothing we can do! Gotta go with what is marketable."
It's a word thats been thrown around a lot in this thread already in defence of a lack of diversity.

Aren't we better than this? Do we not all agree that games are not just products but a form of media? I understand people contest calling them art, but we can at least settle on Media yes? Representation in media is important, and marketability is not the most important factor.

Replies because if I have a thought on something I feel obliged to share it for the good of everyone

freaper said:
Silvanus said:
(If that was your intention, to get everyone, then well played).
Yea, the satire could've gone either way. Which makes it better satire, I guess?
if this were a satire.... and not just a genuine speech against this forced "diversity" that includes white het men in every game... Then I would say that perhaps I wanted to go for both and settled for something in between and I will gladly accept any opinions that it worked out for the best. IF this were a satire.

Pandaman1911 said:
Hmm... can you call something this ham-handed satire or parody? Probably not. Either way it elicited a chuckle, I guess. And if you've got a problem with people complaining about diversity in games, stop complaining about people complaining about diversity in games.

[small]I guess I'm not helping the situation by complaining but THAT'S ANOTHER STORY![/small]
I am against what some people complain about, but I am not, nor will I ever be against complaining. Complaining is one of the purest activities one can engage in. It is no more helpful to stopping a problem and no less necessary to stopping a problem than breathing.
But yeah I agree with this. Though satire is the broad definition of what this might be, I wrote it more out of frustration so I'm not sure it's really nuanced enough.
I mean, this was a COMPLETELY GENUINE APPEAL. STOP PUTTING IN TOKEN WHITE CISHET MALES IN THE NAME OF DIVERSITY DAMN IT

Therumancer said:
If you try and force things you create backlash, ham handed attempts to be diverse for the sake diversity tend to misfire and invoke ire from a lot of people like me. On the other hand if you just sit back and wait for things to happen, they will indeed change at their own pace, and the results will be genuine rather than the result of people pursueing some political or social ideal.

In short things are already changing, but real progress and change is slow, raging about it just makes things worse.
Does it? State one way in which this thread might legitimately, directly hinder the inclusion of diversity in games? I don't see anything concrete here at all I'm afraid. How does talking about a problem and why it is harmful prevent it from being solved? I'm rather confused.

I also contest what you mean by "ham handed attempts to be diverse". The point of this thread is that, to me, the abundance of white cishet males is ham handed. The world is not so orderly, it isn't filled with nuclear families who might have a black friend or two between them, and a gay uncle every now and then. It is frankly silly.
I don't think I've ever, EVER seen a "ham handed attempt to be diverse". What would this look like in a game? Recognising that a plurality of non-white non-cishet people exist? That's how most people seem to define it.

White, cishet males are not the default. Characters who do not conform to this imaginary standard are not exceptional.
 

Savagezion

New member
Mar 28, 2010
2,455
0
0
Gaming is changing to include more diversity. It mostly started last gen. The change is slow because videogame stories have used stereotypes a lot. This is not out of bigotry, it's due to technology. We are going to start from 1985 with the release of the NES since your man could be green on Atari. When NES came out, most games were based on cartoons. No game looked even close to realistic. As well, white US audiences were still learning to grasp what racism was. Remember, the white audience of the '80s was the children of the 20-30 year olds in the 60's now all grown up. This audience of the 80s were people that were children during the civil rights movements. They had a more favorable view to minority inclusion than their white parents of the 60s. Minorities were included but racism would often slip through. Many times minorities didn't get a voice to speak up about it though. However, this wasn't the only thing drawing attention. The 80's was a decade of the working woman. The 80's also had heavy sexism issues to deal with. Those are two very big issues for one generation to change. I want you to watch something. This was a primetime show that did well in the ratings for the time. This is 80's television.


This is an interesting time stamp. Notice the sexism gracing the early part of the show where the dad is a little upset his boy is doing girl things. This still shows up and probably always will. If you are a dad, it is easy to draw masculinity off your son. Because it is a boy YOU help become whatever your ideal of a 'man' is. There are things considered 'manly' in all societies. Currently, sports is one.

Skip to 5:28

"If you give me a bite of your cupcake, I'll free you" would never be allowed today. It was a faux pas of ignorance. This could be considered entirely racist. It can also be seen as parody of the past. Making fun of the stupidty of the idea of slavery. If you see the latter view as "unreasonable" remember that the other side will probably see your side as unreasonable as well. I would sooner side with the racist view, than the latter - but I can see the latter and can see it being valid. I was Wesley's age when this show was on television. I watched this show. I'm from the white audience. I watched many shows like this. Saturday morning cartoons were like this.

The easiest way to include a group of people you know very little about is through stereotypes. Are they racist? Maybe. But it is inclusion. Is that an excuse? Yes, it is. A valid one. Here are the children of the 60's all grown up and not wanting to be racist but know nothing about minorities because their parents were racist. All they had were racist stereotypes from their parents and what they have seen in the minorities around them. Now, remember the argument is that minority means MINORITY. Many white people didn't know many black people at this time. Their parents had 50-60s racism and sexism in them and that was their environment growing up. They wanted to be progressive but didn't know how.

Bobby Kottick, and the CEOs of EA have been the same 80's generation in power. They probably believe that putting minorites in risks getting chastised because they don't know how to do it properly and they know it.

Fast forward to today. Wesley and I are in our 30s now. We got a person from my generation at the helm of EA. Not saying that means problem solved (It's EA after all) but I think it is a good thing. Our generation has succeeded in many ways. Does anyone here remember in the 90s when black americans were getting angry that white americans were trying to 'steal their culture'? Black culture got large in the US in the 90s. Fresh Prince, Martin, BET, and more popped up. This new generation created the term "wigger" in the late 90s. Black people started saying nigga positively all the time but whites couldn't say it. Black culture was proactively resisting the white culture of my generation trying for inclusion by getting involved. However, we overcame it and some things were learned - good and bad. It was an cultural exchange with the vastly white community.

We, as gamers, came off cartidges and went to CDs. With the PS1/N64 era, we saw Nintendo stay cartooned and PS1 try to make "M" games for those who were wanting more adult content than Nintendo would provide. Gaming played it safe and pandered to the majority white audience. Minorities got representation but usually only in the case of stereotypes and usually as comic relief stereotypes specifically. Some were racist which was easier for my generation to recognize and some were not.

This diversity in gaming issue has been around since the release of the PLaystation 2/Xbox. It was just silenced due to very little media existing. Online became a thing in gaming that generation really. It had existed prior but that's when consoles supported it heavily. Online media for gaming was new to journalism, website creation, and even online multiplayer traffic being easy to navigate. These issues took time and attention to develop. On release of the PS3/360, GameStop blew up and we got Game Informer who instantly brought up minority representation to the mass market due to games like GTA:SA, Morrowind, Mass Effect, Jade Empire, etc. Classic Tomb Raider Lara was heavily 'slut shamed' as sexist. Online communities grew by thousands, then millions and keeps growing. Voices are being heard.

The problem is that people tend to think the TvW series and attacking gaming from the 'femenist' or 'civil rights activist' view is the right approach and has any effect. But it doesn't. Whites are a majority. Whites don't always know many minorities. Not they don't want to. There isn't many around. Plus, their 'hood' never feels comfortable due to race relations. There is ALWAYs that guy who wants to make sure 'you know your place' as a white guy. I ain't sure but I think white women may suffer from this as well against minority women. That could just be a stereotype of mine on women though.
I think the best move here is to praise games that you feel do your culture right. Those cultures though also need to encourage if their kids want to be game designers. This right here is a stereotype I see in minorities a lot. Minorities tend to be way too fucking hard on a kid with a dream. Unless its a doctor or lawyer or businessman or something 'respectable' to their culture. (Conformity - you all have it too) This comes in the form of making fun of them, sarcasm, or verbal scolding. If my kid grows up and tells me he/she wants to empty port-o-pottys and its a dream job, I am gonna support them. I'll also support the kid if they want to be a painter, a nurse, a stripper, whatever. I ain't watching my kid strip though. I would try to see if I could talk my kid out of stripping only because they should know the bad implications it can make - which there are many.

I know I ramble a lot. It's my thought process. I spam a lot in my thoughts. I have even left stuff out. I feel this is all pretty relevant though. Here we are at PS4/Wii-U/One's release. Steam popped up last gen. Online communities are huge. TvW used it to go viral by weeding through comments and not talking. Good or bad, it was promoted as good. That's the message feminism sent out to male culture about female culture from a female "pop culture critic". That's what the industry heard loud and clear over the static of us arguing with ourselves. Let's see what happens since we still haven't decided. I really don't think it is going to be positive. But people do surprise me a lot. I hope so. As for racism, custom content in games should fix that. Don't quote that phrase. I ain't saying modding will fix it in any way shape or form. A game with custom content, usually likes to offer diversity in character creation. Look at Skyrim. Extreme modability, one of the strongest character creators in single player games. Character creation is getting much more popular and affordable while 'character selection' is dwindling.

POINTThe best point I can clarify is that something like TvW or ANY cultural exhange isn't going to fix a problem by merely speaking up no matter how good you think your wording and argument is. There is no solution to be 'found'. The solution will resolve based on action. That make sense? TvW made an impact. Nobody knows what kind of impact. I ain't picking on TvW there but it is the best example to use. We need more of those statements made viral. More viewpoints demanding attention from the industry. Both from minorities and from women. Kinda like representatives from your culture. You can make money doing it.



BONUS CONTENT: I have been called a wigger many times by both whites and blacks a lot. You want to know why? Because I like tribal haircuts. My haircut makes people do this. A haircut. Just making sure that sinks in. If I have a mohawk, people think I am racist because that's the stereotype of white guy with a mohawk. If I wear braids, I am a wigger because that is the stereotype. If I say fuck it and shave my head, I am a skinhead. Being white doesn't save you from discrimination. Conformity to stereotypes does. That is probably true across all cultures. I see it from all races including my own. Luckily, I was raised to be opinionated. My mom pushed that real hard. That helped me not care what other people think. I know what's inside. So I just watched people. I don't like people much. Most can't be trusted. I can get along with them just fine, but it took me some time to figure out how to communicate with them. I still haven't fully figured it out. People often surprise me when I thought I understood them. I have to surprise people to talk to them. A black or asian person's first impression of me is as a racist with my mohawk. (Disclaimer: the older they are the more it applies) So I HAVE to make as strong an impression as I can to shock them out of it, which has became easier for me now over the years. But usually though I just let them think whatever. But some people won't. White people are more accepting of the haircuts but it does make them feel uncomfortable because it doesn't conform to the idea of stereotypes and is potentially a bad idea. They know other whites may even discriminate against me for it, let alone minorities. I get all that, but I don't care. "Fuck 'em all" is my outlook. It's hair. I like mohawks. I like braids. I like when people write shit in their hair or make designs. Juice on Sons of Anarchy has a cool style but I don't want tats on my head or face. Neck is where they stop for me.

All that said, latins tend to accept it easily. Not more easily, they just accept it... easily. Weird ain't it? I haven't figured that out yet. It's cool, but they are about the only ones I don't really catch flak from and I haven't figured out why. I have wondered if I am a stereotype in their culture I don't know about though. I said all sides originally merely to control the viewpoint for the above. I have always found this interesting about latins I have spoke with and hung out with. Haha, damn, this post is long. Well, here you go.
 

Pandaman1911

Fuzzy Cuddle Beast
Jan 3, 2011
601
0
0
Thespian said:
Pandaman1911 said:
Hmm... can you call something this ham-handed satire or parody? Probably not. Either way it elicited a chuckle, I guess. And if you've got a problem with people complaining about diversity in games, stop complaining about people complaining about diversity in games.

[small]I guess I'm not helping the situation by complaining but THAT'S ANOTHER STORY![/small]
I am against what some people complain about, but I am not, nor will I ever be against complaining. Complaining is one of the purest activities one can engage in. It is no more helpful to stopping a problem and no less necessary to stopping a problem than breathing.
But yeah I agree with this. Though satire is the broad definition of what this might be, I wrote it more out of frustration so I'm not sure it's really nuanced enough.
I mean, this was a COMPLETELY GENUINE APPEAL. STOP PUTTING IN TOKEN WHITE CISHET MALES IN THE NAME OF DIVERSITY DAMN IT
Well, what I meant by that was if people just kind of ignored the people complaining, instead of complaining about how much they're complaining, then they'd kind of shut up and go about their lives once they realized nobody cared/was listening to them.

Aaaaand now "complaining" doesn't even seem like a real word, I've said it so many times. Complaining. Cooommmplaaaaaiiiniiiiing. But, uh, I know for sure "cishet" isn't a word. The hell's that mean?
 

Thespian

New member
Sep 11, 2010
1,407
0
0
To the guy quoted below, thank you for sharing your thoughts. I read your post a few times and I tend to ramble in much worse ways so don't feel bad. My responses to your views are in bold.

(Oh wow I wrote so fucking much. I'm sorry there was a lot to discuss)

Savagezion said:
"If you give me a bite of your cupcake, I'll free you" would never be allowed today. It was a faux pas of ignorance. This could be considered entirely racist. It can also be seen as parody of the past. Making fun of the stupidty of the idea of slavery. If you see the latter view as "unreasonable" remember that the other side will probably see your side as unreasonable as well. I would sooner side with the racist view, than the latter - but I can see the latter and can see it being valid. I was Wesley's age when this show was on television. I watched this show. I'm from the white audience. I watched many shows like this. Saturday morning cartoons were like this.

I admire you for encouraging us to see both sides of an issue. This is generally what I would do. When it comes to racism however, I have this weird tendency where I am usually one-sided against the racist thing. A joke about slavery is unacceptable in this context. Entirely unacceptable. I don't care if it "points out the stupidity of slavery". That is not for white people (in this context) to do. That is bullshit. It is not a parody of the past. It is a stupid joke about a racial atrocity being told by members of the group that committed the atrocity. Who do they have in mind as an audience? Ah yes, other members of that same group. This joke does not de-power the concepts of slavery or racism, it trivializes them and brings peace of mind to to the majority group. If you start seeing jokes about slavery, you are less inclined to feel bad about it. "Oh hey, we can all look back and laugh now!" Disgusting and utterly unreasonable. I am very inclined to consider both sides of an issue, but still I will hold a view that is entirely polarizing. These kind of jokes are wrong and bad and a white show for a white audience has absolutely no right to tell them in any point, ever.

The easiest way to include a group of people you know very little about is through stereotypes. Are they racist? Maybe. But it is inclusion. Is that an excuse? Yes, it is. A valid one.

Oh dear. I'll get to this in a minute.

Fast forward to today. Wesley and I are in our 30s now. We got a person from my generation at the helm of EA. Not saying that means problem solved (It's EA after all) but I think it is a good thing. Our generation has succeeded in many ways. Does anyone here remember in the 90s when black americans were getting angry that white americans were trying to 'steal their culture'? Black culture got large in the US in the 90s. Fresh Prince, Martin, BET, and more popped up. This new generation created the term "wigger" in the late 90s. Black people started saying nigga positively all the time but whites couldn't say it. Black culture was proactively resisting the white culture of my generation trying for inclusion by getting involved.

Black culture was resisting white culture? I want to be respectful in all of my replies but the only thing coming to mind for this is "NO SHIT SHERLOCK". White people couldn't say ******? Good. White people should never say it, and more to the point, they should never want to say it. Unless you are quoting someone who said it? And yeah, a formerly oppressed culture is being protective about their culture? Honestly what do you expect. Slavery is over, yay, but it's effects are not forgotten and racism still happens a lot. Basically, Black culture resisting white culture? Not a mystery, totally understandable.

We, as gamers, came off cartidges and went to CDs. With the PS1/N64 era, we saw Nintendo stay cartooned and PS1 try to make "M" games for those who were wanting more adult content than Nintendo would provide. Gaming played it safe and pandered to the majority white audience. Minorities got representation but usually only in the case of stereotypes and usually as comic relief stereotypes specifically. Some were racist which was easier for my generation to recognize and some were not.

[...]Classic Tomb Raider Lara was heavily 'slut shamed' as sexist[...]

Okay, I'm going to address the stereotype thing now.
I get where you are coming from. Because I am a comic book nerd, let me use a few examples from comics of minority characters brought in as stereotypes. Luke Cage, Black Panther, Wong, Ororo Munroe - Today, these are (generally) well-rounded characters who are divorced from their one-note identities of the past. Though they may be partially defined by their ethnicities, just as real people are, ethnicity is not their sole defining feature. Though some weren't too bad at the start, a few of them were really blatant stereotypes (poor Luke Cage).
Okay, you might say, so introducing stereotyped characters is a good way to introduce minority characters without being too jarring to a non-minority audience?
Ahh, understandable how we might reach this conclusion, but it is yet another example of that most common of all logical fallacies, the trademark-human confirmation bias. You can search for examples that support your hypothesis, but how many you find is meaningless - you must first search for examples that disprove your theory.
You see, there are stereotypes that have done nothing for minority representation in media, and non-stereotyped minority characters that were well-received.
There is another point I want to make, which I will save for the end because I like building suspense.
First off though, it's all well and good to point at a few racist stereotypes from back in the day and say "Hey they turned out okay". But there was so much awful terrible harmful shitty stuff too that is simply not excused. Why does the arbitrary line you drew around the time of Mr. Belvedere even matter? If we are talking about media in broad terms, let's go all the way to black face productions in theaters. This revolting stuff doesn't get a pass.
And secondly, what about the non-stereotyped characters that did fine? To mention another name from geekdom, Lieutenant Uhura from Star Trek. I've seen every episode of the original series and though a minor character, she is for the most part presented without stereotyping or racist goggles. If we were arguing examples of feminist characters in this era, well... Ehhhhhh... But as a black woman? Sure, she was professional. A few times she was called on to do unorthodox work outside of her job description and succeeds (such as in "Who mourns for Adonais?" s2e2, in which Spock notes his faith in her as an expert) and she demonstrates the ability to fill the spot of a navigator if requested. Basically, she was as competent as anyone else on the bridge. In the episode "I, Mudd" she is shown as having her own interests and agenda, being swayed to abandon her job and accept the gift of immortal life as an android, but later in the episode she proves her loyalty to the federation over personal gain. She takes joy in music, she relishes in teasing Spock, she brings both levity and professionalism to her role on the Enterprise. When her mind is wiped in "Nomad" and she must relearn English, we see that she is more comfortable speaking Swahili, so her culture is not swept under the rug.

Nyota Uhura was a minority character (almost) completely free of stereotype or racism. She graced the small screen in 1966, some 19 years earlier than Mr. Belvedere's slavery joke. She was inoffensive to and accepted by white audiences and went on to have the controversial inter-racial kiss. I don't see how that kiss would have been any less controversial had Uhura been a walking stereotype. More importantly however, she is often cited as inspiration to young black men and women who watched Star Trek as kids. Man, Uhura had it all - Okay, maybe she didn't have the limelight she deserved, but she was a positive minority character in the sixties who bridged the cultural gap.

So in conclusion to the stereotype thing: There is absolutely no reason to suggest that racially stereotyped characters were a positive thing or had any kind of positive effect. The means through which you arrived at this conclusion were, as Spock might say, entirely illogical. What use is there for racist jokes and stereotyped characters when we can see non-stereotyped characters who were successful? Why do you choose to see the stereotyped racist minority characters from early video games as forgivable, when we have proof that they could have been like Uhura or many others? Why are you so eagerly adopting an apologist stance for racist characters in video games when there is nothing to suggest that they were the only way to introduce minority characters?

Oh, and that thing you probably forgot I was building suspense for?
"Some were racist which was easier for my generation to recognize and some were not."
Who fucking cares. Excuse my french, but who. Fucking. Cares.
You are justifying what you have admitted was racist because it was easier for non-minority people to swallow.
You are justifying racism because it was easier for non-whites.
You are justifying racism because it was easier for non-whites.

Guess what? Minority representation is not for you. It's not for white people. It's not there to help white people accept minorities, you should be doing that on your own. Minority representation is there for the minority and it is not okay to make it racist because for some reason, according to your reasoning, white people will accept racism before they accept well-rounded minority characters.
If I could I would type that last sentence a million more times. But I won't. This time.



The problem is that people tend to think the TvW series and attacking gaming from the 'femenist' or 'civil rights activist' view is the right approach and has any effect. But it doesn't. Whites are a majority. Whites don't always know many minorities.

I find it really problematic, all the scare quotes you are putting around things like feminism but... Okay. I just want to say this for posterity's sake because I haven't clarified it yet in this thread. "Whites are a majority" is sort of a broken statement. We are talking, to be clear, right now primarily from a North American and European standpoint? Because obviously white people are not... A global majority. Furthermore, Whites are not a constant majority. I think you are being awfully subjective. Yes, where I live (Ireland), caucasian whites are a majority. Many American and European cities however, and specific neighbourhoods, are predominantly non-white, or whites are one of the smaller groups. Please keep this in mind Because it's not really true to say Whites are a majority. I've said it a few times in this thread, but I suppose I meant it in relation to other groups in the context of what I was saying. However the belief that whites are simply a majority whenever it comes to video games and video game audiences and just north america in general is a) a myth b) fallacious because you could say that games target whites because they are the majority, or maybe whites are the majority because games only target them.
So keep this in mind. I'm not even really trying to correct or argue with you here, I'm just clarifying the context in which this discussion takes place.


This right here is a stereotype I see in minorities a lot. Minorities tend to be way too fucking hard on a kid with a dream. Unless its a doctor or lawyer or businessman or something 'respectable' to their culture. (Conformity - you all have it too) This comes in the form of making fun of them, sarcasm, or verbal scolding.

Baffling. Utterly baffling. I don't know where you are getting this. That is a trait of parents in general, if anything, so you "noticing it in minorities" is likely due to a personal bias (which we all have, I'm not calling you racist or anything dramatic like that). However you blatantly admitted that this fact comes purely from stereotypes you've heard and things you have noticed. Things that you, in your surroundings, have subjectively noticed, and not recorded. That is what we call "Statistically Insignificant", to be kind.

-snipped things about this gen and tropes versus women-

Plenty I'd like to say but I don't want to derail this thread into another TVM debate. Far too many of those. Interesting comments on what the future has in store.



BONUS CONTENT: [...]Being white doesn't save you from discrimination.[...]

It certainly doesn't! In some places. In the situation you described, however? Oh wow it absolutely does. You are not the victim of discrimination, at least not in the way you are described. It is a pity that people judge you for your hairstyle, they shouldn't, but unfortunately due to atrocious hate crimes being associated with that hairstyle people often don't have a choice.
However, in the context I previously established, a white person can not be discriminated against or made the victim of bigotry or racism at the hands of a minority person or person of colour.
It can not happen.
It simply can not, it is not possible.
Being judged by your appearance is not the sum total of what discrimination is. It sucks, but it is not discrimination in the same meaning of the word as what is experienced by members of an ethnicity or group that has been the subject of oppression.
Discrimination is composed of cultural and historical context. Even the stereotype you have been wrongly associated with is connected to oppressors of minorities, not the oppression of your own group. Do you not see the significance of that?
 

Savagezion

New member
Mar 28, 2010
2,455
0
0
Okay, you might say, so introducing stereotyped characters is a good way to introduce minority characters without being too jarring to a non-minority audience?
Hold on, you took a wrong turn somewhere.

Thespian said:
Minority representation is there for the minority and it is not okay to make it racist because for some reason, according to your reasoning, white people will accept racism before they accept well-rounded minority characters.
This is the phrase you wanted to type a million times. This is also the phrase that brings home that you missed what I was trying to communicate. The racism doesn't show up because white audiences can accept it. I don't know where you made that connection in my post. White people that have a lot of influence on the industry, they don't know much about minorities other THAN stereotypes. Stereotypes are what they know. That is what is relatable in their life so that is what they write about. Say a white guy wants to make a game. But he only knows a couple black people. He don't know much about black culture. He knows of a couple stereotypes of black people he likes. He makes a game with that stereotype in it figuring other people probably like it too. What an asshole, right? How dare he? Writing about what he knows instead of what he doesn't know.

"He could learn," a voice calls from the distance.

Black culture was resisting white culture? I want to be respectful in all of my replies but the only thing coming to mind for this is "NO SHIT SHERLOCK". White people couldn't say ******? Good. White people should never say it, and more to the point, they should never want to say it. Unless you are quoting someone who said it? And yeah, a formerly oppressed culture is being protective about their culture? Honestly what do you expect. Slavery is over, yay, but it's effects are not forgotten and racism still happens a lot. Basically, Black culture resisting white culture? Not a mystery, totally understandable.
Nope because black culture will never be understood unless they can find a middle ground. Blacks don't get to decide what whites can and can't do. Just like they can't tell asians what to do. Where does that ego come from? Like it or not black and white history is tied to slavery in America. It is a part of each culture and there. No one gets to tell me what I can or can't say or talk about. I don't care what race I am or what race you are. People that come to me with demands have problems real quick. I don't care to say ******. But if I say it, you should look at the context I am using it in. I will say it if it suits me and if you don't like it, I don't care. The best way to get rid of stereotypes especially bad ones is to educate the other side and the best way to do that is to be hospitable, not hostile. You want to fuck with a racist person? Ignore the insults and when they address you derogatorily wanting a response answer respectfully.

Racism is this easy - If you can acknowledge that you not being racist doesn't make you "better" than someone who is racist, problem solved. They have one opinion, you have another. Neither is better. Modesty, not pride, is the answer.

Black culture was resisting white culture enjoying black culture in what I was speaking about. White culture learned something about black culture and celebrated it and the black communities got downright pissed about it. That isn't good. How does that help? "I have a dream," remember?

me said:
Bobby Kottick, and the CEOs of EA have been the same 80's generation in power. They probably believe that putting minorities in risks getting chastised because they don't know how to do it properly and they know it.
They honestly don't know how to do it. Their culture hasn't taught them how to. Their culture has mostly got it wrong when they tried. It isn't about "How will a white audience recieve this" it is about how the hell do we do it right? Everything we have tried, we are told is wrong. Then when we do get it right, we can't tell how accurate it is because people don't applaud it enough. They just take it for granted that we got it right. Feedback sucks if youonly offer negative reinforcement and no positive reinforcement.

Baffling. Utterly baffling. I don't know where you are getting this. That is a trait of parents in general, if anything, so you "noticing it in minorities" is likely due to a personal bias (which we all have, I'm not calling you racist or anything dramatic like that). However you blatantly admitted that this fact comes purely from stereotypes you've heard and things you have noticed. Things that you, in your surroundings, have subjectively noticed, and not recorded. That is what we call "Statistically Insignificant", to be kind.
Your right, it seems I overlooked my own culture. That was my bad. See how easy these things can happen? In response to the final part, I am not trying to prove anything. I am just throwing a viewpoint out for anyone to consider. It is merely one viewpoint, but statistics are made of lots of viewpoints. This is my central viewpoint on the topic.

My viewpoint is American. It is based on American racial cultures.

However the belief that whites are simply a majority whenever it comes to video games and video game audiences and just north america in general is a) a myth b) fallacious because you could say that games target whites because they are the majority, or maybe whites are the majority because games only target them.
Whites are referred to as the majority because of the term "minority". If whites cannot be considered a minority then they must be a majority. Or they don't exist at all. Haha. They are a majority demographic to market to in NA and EU correct?

You are not the victim of discrimination, at least not in the way you are described. It is a pity that people judge you for your hairstyle, they shouldn't, but unfortunately due to atrocious hate crimes being associated with that hairstyle people often don't have a choice.
Woah now, that is how stereotypes work. Pay extra attention to this bit right here. Hate crimes happened with people who have my hairstyle and now people have no choice to see me any other way? No choice? No, they stereotyped because that's how the human mind works. They have and had a choice. They choose to stereotype. They choose to assume the worst based on appearance. They choose to not give me a job based on appearance. They choose to exclude because of appearance. They choose to look down on because of appearance.

However, in the context I previously established, a white person can not be discriminated against or made the victim of bigotry or racism at the hands of a minority person or person of colour.
It can not happen.
It simply can not, it is not possible.
Well, that's racist. You have excluded a whole race for simply for not being one of the other races. Why not just establish slavery of whites then? Not like that would be bigotry or racism. Can't happen. Impossible. Black man doesn't hire a white guy because he don't like whites. I don't undertsand the logic process here.

Discrimination is composed of cultural and historical context. Even the stereotype you have been wrongly associated with is connected to oppressors of minorities, not the oppression of your own group. Do you not see the significance of that?
I see that and that is why I am understanding of racists. That is why I don't judge racist people even though I do not believe in racism. I don't judge minority racists (of which there are a lot) and I don't judge white racists. (of which there are a lot.)I just take note. I will express that I am not racist if it comes up. Sometimes, I let them know I don't judge them for being racist if they won't judge me for not being racist. That is situational though. Mostly I just watch both sides as best I can. People are hateful little creatures. Prejudice as hell too. After all, you need some reason to hate. Have I said I don't like people much?
 

CloudAtlas

New member
Mar 16, 2013
873
0
0
Thespian said:
But the simple fact is, every single game has gotten ridiculous with it's attempts to cram in white guys. I know, I know, straight white male teenagers don't have many role models, or people to look up to. Yeah of course most game protagonists obviously are trying to appeal the demographic of non-white girls. I mean I can drop a name like Nilin and Sheva Alomar and you know who they are immediately without even googling them. Like, these are the real memorable characters.
Hey, leave Nilin out of this! I just picked her as avatar a couple of days ago, and now you want to make her a white guy? I'm no racist/misandrist but... not every game has to pander to white guys you know. I mean I get it that white guys want to have characters to identify with too, but Nilin is already half white and has short hair, ain't that enough?