The final proof...

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Easton Dark

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GZGoten said:
my gf is all the rage for the Sorceress and mostly is because of her design, its daring and unique
You just said this style was all the rage back in the 80's. Whatever, it's sexist or it's not sexist, up to you, but daring and unique it is not. It's thin girl, large breasts, large ass. Oooo, creativity.

I think it's terrible.
 

RaikuFA

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Oh dear another sexism debate...

Listen, yes there's sexism in the industry, but asshats like the guy from kotaku(seriously, why the fuck do people go on this shit site?) are the problem. So are the women who think Gloria Allred is a Messiah and if you have a Y chromosome you're automatically a sexist. And also the people who try to deny the fact that sexism exists. These sides are wrong. What we need is some new people in charge, ones that won't say "This game won't sell because it has a female lead.". We also need to throw out people who go "Oh my gosh, that woman has boobs, anyone who plays this game is sexist."
 
Sep 13, 2009
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generals3 said:
A couple of things i'd like to add:
First: something i edited in and you probably missed because you were typing your answer before i edited it:
"And that is ultimately my point: what is often called "male power fantasies" could just as well be called female sexual fantasies. And mind that doesn't mean it is necessarily true, mainly because traits are often exaggerated in games or other forms of entertainment. However the traits which are being exaggerated are traits considered attractive. (And the same goes for females being presented as male sexual fantasies. A lot of people don't like huge breasts however those fantasies are too often portrayed with huge breasts)"


Second: Not every power fantasy is the power fantasy. Sometimes they just exaggerate one trait and say "there you have it, now fantasize". If anything those are just secondary fantasies. It is not about fantasizing being the person but fantasizing about one of his traits (or what he achieves)(unless we're talking about being the person in the setting in which he's put, in which case obviously things get messy considering you can't actually apply Real Life rules than). And that trait is in most situations a trait liked by women.
In response to your first: The big difference here is that most of the time they're predominantly a male fantasy, and inadvertently a female sexual fantasy. Actually I won't even limit it that much, they're primarily intended to portray someone you'd want to be, not just someone you'd want to have sex with. Unfortunately I'm having trouble thinking of a perfect example for this for a female main character, but Alyx Vance is a good example for this for side character. She's strong and capable, and while some people find her attractive, you can tell clearly from her design and character that nothing's being thrown in just be be sexualized. Or take Tali, I find her accent far more attractive than I have any right to, but the accent isn't intended to be lusty. Those are characters that are just inadvertently attractive, and aren't designed to appeal to guys.

Now the opposite of that is very common in female characters, sexual characteristics take up the majority of the focus of the character. For example in Mass Effect with the number of ass shots that Miranda gets, the game is trying to shove the sexualization in your face. You probably wouldn't see that many close ups of guy's firm butts in the game. The sorceress who started this thread fits firmly into this category.

My point is, even if power fantasies can be attractive, when done properly the fantasy comes first and the attraction comes second. For most characters there should be some overlap, a quality being desired for its own sake, not just because it attracts all the guys. Of course I really don't think that every character needs to be a power fantasy, or really any, but the sheer number of female characters that get sexuality as their primary aspect is considerably more prominent than how many male characters. Actually, I'd be happy if you could show me a single male character who does it.

Second: Oh, completely. I agree with just about everything in that. I'd even go as far to say that the reason why being strong and intelligent is seen as attractive to a lot of women is similar to the reason why guys want it. And I'm going to tie my previous point into this, there are things besides large breasts and asses that guys find attractive in women. Things to the same effect of intelligence, craftiness and strength (talking a broad definition of strength here). And I'm going to tie in my previous point to this, these are qualities that overlap and can be appreciated by in both a sense of attraction and idealization.

The thing is, when you get situations like the ass shots and massive boobs it is clear that those are put in there solely for people who're attracted to women. Which... can be fine, so long as there's even close to the same amount of attention given to the opposite gender
 

Oltsu

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SJWs truly are the blight of the internet.

If we want gaming to be seen as a serious artform/past time/etc. what we need to do is stop it with this stupid attitude about what's right and what's wrong. Everyone needs to see that there's enough space out there for all kinds of games.

Should there be games with sexualized characters? Yes of course, if there are devs who want to make those games and gamers who want to play them.

Should there be games that aren't sexualized? Yes of course, read above.

No one here should give a flying fuck if some random game out there has character models that they don't like, no one should go all tumblr-SJW on developers who want to make games that are more porn than games. There is absolutely nothing wrong with having different sorts of material for different gamers to consume. This is the standard in pretty much every single entertainment industry. Not. Everyone. Needs. To. Like. Everything.

And dear feminists (yes I know I'm generalizing), if you want a better reception from pretty much everyone you should try changing the tune from "X is sexist, wrong, disgusting and stupid" to "I would like to see X, I think we could improve this by doing X, I'm going to back game X because I like it but refrain from bashing Y because liking Y is subjective".
 

generals3

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The Almighty Aardvark said:
In response to your first: The big difference here is that most of the time they're predominantly a male fantasy, and inadvertently a female sexual fantasy. Actually I won't even limit it that much, they're primarily intended to portray someone you'd want to be, not just someone you'd want to have sex with. Unfortunately I'm having trouble thinking of a perfect example for this for a female main character, but Alyx Vance is a good example for this for side character. She's strong and capable, and while some people find her attractive, you can tell clearly from her design and character that nothing's being thrown in just be be sexualized. Or take Tali, I find her accent far more attractive than I have any right to, but the accent isn't intended to be lusty. Those are characters that are just inadvertently attractive, and aren't designed to appeal to guys.

Now the opposite of that is very common in female characters, sexual characteristics take up the majority of the focus of the character. For example in Mass Effect with the number of ass shots that Miranda gets, the game is trying to shove the sexualization in your face. You probably wouldn't see that many close ups of guy's firm butts in the game. The sorceress who started this thread fits firmly into this category.

My point is, even if power fantasies can be attractive, when done properly the fantasy comes first and the attraction comes second. For most characters there should be some overlap, a quality being desired for its own sake, not just because it attracts all the guys. Of course I really don't think that every character needs to be a power fantasy, or really any, but the sheer number of female characters that get sexuality as their primary aspect is considerably more prominent than how many male characters. Actually, I'd be happy if you could show me a single male character who does it.
Actually i don't really like the word "attraction" in this context. Simply because attraction is a consequence of many elements. For instance "intelligence" is an attractive trait and thus by default cause attraction. (well ok, if everything else fails it won't be able to make up for the other unattractive traits but if all else remains the same more intelligence will increase the attractiveness. Mainly for women) And i would also like to add that there is no such thing as quality being desired for its own sake. A quality is only beneficial if you consider it a quality and if you do there is a reason.
Secondly one of the problems we can encounter is the fact both women and men find different perks more important when it comes to attractiveness and both respond differently to sexualization. For instance traits not considered as sexual are more important for women than men. And nudity has a bigger impact on arousal for males than females. As such you don't even need to sexualize male characters for them to be sexual fantasies.


Second: Oh, completely. I agree with just about everything in that. I'd even go as far to say that the reason why being strong and intelligent is seen as attractive to a lot of women is similar to the reason why guys want it. And I'm going to tie my previous point into this, there are things besides large breasts and asses that guys find attractive in women. Things to the same effect of intelligence, craftiness and strength (talking a broad definition of strength here). And I'm going to tie in my previous point to this, these are qualities that overlap and can be appreciated by in both a sense of attraction and idealization.

The thing is, when you get situations like the ass shots and massive boobs it is clear that those are put in there solely for people who're attracted to women. Which... can be fine, so long as there's even close to the same amount of attention given to the opposite gender
While they may like them they're lower on the priority scale than for women. We prioritize signs of fertility and not genetic awesomeness. Doesn't mean we don't care at all about intelligence or humour or whatever, but just care less.

And i totally disagree that there is an inherent need to give the same amount of attention to the opposite gender. That's not how marketing works. You choose your target and try to satisfy that target.
 

Vegosiux

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Oh for cryin' out loud, let's just go back to stick figures and call it a day.

Will even mean people won't have to sink money into GPUs as often anymore.
 

HalfTangible

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"The final proof"? REALLY?

Dude, most feminists are not represented by this guy anymore than most gamers are represented by the people who were threatening to rape Anita Sarkeesian(sp?) for a series of internet videos, or the Columbine shooters. And that's assuming he/she is completely wrong in the first place.

As to the clothing thing: The issue is less the way the characters are dressed and more how they pose/are presented to the player. Google pictures of, say, Zangief versus Mai Shiranui. The former conveys a shitload about the character in a single frame from his pose [usually "Im strong and tough and gonna rip your body apart"]... whereas the latter is generally posed like she's checking herself out. Both of them are clad in little and show off a lot of their body, but whereas the former is communicating a lot about his character in every frame... Learning just about anything about the latter requires that you look it up.

That's not to say Mai isn't a deep, interesting character... I've never played the games, she could be the deepest character in it for all I know. But you would never get that from looking at pictures of her. (seriously, google her, you'll see what I'm talking about)

Heck, even that wouldn't be that big of an issue if it weren't so prevalent.
 

Zeles

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GZGoten said:
are any of you artist?
have any of you thought that maybe, just maybe this isn't sexism and just the art style the artist was going for. You know an over the top super deformed body types in a fantasy world.
*Raises hand*

I'm not a professional, and am still learning, but I've been trying really hard to improve on how realistic I make my proportions while trying to find a style of my own. So, looking at the Sorceress, the thought did occur to me.

HOWEVER

I think when a character is designed to look like that, it's acceptable, UP TO THE POINT WHERE SHE BREAKS HER BACK TO LOOK AT THE VIEWER.
Looking at all the characters, it sort of makes sense for all of them to be a bit out of proportion- that appears to be what the look is going for. But none of the others are so ridiculously bent out of shape.
 

Izanagi009_v1legacy

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Let me make my position perfectly clear, I like the TnA just as any teenager would but at the same time, I'm more interested in the gameplay that she exhibits

I thought along the same lines as a lot of people that I would not play as the sorceress at all due to the overemphasized cleavage but looking at the gameplay and her use of barriers, transformation spells and her air dash, I'm more inclined to play her at some point

The issue of female design and their use as simply fanservice is something to discuss but as long as the gameplay does not do anything that can be considered shameless (clothes being ripped up by attacks) I really don't have a problem.

Plus, lots of women in anime, manga, games and television have had oversexualized characteristics that still have personalities and story arcs ( the aforementioned Bayonetta being one), I see no issue with having overtly sexy characters as long as they are at least well written or given good gameplay.
 
Sep 13, 2009
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generals3 said:
Actually i don't really like the word "attraction" in this context. Simply because attraction is a consequence of many elements. For instance "intelligence" is an attractive trait and thus by default cause attraction. (well ok, if everything else fails it won't be able to make up for the other unattractive traits but if all else remains the same more intelligence will increase the attractiveness. Mainly for women) And i would also like to add that there is no such thing as quality being desired for its own sake. A quality is only beneficial if you consider it a quality and if you do there is a reason.
Fair enough, what I essentially mean is not for the sake of being an object of lust. Something that comes more directly from the trait, intelligence results in greater understanding, strength gives you more freedom to interact with the world, etc...

Secondly one of the problems we can encounter is the fact both women and men find different perks more important when it comes to attractiveness and both respond differently to sexualization. For instance traits not considered as sexual are more important for women than men. And nudity has a bigger impact on arousal for males than females. As such you don't even need to sexualize male characters for them to be sexual fantasies.
Depends, there's many ways though that guys can be sexualized in games that would probably do far more for a lot of women than being smart, funny or strong. One sec, I'm going to ask one to get an example.

Okay, here's what she says would work with a lot of the women she knows (although not particularly for her):
- Tight pants, accentuating the ass and showing off the definition of his package
- Very low cut shirts or shirtless with defined abs, but not a hulking beast of a man
- Confident, teasing attitude
- "making eyes" (I'm guessing this would be akin to giving sexual gazes to the player character)
A very large part of it seems to do with how they'd interact with the characters, acting in an alluring, roguish manner. As well as how they carry themselves and show their body.

She also gave me a link to an artist who does a lot of drawings of sexualized guys, which can be seen here [http://neemeister.deviantart.com/art/Jason-150021275?q=gallery%3Aneemeister%2F1661593&qo=22]. And while that one is rather tame, the Man for Every Season [http://neemeister.deviantart.com/art/Man-for-Every-Season-Calendar-104258603] calender goes a fair bit farther with that. Also, I feel this quote from her is prudent "90% of the men in [the artists] Gallery look like they just are asking to be fucked".

This obviously isn't every woman's opinion or taste, but I think that it makes a good enough point that guys can be sexualized for women in senses far beyond being smart, strong and funny. Those just don't get nearly any attention. I imagine this is largely due to the fact that game publishers are afraid of making guys uncomfortable by playing as female protagonists, much less have attractive shirtless men seductively make advances on them.

While they may like them they're lower on the priority scale than for women. We prioritize signs of fertility and not genetic awesomeness. Doesn't mean we don't care at all about intelligence or humour or whatever, but just care less.

And i totally disagree that there is an inherent need to give the same amount of attention to the opposite gender. That's not how marketing works. You choose your target and try to satisfy that target.
You can say that, but then that just further reinforces the idea that gaming is a boys club and that effort should be made to ensure that it remains one. Something I don't buy into at all, if you're clearly marketing your products to a single gender, you shouldn't be surprised when the other gender gives less attention to it

EDIT: Also relevant and pictured below is the reportedly very sexualized statue of a man in the controposto stance and reflects a mischievous play of dominance (her words, she also happens to have taken some art history classes). However this was in ancient greece and might not be entirely applicable as it was men doing the sexualization

 
Sep 13, 2009
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Epomis said:
The Almighty Aardvark said:
Wow... the sorceress is even worse in that one. Is everybody noticing the placement of the staff there? I can't believe people are trying to turn this into a power fantasy or draw a false equivalence to guys. Or maybe there's some vast reservoir of male characters in games grinding their ass and groin against objects that I've completely missed out on.

Do people even realize what it means to equate this and muscular game characters under power fantasies? Apparently a guy's power fantasy is to be strong and powerful, while a girl's is to be something that a guy would lust after.
The comparison to how males are sexualized in games and media is ridiculous, precisely because heterosexual men and heterosexual women don't find the same things sexually exciting. I don't think some of the men making this argument quite realize that these guys with their muscles and powerful stances are being put into the game for their own benefit, to help the power-fantasy along.

There's not much to be said about the sorceress grinding her ass and genitals against her own staff though; you can have every woman in every video game grinding against every phallic shaped object and precisely zero women would have been objectified or harmed in the act. That's because a two-dimensional representation of an allegedly human woman isn't actually a woman, and making her do all sorts of hypersexualized things on screen doesn't really prove much other than that the developers/publishers don't have a high opinion of their target audience. It's nothing more than a cynical marketing ploy aimed at the lowest common denominator -- the kinds of sexless losers who would actually be turned on by that.
I wasn't being entirely serious with the guys grinding their genitals comparison, I was more referring to any sort of female equivalent to that. And while it's true no one is harmed, or objectified, it's a fairly large statement on what kind of demographic you intend to be playing this game. The gaming world is unfortunately a little too over-saturated with sexualization solely intended for straight males
 

go-10

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You just said this style was all the rage back in the 80's. Whatever, it's sexist or it's not sexist, up to you, but daring and unique it is not. It's thin girl, large breasts, large ass. Oooo, creativity.

I think it's terrible.
yeah the 80's, which have been done and over with for quite a while mind you. Also in recent games look for character designs similar to that, and no Scarlet Blade crap I mean actual games

*Raises hand*

I'm not a professional, and am still learning, but I've been trying really hard to improve on how realistic I make my proportions while trying to find a style of my own. So, looking at the Sorceress, the thought did occur to me.

HOWEVER

I think when a character is designed to look like that, it's acceptable, UP TO THE POINT WHERE SHE BREAKS HER BACK TO LOOK AT THE VIEWER.
Looking at all the characters, it sort of makes sense for all of them to be a bit out of proportion- that appears to be what the look is going for. But none of the others are so ridiculously bent out of shape.
why should ANY character in a fantasy universe behave with the rules of reality? This is something that has always bothered me, if its a FANTASY why does it matter if anything in that world wouldn't make sense in real life? For all we know magician in the Dragon's Crown universe have 400 vertebrates like some snakes do, point is it doesn't matter because its fantasy so reality needs to check out at the door, and if you can't relate because its fantasy... really?


mind you this doesn't mean I'm fond of the design its just that I don't pretend like the end of the world because some dude put Hitomi Tanaka in a witch costume
 

grey_space

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Easton Dark said:
I only bring this up because the sorceress is nothing but eye candy. To try to argue she isn't is disingenuous. But she's one character. If all the female characters were huge sluts like dead or alive there's a little bit more room for debate there, but calling this game sexist implies that a game is not even allowed to have a sexualized female character without being labelled as sexist. Making every female character in a game an excuse to show off jiggle physics is immature, but I think pretending that women are NEVER sexualized ever or never sexualize themselves is just as immature in a different way.

And that's not to say that there's no room for immature tit-fests either. I think people are quick to correlate sexualization with Misogyny when really these things don't hurt anybody. I'll understand if women don't see the appeal in it, but if the developers want to pander to a male demographic that's their prerogative.
.

Ya I agree. I think the game is immature and the fucking jiggle physics is really grating on my eyes so I won't be playing it. If guys(or girls) want to buy this game and fap or giggle at cartoon t'n'a then more power too them.

Each to his own. But this game is certainly not improving the fair representation of women in the media, but I wouldn't say its dragging it backwards either.
 

zefichan

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Saying videogames using the trope of damsel in distress encourages toxic views of women in RL isn't something to be taken lightly.
Indeed, mostly since it's true. There are very few groups in the western civilization more sexist than male gamers for a reason (one of the few: Catholic priests. Before you cry about OMG ANTI-CATHOLICISM - I AM catholic culturally). I know sports clubs where this discussion you are having wouldn't fly, and where people flat out admit things are sexism. Gamers, meanwhile, shriek and threaten women who say that with rape and death (See Sarkeesian - the entire attacks on her proved her right 100%. Gamers managed to be worse than Bronies when it came to her...).

Wow, screenshots of those characters have been floating around for ages and NOW people are taking offense?
People have taken offence for ages, gamer nerds just attacked them since the beginning. Basically the same mudflinging you guys are doing now.

why should ANY character in a fantasy universe behave with the rules of reality?
You'd be the first to shriek if any female character you liked was suddenly obese, so your logic just committed suicide right there.

There is something called internal realism, which is very important. Look up why.
 

generals3

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zefichan said:
Saying videogames using the trope of damsel in distress encourages toxic views of women in RL isn't something to be taken lightly.
Indeed, mostly since it's true. There are very few groups in the western civilization more sexist than male gamers for a reason (one of the few: Catholic priests. Before you cry about OMG ANTI-CATHOLICISM - I AM catholic culturally). I know sports clubs where this discussion you are having wouldn't fly, and where people flat out admit things are sexism. Gamers, meanwhile, shriek and threaten women who say that with rape and death (See Sarkeesian - the entire attacks on her proved her right 100%. Gamers managed to be worse than Bronies when it came to her...).
That's just silly. People attacked her because she made an insane claim with 0 evidence concerning video games. Yes gamers are very protective about their hobby, exactly because populist liars love to make ludicrous claims about the impact of games on RL. Soon we'll be told playing GTA makes us all extremely violent psychopaths who think its fun to kill people with a dildo. And yes the internet overreacts as well and that has nothing to do with gamers being sexist misogynistic pigs.
 

generals3

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The Almighty Aardvark said:
Two points:

One: I didn't say men couldn't be sexualized. However it has a much lesser impact and simply isn't worth it. On top of that male characters are actually sexually appealing through non-sexualized traits, that's something much harder to achieve with female characters. Let's not ultimately forget that sexualization comes at a cost, it makes quite some consumers not take the game seriously anymore, so it has to be done with a clear objective. Obviously emphasizing on a woman's ass is gonna be much more beneficial than doing so on a man's ass. Not only because there are more male gamers but because such things have a bigger impact on males.

Two: "You can say that, but then that just further reinforces the idea that gaming is a boys club and that effort should be made to ensure that it remains one. Something I don't buy into at all, if you're clearly marketing your products to a single gender, you shouldn't be surprised when the other gender gives less attention to it"

Efforts shouldn't be made to ensure it remains one. Efforts should be made for the gaming industry to make money and if males are more prominent consumers obviously targeting them is more profitable. And i don't buy the vicious circle theory because if there was a way to make a shit ton of money by making women-centric games it would have probably already been done.
 

Easton Dark

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GZGoten said:
You just said this style was all the rage back in the 80's. Whatever, it's sexist or it's not sexist, up to you, but daring and unique it is not. It's thin girl, large breasts, large ass. Oooo, creativity.

I think it's terrible.
yeah the 80's, which have been done and over with for quite a while mind you. Also in recent games look for character designs similar to that, and no Scarlet Blade crap I mean actual games
One that came to mind immediately from the most popular game played today.


Basically, the sorceress is a clone of Miss Fortune with a stick she can grind against.

Also instantly thought of was this witch from an anime I never watched... but she has the symptoms of oversized, but underclothed, witch gear, with big breasts, ass, and with purple hair.

If required I could go through comic heroines I know.
 

Kopikatsu

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Zeles said:
GZGoten said:
are any of you artist?
have any of you thought that maybe, just maybe this isn't sexism and just the art style the artist was going for. You know an over the top super deformed body types in a fantasy world.
*Raises hand*

I'm not a professional, and am still learning, but I've been trying really hard to improve on how realistic I make my proportions while trying to find a style of my own. So, looking at the Sorceress, the thought did occur to me.

HOWEVER

I think when a character is designed to look like that, it's acceptable, UP TO THE POINT WHERE SHE BREAKS HER BACK TO LOOK AT THE VIEWER.
Looking at all the characters, it sort of makes sense for all of them to be a bit out of proportion- that appears to be what the look is going for. But none of the others are so ridiculously bent out of shape.
I forget what it's called, but there is a name for stances that fly in the face of anatomy for the sake of a 'dramatic' or 'powerful' stance/scene. (Powerful in this context doesn't relate to physical strength). One of LoL's artists discussed it recently, stating that most of their splash images use this kind of technique, but I don't remember their name right now.