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5 votes
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About one out of three men prefer playing female characters. Rethinking the importance of female protagonists in video games.
16 votes -
The domestic masculinity of Helltaker
10 votes -
Riot Games will pay at least $10 million to settle gender discrimination suit, split between all female employees who worked there in the last five years
17 votes -
Interview with Hou Yifan, the number one female chess player in the world, on growing up as a prodigy in China, the gender gap and more
10 votes -
Riot Games reaches agreement in principle to settle class action gender discrimination lawsuit
8 votes -
The state of California is investigating Riot Games for gender discrimination
12 votes -
So apparently there's an ongoing controversy about Battlefield V allowing you to play as a female character
Any perspectives on that, fellow Tildoes? Tildarians, Tilderinos, Tildonkeys, etc.? From what I can tell, the main argument against it is that it's not historically accurate. I guess that makes...
Any perspectives on that, fellow Tildoes? Tildarians, Tilderinos, Tildonkeys, etc.?
From what I can tell, the main argument against it is that it's not historically accurate. I guess that makes sense, but A) that doesn't seem to warrant the utter seething rage that I see from opponents, and B) I rather doubt the Battlefield franchise has made it a habit to be 1-to-1 regarding history anyway. I've played none of them, but I saw someone mention that in-game events are definitely not historically accurate anyway. So I guess the "keep women out" side is conflating the game's setting with a declaration of dedication to historical accuracy? Seems silly to me to take umbrage at a game failing to meet an expectation that you invented.
Then again, maybe I'm wrong. My initial gut reaction was to write it off as casual sexism and an unwillingness to break tradition, and while I'm sure that explains a minority of the outrage, I highly doubt the controversy can be explained so simply.
Anyone here want to way in?
31 votes