You miss the point. Due to the fact that most game company CEOs come from packaged goods there is also a bit of an awareness of publicity from then. Therefore intentionally forcing their development studios and teams to shoehorn in characters they hadn't planed for is something they do. They don't do it because, "This is a real money maker!" They do it so they can say; "See our game has a gay/trans/black/Asian/Hispanic/whatever character, see we're inclusive!" This is a stunt done not directly to make money, but to make a company look good so that people will have more good will for them. Good and bad publicity are both wins because they get your name out there, they get the product out there. Weather it's negative, or positive attention, it's still attention that brings in customers. Often times for negative, you get people going; "I need to see if it's that bad." For positive attention it's; "This company has cleaned up their act," or "well now I have more good will for them." But if it's inserting characters from a minority, or sensitive under represented group, it's most likely an attempt to get on the customer's good side by being politically correct.erttheking said:This is true, no real way to get around that. The problem is that we don't really know exactly what the publisher demands of the dev. A lot of times that happens behind closed doors. Heck, three years later and we don't exactly know if ME3's shit ending was because of EA or not (They say it was Casey Husdon but the BY MOAR DLC thing at the end makes me question if they're being honest with me). So we have no idea if there's a gay mandate, but personally I kinda doubt that. Publishers are the reason so many games a getting homogenized today, making so many games look a wee bit similar, and gay characters in gaming are still too few for it to strike me as something publishers would look at and say "Yeah this is a real money maker!" especially considering the most recent example, Mortal Kombat, is so subtle plenty of people played through the game without realizing he was gay. If the death of survival horror in the AAA market is anything to go by, publishers aren't very good at being subtle, so I doubt this was just a corporate mandate.KyuubiNoKitsune-Hime said:sniperttheking said:snip
Though there are plenty of developers who include gay/trans/whatever characters because they want to. They still tend to go for the stereotypical and token approach rather than actually writing a character who is gay/trans/whatever who is dealing with their challenge, and is more than just gay/trans/whatever.
Edit:
Thanks for taking just a small snippet without addressing the point as a whole. Nice way to make a strawman argument there.Pluvia said:Wanting equality for others and having empathy for groups that you aren't in means you're "pandering" apparently. Like all those guys that wanted equal rights for women, or whites that wanted equal rights for blacks. It strikes me that they could do that without actually being a woman or black themselves.KyuubiNoKitsune-Hime said:Basically what it is, is pandering. It's pandering because a lot of people with no connection to the community are championing the community as of late. Really it strikes me like why so many people want gay marriage without actually being gay them selves, and without considering what sort of possible consequences there are for it. I'm not gonna dive in to detail on that matter though.
If you bothered to address my actual point: It's the people who do it so they can give themselves a politically correct pat on the back, not the people who actually care about equality. Most people will jump on a bandwagon so they can feel good about themselves for doing the bare minimum, not because they care about whatever group is being oppressed. As soon as these things leave the headlines these so called empathetic people suddenly vanish, is that a coincidence? No it's because they do it more to look good and feel good about themselves. While plenty of people actually do care, they generally get drowned out when the outrage group descends on the cause they support. Which usually leaves the cause the worse for wear in the short term. Non-LGBTQ people can support the LGBTQ community, there is absolutely nothing wrong with that. Where it gets upsetting, wrong, and bad, is when people do it to look good socially and for political reasons only, instead of actually caring about the issue at hand.