roseembolism (
roseembolism) wrote2008-05-12 03:56 pm
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[Gaming] Something else about RPG Gender Differences that annoys me
There was a recent thread on rpg.net about games that enforce gender differences: what games have them, how they are handled, and what players think of them. I've always been of the opinion that altering basic stats based on gender is a bad idea, and that if one HAS to enforce the idea of a gender-segregated society (which in turn I tend to dislike), that social occupations and roles is the best way to go about it.
I think that a more important thing to note is that when it comes to games that give gender-based limitations and bonuses, nearly always the default average is assumed to be male. This basically implies that the default "Human" is assumed to be male, which I think is as damaging a notion as the actual limitations. I wonder how many people have been turned off a game by the implication that women are as inhuman as say, elves?
Fortunately, games that enforce gender disparity seem to be rare, and generally in a genre I'm not interested in (generally historical or semi-historical simulation, like Harn). that being the case, I wonder why people bring up the idea as if it might be a good idea?
I think that a more important thing to note is that when it comes to games that give gender-based limitations and bonuses, nearly always the default average is assumed to be male. This basically implies that the default "Human" is assumed to be male, which I think is as damaging a notion as the actual limitations. I wonder how many people have been turned off a game by the implication that women are as inhuman as say, elves?
Fortunately, games that enforce gender disparity seem to be rare, and generally in a genre I'm not interested in (generally historical or semi-historical simulation, like Harn). that being the case, I wonder why people bring up the idea as if it might be a good idea?
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It seems to me that even when it is designed to enforce a particular setting, gender difference as far as profession and skill selection really end up just hampering people playing female characters more than anything else.
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The demolitions expert was "Father" Tom Callahan, who was French. At least his passport was. His goal was to blow up the British Navy. He got eaten by a monster before he managed it, though.