cynicalandbored said:
This wilting violet of a girl has to be subjected to more hideous torture and brutality than any of us are ever likely to experience. The implication of this is that the only way for a woman to develop an attitude and be able to look after herself is for her to undergo unspeakable hardship.
No it isn't. If anything, the implication is that
humans generally have to go through something horrible to become a badass. How many films and games have you seen where the male protagonist goes through training from hell to become who they are? Historical badasses like the Spartans trained for years through utterly brutal conditions. Yet suddenly because the trope is applied to a woman, its generalising women?
People are toughened by harsh experiences. 'What doesn't kill you makes you stronger,' and all that. So it puts a female character on even footing with male ones.
cynicalandbored said:
And of course to have the big male ego of the gamer caring for her at every step. The fact that this hardship has to be rape as opposed to anything else is truly despicable.
But the gamer is playing as Lara. So the gamer will be helpless. That's not something designed to stroke an ego, its something designed to evoke sympathy for the character. Also, why is rape specifically so despicable when murder and every other vile activity in the book gets used in games already? Its a bold move on the developers part and if they manage to do it
well and not just for the shock value; it has the potential to provide an insight into Lara's character that we've never had so far.
Also, it may be rape or simply attempted rape. If it is the latter, then
both genders get that powerful feeling of 'I just stopped someone being raped,
I'm awesome. If its the former, both genders get the crushing feeling of 'someone I care about/someone I'm supposed to protect has been hurt horribly and I can't do anything about it.' It's the same psychological feeling you get when the guy gets raped in Shawshank Redemption. You want to help, and can't.
cynicalandbored said:
Why couldn't we have a Lara we could try to identify with? I see no fundamental difference between one that men only play because they want to ogle her tits and one men only want to play because they feel the need to take care of the poor little girl. Both models of femininity are equally sexist in my opinion. And rape, seriously?
It's a male power fantasy to go round saving women from evil guys and play the part of a flawless hero. It is
not a male power fantasy for that to happen and you be powerless to stop it.
cynicalandbored said:
Am I just overreacting? Or is it a valid point? What do you all think?
I don't think you're overreacting. I just think you're misinterpreting the reasons behind the designer's decisions. From what I've seen, this new game will NOT be a male power fantasy, nor a male sexual fantasy. By the end of the game, when Lara is badass, it will be just as much of a power fantasy for both genders.
However, I'm saying all of this with the assumption that the writing will be good and the characterisation will be realistic. There's always the possibility that it won't be any good and we'll end up with a sexist piece of shite game. I choose to be optimistic.
Its unfair to demonise the developer because our interpretation of their decisions is excessively negative. Wait until we see the game properly before making these kinds of assertions.