Yep, I do play as the opposite gender in RPGs. Not always for the same reasons, though.
Like in Fallout and Fallout 2 I usually played a female character because they almost always got vendor discounts and loot that wouldn't normally be accessible to male characters (hell, in Fallout 2, if you use a female character with the name Buffy you can get a suit of metal armor and a 10mm SMG really early in the game).
In the Mass Effect games I played as Femshep because, quite frankly, I couldn't stand the voice acting for Broshep. It always sounded either especially hammy or completely phoned in. The only lines in the games that I thought he delivered better than Femshep were the particularly silly ones ("you big, stupid jellyfish!"). So yeah... I went with Femshep because I thought Jennifer Hale did a better job recording the dialogue.
Then there's the MMO scene. I used to play World of WarCraft for a long time. I typically played female characters because the male character models were either hideous or active gameplay hindrances (like male Tauren who sometimes have difficulty with doors due to their height and size; especially when they're riding mounts).
So, yeah... it kinda varies from game to game if I'll do it at all, and why. But I'm definitely not opposed to playing female characters.
Like in Fallout and Fallout 2 I usually played a female character because they almost always got vendor discounts and loot that wouldn't normally be accessible to male characters (hell, in Fallout 2, if you use a female character with the name Buffy you can get a suit of metal armor and a 10mm SMG really early in the game).
In the Mass Effect games I played as Femshep because, quite frankly, I couldn't stand the voice acting for Broshep. It always sounded either especially hammy or completely phoned in. The only lines in the games that I thought he delivered better than Femshep were the particularly silly ones ("you big, stupid jellyfish!"). So yeah... I went with Femshep because I thought Jennifer Hale did a better job recording the dialogue.
Then there's the MMO scene. I used to play World of WarCraft for a long time. I typically played female characters because the male character models were either hideous or active gameplay hindrances (like male Tauren who sometimes have difficulty with doors due to their height and size; especially when they're riding mounts).
So, yeah... it kinda varies from game to game if I'll do it at all, and why. But I'm definitely not opposed to playing female characters.