Sexy fantasy armor...

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Erttheking

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SUPA FRANKY said:
erttheking said:
SUPA FRANKY said:
Ah, the male power fantasy. I really hate that excuse, because it's total bullshit. Why do most people want to be muscular ( barring athletes)? To either attract mates, look good for someone, etc.
Well, when you get down to it there's a difference between a man designed to be powerful and a man designed to be sexy.

Compare Kratos

http://img4.wikia.nocookie.net/__cb20100727072252/godofwar/images/1/19/Kratos_rendering_concept.jpg

To the zesty man

http://www.themplsegotist.com/sites/www.themplsegotist.com/files/images/zesty_kitchen_aotw.jpg

Also, I can only speak for myself, but I want to be muscular because I want to be in shape.
Eh, I don't see it. I know women/men would be throwing themselves at me if I looked like Kratos. Not saying there aren't health benefits, but why do many men feel insecure when the muscular action heroes take off their shirts to show off their muscles? Why do many women diet and excercise so excessively to hit that beauty ideal?

I get that RAWR HULK muscle definately isn't sexy, but that's rarely the case. Check out the cast of Magic Mike. Those guys had the same build as a Super Hero....wonder how much money that movie made...
It's less of how much muscle and more the attitude behind the muscle. Kratos is standing upright, scowl on his face, looking like he's three seconds away from caving someone's skull in.

Zesty guy is sitting in a tantalizing position with a smile on his face and a "Come hither" look who looks like he's three seconds away form having sex.

Also fair enough, I was just speaking from personal experience.
 

Animyr

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One example I can think of; I think it's justified to object to, for instance, Ashley's sexualized character design in ME3. It doesn't fit the universe's style or her personality or her occupation as a front-line soldier or previous portrayals of all three. Miranda, by contrast, has a confident attitude in regards to sexuality, a deliberately cultivated femme fatale aspect to both her personality and her character design, and isn't a front line soldier, so I don't have much of an issue with a way she's dressed since it has enough situational justification to seem idiosyncratic to her character, rather then a fashion template for her entire gender.

That's the key; I wouldn't really mind sexual armor and such if it wasn't so ubiquitous, and so often present regardless of proper context, that comes to be expected, even demanded regardless of the situation. Stereotypes by definition encourage us to expect something by default that we shouldn't, and I don't think titillation should be something we expect from an entire gender, be it consciously or unconsciously, out the gate.
 

Aaron Sylvester

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LifeCharacter said:
So, a question for the person who likes complaining about the male power fantasy but also likes going on and on about how men are the only demographic that matters to video games:
I think you quoted the wrong person because nowhere have I said men are the only demographic to video games. I only majorities and minorities, market and demand.

LifeCharacter said:
Do you think whatever male character you think is a sex fantasy for women was made that way for the female members of the audience that you don't even think they consider, or for the male audience members? I'm having a hard time reconciling the position that developers/publishers don't care about appealing to women and the position that there's all these male characters that were made to be appealing to women instead of men.
They obviously make it for the males.

Appealing to just women by means of titillation (i.e. present them with sexy males in revealing armor) is unprofitable because the demand for such a thing is almost non-existent. There are a few examples sitting in Japan (I think) but outside that nothing mainstream.

Sure a dev could try to make such a game purely for giggles, but ultimately it would have very few players because females in general just aren't interested in such a thing.
Meanwhile the typical erotic flash browser game catered to males gets TONS of viewers and there are so many of those types of games that it's literally impossible to count them all. Because they are driven by demand.

Here's something anyone can easily relate to - count the number of female strip clubs compared to the number of male strip clubs. I guarantee you that the former out-numbers the latter by orders of magnitude.
 

Drummodino

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SAMAS said:
Drummodino said:
OT: I don't have a problem with unrealistic armour designs, as long as the fit the setting and actually look good. For example:


This is obviously impractical, but does it look good and fit the setting (Kill la Kill)? Hell yea it does.
Hell naw it doesn't. In fact, that outfit is the sole reason I have yet to watch the series. I don't care how Gurren-Lagann-AWESOME it is, that right there is just stupid.

And no, I didn't have a problem with Yoko's outfit. Skimpy as it was it was still something people have actually worn.
Trust me, it fits the setting. I'd recommend giving the series a shot, at least watch the first seven episodes or so. You might be pleasantly surprised :)
 

Drummodino

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LifeCharacter said:
Drummodino said:
SAMAS said:
Hell naw it doesn't. In fact, that outfit is the sole reason I have yet to watch the series. I don't care how Gurren-Lagann-AWESOME it is, that right there is just stupid.

And no, I didn't have a problem with Yoko's outfit. Skimpy as it was it was still something people have actually worn.
Trust me, it fits the setting. I'd recommend giving the series a shot, at least watch the first seven episodes or so. You might be pleasantly surprised :)
Certainly it fits the setting, but whether or not it actually looks good is really up to the individual. I personally think it looks kinda stupid, and liked the show in spite of that. And, while I agree that they should give it a chance (get to episode 3 or 4, then decide), I understand the desire to steer incredibly clear of something that looks like that.
Yea that's fair enough I guess, that's just down to personal tastes. I love the design personally but I can see why others would be turned off by it. I think that a lot of those people would still enjoy the series though (like you), since it really is very good.
 

Something Amyss

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MCerberus said:
A couple of things, if you look at that "Controversy", the outfits were noticeable, because they were designed to be. When a reviewer has to say "Come on, seriously?", then it's fair game to knock off points. But it became more than that, because of course it has to.
If you don't like the aesthetics, it's fair game. However, neither review made it a centerpiece and there's no evidence that it lost them points. The former gamers routinely reinforce until it's used against something they actually like.

Second, correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't "form fitting" modern armor "it fits women"? The US military in particular has a problem where pretty much all of its stock is based off a narrow range of male dimensions, making it impractical but "better than nothing" for female soldiers to wear.
The "form fitting" armour I was referring to has boob contours, just not as ridiculous as the "practical" armour in question. However, my understanding is that armour has been improved for women. I'm not sure specifically about military, but I've got friends in law enforcement.

But it's not so much "better than nothing," as it still provides significant protection. It's "a lot better than nothing."

thaluikhain said:
There's a lot of that regarding the burqa itself.

In some places, women are forced to wear the burqa, regardless of what they might choose. Many people object to this, and many of those who do demand that women be forced not to wear it instead, regardless of what they might choose.

There is something of a problem there.
Within the context of the accusations that we were putting teh wimminz in teh berkehz, I figured it was pretty clear which situation we were talking about. I have absolutely no issue with a woman who chooses to wear a burka, though I do question it on some level. Still, I question a lot of things without opposing them, and I can respect the right or choice without agreeing with it.

If we're talking about letting women choose whether they wear burkas, there's no relevance to the original bit.

Dead Raen said:
Oh no. Skyrim may very well still be boring WITH sexy armor. It's not the sexy armor that makes it not boring, it's the addition of more content. I make it less boring for me with sexy armor (among new houses, quest lines, followers, enemies, and many, many, many other things). Perhaps I should have more accurately defined that my post was of my preference alone.
Fair enough. I appreciate the clarification.

mecegirl said:
It gets really touchy when the subject intersects with Middle Eastern women and their choice to cover themselves. By all means forcing the burka on anyone is wrong, but that has little to do with why some women choose to wear say a hijab. Some western feminists can be very pushy with their beliefs, when really all that matters is if an individual has free choice to follow their own path. So to say that they have to bare themselves in order to be truly liberated is no different than saying that one has to always be covered. Just like a woman who chooses to wait until marriage to have sex is just as "sexually liberated" as a woman who has chosen to have multiple partners.
And I agree. I covered part of this in my response above, but my stance is one of self-determination. A woman who chooses to be a housewife is as legit as a woman who chooses to be a lawyer. A woman who chooses to wear a burka is as legit as one who doesn't. And a decent chunk of feminists are straight white middle classed women who are only concerned about their straight white middle class sensibilities.

There is also an issue that I think muddies the water, and it's that a lot of times it's hard to tell choice from external pressure. After the Civil War, you still had many American blacks who were uncomfortable being free. Not only were they used to slavery, but they received a huge amount of negative reaction in the south. And sometimes the north. Cultural pressures and predispositions don't dissolve overnight. And we're still seeing that with Islam. Religion and culture can both be used as a form of emotional abuse, which we see play out. In the same sense a domestic abuse victim might choose to stay with their partner, so might someone cleave to the burka. And I think some folks pick up on that in their crusade to wipe it out. But while I identify it as an issue, I'm not entirely sure how to address it.

However, I'm taking this from the accusation that wanting our characters to wear clothes is the same as putting women in burkas. Remember, she said we're no different than those who were trying to FORCE (emphasis mine) women to wear burkas. And that comparison isn't cool.

In this case though we aren't even really talking about what a woman would wear in everyday life, but what she would wear to do a specific task. And preferring one type of fantasy armor over another is just a preference. Some people may prefer a Conan type of world and the armor that comes with it. Others may prefer a Aragorn type of world and the armor that comes with it. It's no different from preferring a dystopian future to a utopian future. It's only an issue because content creators will create an Aragon type of world and only have the women dress like they come from a Conan type of world(the same would work for the opposite situation but we never see the opposite situation). As if we aren't supposed to notice the difference and question why she is dressed for the wrong climate and type of combat. Unless she is a recent immigrant she would adhere to whatever armoring conventions are common in her culture. Not wear what the men wear but with strategically placed cutouts.
Or band-aids.

But the issue of preference is why I like games whether clothing is either stat neutral or where you can pick your attire and then slot gems/equipment/whatever to give it states. That way, you can dress your character your way, I can dress mine my way, and everyone else can dress their characters how they want. Someone who wants "lore" or "region" appropriate can choose that. Someone who wants fanservice or empowerment fantasy can have that.

I honestly feel like everyone wins with this situation.

Except maybe the developers, who might have to program more options.
 

Olas

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Risingblade said:
Why even have armor? Naked all day every day
Boring. We've all seen naked people. Only if the character has an interesting looking body like Kerrigan from Starcraft 2, otherwise who cares?
 

SAMAS

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Aaron Sylvester said:
A bunch of questions to those asking for internal consistency:
1) Would you fap to males wearing skimpy armor?
As a straight male? no. Then again, I rarely fap to the females, either.

But am I particularly worried/offended by them? No. That would be hypocritical to expect women to put up with it if I couldn't take it. What's good for the Goose, etc...

2) How many players of the game do you think will actually WANT to wear skimpy armour on their males (remember that the players are mostly male)?
Not many (I never wear the Bone Armor in Monster Hunter, at least). I would expect there to be a variety of armors that look badass in addition to ones designed specifically to (or just happen to) appeal to female gamers.

3) Are you purely asking for internal consistency out of a selfish desperation to see equality no matter what the players actually want?
We're men. We should be able to take if it we're gonna insist on dishing it out.

4) Do you think there are thousands/millions of female players out there looking to get easy titillation out of males wearing skimpy armour in videogames?
Do you think there aren't? I mean, the Yaoi genre is a thing. So is the word "Bishonen". There is clearly a market for it, given the cyclical success of boy bands (seriously, they break out roughly every ten years or so, which means we're due another wave soon), manga circles like CLAMP, and magazines like Tiger Beat.

Seriously, go to DeviantArt or Google Image Search and type in "Bishonen". This may surprise you, but yeah, girls do like looking at handsome men, just as much as we like looking at beautiful women.

Then we come back to the Hypocrisy thing: If it's so bad for us, how can we feel entitled to make them go through it?

5) If so, where is their demand? Where is the supply? Where is the market? If the demand was so overwhelming then there would be an entire market of videogames catered just for them. Yet no such thing exists.
Ask CLAMP. Ask the guys who made the Backstreet Boys, N*SYNC(sp), O-Town(sp), New Edition, Boyz II Men, the Beatles, Ask the guys who publish Tiger Beat.

Wait, lemme rephrase that:

http://www.buzzfeed.com/josephbernstein/the-11-hottest-hunks-in-video-games-as-ranked-by-a-straight

http://laurendem.wordpress.com/t-mcbees-top-10-hottest-video-game-men/

http://thephoenix.com/boston/recroom/131648-sexiest-video-game-studs-of-2011/

http://gamingmemoirs.co.uk/12-video-game-men-that-a-girl-gamer-thinks-are-hot/

http://4thegirlgamers.blogspot.com/2006/06/top-ten-hottest-video-game-guys.html

That's where.
 

Aaron Sylvester

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SAMAS said:
We're men. We should be able to take if it we're gonna insist on dishing it out.
We're not dishing out anything, the devs are. It's a massive waste of time and resources for the devs to create armor sets that pander to the tiny % of female gamers (or males) that actually want that stuff, you would see many armor sets go unused/untouched.

SAMAS said:
Do you think there aren't? I mean, the Yaoi genre is a thing. So is the word "Bishonen". There is clearly a market for it, given the cyclical success of boy bands (seriously, they break out roughly every ten years or so, which means we're due another wave soon), manga circles like CLAMP, and magazines like Tiger Beat.
SAMAS said:
Seriously, go to DeviantArt or Google Image Search and type in "Bishonen". This may surprise you, but yeah, girls do like looking at handsome men, just as much as we like looking at beautiful women.
I looked up Bishonen and "handsome men" is the last thing that came to my mind. Those things look more like androgenes or male bodies with female heads. This sounds specifically like a thing only popular in Japan and maybe Korea/China.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bish%C5%8Dnen

I don't think you are realizing that the way females can be objectified, sexualized and sold in media doesn't really have a male equivalent...or at least not anywhere near in demand.

I mean come on, think of a DoA:Beach Volleyball equivalent catering to females. Like...what would that even involve? It would sell jack-all copies.

Boy Bands, Yaoi and Bishonen don't come across around cheap titillation and easy sexualisation existing purely for "female gaze", nowhere near comparable to what is popular and in-demand amongst males anyway.

SAMAS said:
Then we come back to the Hypocrisy thing: If it's so bad for us, how can we feel entitled to make them go through it?
We're not making them go through anything. The lack of female involvement and female demand in big-budget gaming is ultimately responsible for the lack for games pandering to females. If they want it they should goddamn create it.

Since they can't create anything, the only thing they can do is whine about "inconsistency" with female vs male armor designs and wave the sexism flag...which means nothing and achieves nothing.

SAMAS said:
Ask CLAMP. Ask the guys who made the Backstreet Boys, N*SYNC(sp), O-Town(sp), New Edition, Boyz II Men, the Beatles, Ask the guys who publish Tiger Beat.

Wait, lemme rephrase that:

http://www.buzzfeed.com/josephbernstein/the-11-hottest-hunks-in-video-games-as-ranked-by-a-straight

http://laurendem.wordpress.com/t-mcbees-top-10-hottest-video-game-men/

http://thephoenix.com/boston/recroom/131648-sexiest-video-game-studs-of-2011/

http://gamingmemoirs.co.uk/12-video-game-men-that-a-girl-gamer-thinks-are-hot/

http://4thegirlgamers.blogspot.com/2006/06/top-ten-hottest-video-game-guys.html

That's where.
Those links prove my point beyond a doubt - what females consider sexy doesn't involve simply throwing skimpy armor/clothing on males.

So the people demanding "equality" by means of forcing both females and males to wear skimpy armor are a bit lost. On females skimpy armor/clothing makes sense (sexualization, titilation, easy to sell, male gaze, showing their figure, etc) but on males it makes far less sense and the market demand for it is almost non-existent.

That's the point I'm trying to drive home here since that's what this thread is about. Not Boy Bands and Yaoi lol.
 

Lilani

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Aaron Sylvester said:
Those links prove my point beyond a doubt - what females consider sexy doesn't involve simply throwing skimpy armor/clothing on males.

So the people demanding "equality" by means of forcing both females and males to wear skimpy armor are a bit lost. On females skimpy armor/clothing makes sense (sexualization, titilation, easy to sell, male gaze, showing their figure, etc) but on males it makes far less sense and the market demand for it is almost non-existent.

That's the point I'm trying to drive home here since that's what this thread is about. Not Boy Bands and Yaoi lol.
A lot more is done to make sexy female characters than just giving them scraps to wear. The designers make sure all their poses and camera angles capture all their best bits, and give their gazes and poses that "come hither" vibe. The same basic things attract women: get a few men down to their bare essentials and give them inviting gazes and poses and you've got their attention. As someone else pointed out earlier, that's what Magic Mike did, and it yielded pretty dramatic results.
 

Erttheking

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Archangel357 said:
erttheking said:
There's plenty of media, stories, and games with practical armor designs for the ladies so its not as if the fantasy genre is saturated in sexy wardrobe.
That's like saying, "there are plenty of jobs where women can walk around fully clothed, so it's not like everybody needs to be a prostitute, therefore I do not understand the problem people have with women being mere sex objects."
I do believe that you quoted the wrong person with that one.
 

Aaron Sylvester

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Archangel357 said:
erttheking said:
There's plenty of media, stories, and games with practical armor designs for the ladies so its not as if the fantasy genre is saturated in sexy wardrobe.
That's like saying, "there are plenty of jobs where women can walk around fully clothed, so it's not like everybody needs to be a prostitute, therefore I do not understand the problem people have with women being mere sex objects."
Are said sex objects getting paid to be sex objects?
 

SAMAS

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Aaron Sylvester said:
SAMAS said:
We're men. We should be able to take if it we're gonna insist on dishing it out.
We're not dishing out anything, the devs are. It's a massive waste of time and resources for the devs to create armor sets that pander to the tiny % of female gamers (or males) that actually want that stuff, you would see many armor sets go unused/untouched.
So? I don't see how it's any more of a waste than the sexy armor for female characters. Cake is cake (cheese or beef), and just because a larger segment eats it doesn't make it any less pointless. If someone wants to make an outfit or two for a male avatar/character that women can find sexy, I can live with three sexy female outfits instead of six.

SAMAS said:
Do you think there aren't? I mean, the Yaoi genre is a thing. So is the word "Bishonen". There is clearly a market for it, given the cyclical success of boy bands (seriously, they break out roughly every ten years or so, which means we're due another wave soon), manga circles like CLAMP, and magazines like Tiger Beat.
SAMAS said:
Seriously, go to DeviantArt or Google Image Search and type in "Bishonen". This may surprise you, but yeah, girls do like looking at handsome men, just as much as we like looking at beautiful women.
I looked up Bishonen and "handsome men" is the last thing that came to my mind. Those things look more like androgenes or male bodies with female heads. This sounds specifically like a thing only popular in Japan and maybe Korea/China.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bish%C5%8Dnen[/quote]

News Flash: They're not designed to appeal to your standards of masculine beauty. Or mine, for that matter. If that kind of look resonates only in Asia, why has it become so big over the world?

I don't think you are realizing that the way females can be objectified, sexualized and sold in media doesn't really have a male equivalent...or at least not anywhere near in demand.
And there you go with the "I don't think it's as popular, therefore it shouldn't be appealed to" line again. So what?

Yes, female objectification of men is often a little different than male objectification of women. (we know it as "Romance Novels") But female gamers, and anime fans, and music fans still like looking at men they find sexy. I like to look at women they find sexy, so I find no reason to deny them.

I mean come on, think of a DoA:Beach Volleyball equivalent catering to females. Like...what would that even involve? It would sell jack-all copies.
It's called the "Otome" genre, and it's been around for a few years. :)

Boy Bands, Yaoi and Bishonen don't come across around cheap titillation and easy sexualisation existing purely for "female gaze", nowhere near comparable to what is popular and in-demand amongst males anyway.
And what exactly is "popular" and "in demand" anyway? Because I don't remember anybody actually demanding anything. In fact, as the gaming public has grown up, there has been an increasing male backlash against things like Sexy Fantasy Armor. While I would never say it's dying, gratuitously blatant fanservice is greatly reducing.

I mean, look at Extreme Beach Volleyball. Yeah, it gets contreversy, but after the first game, the response to the sequel was an overwhelming "meh". Seems like we guys weren't all that interested in it after all.

SAMAS said:
Then we come back to the Hypocrisy thing: If it's so bad for us, how can we feel entitled to make them go through it?
We're not making them go through anything. The lack of female involvement and female demand in big-budget gaming is ultimately responsible for the lack for games pandering to females. If they want it they should goddamn create it. [/quote]

Then we should goddamn let them. Or have you already forgotten that whole thing the developers for Bioshock Infinite and The Last of Us had over their female leads even being on the cover?
 

SUPA FRANKY

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The Lunatic said:
It's kinda cringy to see people get so "Into" sexualised characters.

Like, Okay, I get you like naked women bodies, but, can't you just go and look at porn?

What's the fascination that every female has to be as revealing as possible in a fantasy setting?

Even boob-plate is dumb. I mean, sure, it's better, but, it's dumb.
Isn' that preety much the " If you don't like i, go play something else!" argument with a difrent coat of paint.

Besides, it's no like that is actually that prevalent, at least in terms where the male gender gets full plate armor and the females don't.
 

Aaron Sylvester

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SAMAS said:
So? I don't see how it's any more of a waste than the sexy armor for female characters. Cake is cake (cheese or beef), and just because a larger segment eats it doesn't make it any less pointless. If someone wants to make an outfit or two for a male avatar/character that women can find sexy, I can live with three sexy female outfits instead of six.
You can live with it, but it's the devs' decision because it's their work and money that's going into the design.

SAMAS said:
News Flash: They're not designed to appeal to your standards of masculine beauty. Or mine, for that matter. If that kind of look resonates only in Asia, why has it become so big over the world?
It...hasn't?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bishounen#Popular_culture

My standards for masculine beauty are very simple - he should look like a male. Bishonen is nothing more than adding feminine features to male faces and it's fitting that the word "beautiful" is used to describe them instead of "handsome". Now that I think about it it's very much specific to Japan/East Asia.

I don't think you are realizing that the way females can be objectified, sexualized and sold in media doesn't really have a male equivalent...or at least not anywhere near in demand.
And there you go with the "I don't think it's as popular, therefore it shouldn't be appealed to" line again. So what?

SAMAS said:
Yes, female objectification of men is often a little different than male objectification of women. (we know it as "Romance Novels") But female gamers, and anime fans, and music fans still like looking at men they find sexy. I like to look at women they find sexy, so I find no reason to deny them.
They like looking at men they find sexy - with "sexy" having a ridiculously broad and flexible range of definitions. Skimpy male armor would find little or no place in their definition of sexy. Remember this thread is about sexy fantasy armor -_-

SAMAS said:
It's called the "Otome" genre, and it's been around for a few years. :)
Only established in Japan, and as we've seen Japan has a lot of weird shit going on.

SAMAS said:
I mean, look at Extreme Beach Volleyball. Yeah, it gets contreversy, but after the first game, the response to the sequel was an overwhelming "meh". Seems like we guys weren't all that interested in it after all.
Because the gameplay sucked and the first one was basically better in everything bar graphics. It went the way of MOST game sequels to be honest. A full-priced game's gotta have decent gameplay first, sexualization can be the icing on the cake.

SAMAS said:
Then we should goddamn let them. Or have you already forgotten that whole thing the developers for Bioshock Infinite and The Last of Us had over their female leads even being on the cover?
That was the publisher's decision derived from their statistical analysis that game boxes featuring males on the front sell more copies than game boxes with females on the front. Consumer purchasing patterns - trends that people like you and me created. The publisher was just looking to make a few extra easy bucks off the box art, the game itself was untouched.
I don't get that whole "omg publisher is so sexist and misogynistic" reaction, as if the entire company is filled with overweight mustache-twirling evil men looking to eliminate women from the world.

Not sure what that has to do with sexy fantasy armor btw.