Pretty much this. Ladies I don't know how you feel about it (obviously you certainly shouldn't be ashamed), but it is gross. It is a perfectly natural, healthy part of being an adult female, but it's also gross. Which doesn't make women gross... or at least not any grosser than men. In fact quite a few things about being alive are just gross. And that's okay, but it doesn't make them appropriate everyday topics of conversation.Silentpony said:Not knocking the issue. Women should not be made to feel shame about their periods, but I was always under the impression(as a guy FYI) that periods were personal things. Not embarrassing, just personal. Like I can't imagine I can just ask random women how their cycle is going. It's not an open table topic, or stand in line for a movie chitchat.
If anyone needed further proof at how driven we are to factionalism...Saetha said:The only menstruation talk I want to have is why do girls who use tampons ridicule girls who use pads?
Thank you, I was thinking the exact same thing. You could pretty much substitute urine, semen, or feces as your projectiles and it would carry the exact same "message" as this game is trying to get across.Bolo The Great said:At the base of it this is still just a buggy little flash pixel art game that is solely being highlighted because of it's 'message'. Menstruation is about as taboo topic as pooping, people don't like to talk about it... because it's considered not polite.
Can we start judging games on their merits and not some half-message they've cooked up. We get it, it's a feminist game about vaginal bleeding. It's also... just not very good. This is airspace an unsung gem of a game could be taking up.
If i took 20 minutes in some game creation software i could probably make "Ejaculation the videogame" where you shoot sperm instead of bullets. Would that get my game featured on some news pages simply because I'm breaking 'taboo'?
Games /can/ be a great medium for conversation on any subject, the problem is that developers too often fall for the idea that "If our product has a thing in it, then it's discussing that thing."Silentpony said:I think this game illustrates a larger social misconception: video games aren't a great medium for conveying topical awareness or social issues.
This game basically makes periods into laughing stocks. The most important question any game faces is 'is it fun?' That's what gives a game play value, not some half hearted message.
If there is a worthwhile message, great! But the primary focus of a game is to entertain.
Not knocking the issue. Women should not be made to feel shame about their periods, but I was always under the impression(as a guy FYI) that periods were personal things. Not embarrassing, just personal. Like I can't imagine I can just ask random women how their cycle is going. It's not an open table topic, or stand in line for a movie chitchat.
I was unaware that this was an actual "thing". Do the tampon-users doing the ridiculing not know about the (low but non-zero) risk of Toxic Shock Syndrome from tampons? I mean, it still happens [http://www.irishexaminer.com/examviral/real-life/girl-almost-died-from-toxic-shock-syndrome-caused-by-a-tampon-285440.html]....Saetha said:The only menstruation talk I want to have is why do girls who use tampons ridicule girls who use pads?
Oh, it's a thing. It's not staggeringly common, but common enough that I just don't bring up my preference whenever it's mentioned. The first incident I recall was in the girl's lockroom in gym class. I have a friend who gets a lot of heat from her sorority sisters for it, too.The Rogue Wolf said:I was unaware that this was an actual "thing". Do the tampon-users doing the ridiculing not know about the (low but non-zero) risk of Toxic Shock Syndrome from tampons? I mean, it still happens [http://www.irishexaminer.com/examviral/real-life/girl-almost-died-from-toxic-shock-syndrome-caused-by-a-tampon-285440.html]....Saetha said:The only menstruation talk I want to have is why do girls who use tampons ridicule girls who use pads?