Jeremy
MyGaming Alumnus
The problem with “girlfriend modeâ€, according to a girlfriend
WARNING: This post contains opinions.
WARNING: This post contains opinions.
Do you work in an office? (I ask because I am not sure) I do, I work in a client driven retail environment & while I dont have to communicate directly with our clients I do respond to a lot of email queries that my Project Manager purifies before sending it on to the client. In our office we have a term for when we need to explain something very basic, like what we mean by {clientname}DDMMYYYY.xml, we call it "Going Full Retard". Non of us hold any kind of resentment for mentally challenged people we simply use the term or its acronym "GFR" to explain in easily understandable words how details the solution to a problem has to be.
Similarly the head designer referring to the mode, internally, as "GirlFriend Mode" shouldn't carry any connection to sexism. It simply helps convey an over all idea of what the mode should entail by using an established social stereotype, in this case that most guys who play Borderlands probably has a girlfriend who doesn't play games and will there for be crap at them.
"beginner mode" is reserved for official documentation or in game for inter office communication between members of a creative team it simply lacks the necessary "umph" to convey what the designer wanted.
Statistically, of course, straight males do make up the majority of the gamer demographic...
Commenting on this, however, I am already in a pretty luxurious position. I’m a dude. Nobody is ever going to assume that, if I am sitting on a couch with a woman playing Xbox, she is the better player. Nobody is going to think that I need to have a mechanism put in just for me so that I can play with her. Nobody, if I go to a convention or games event with a woman, is going to assume that I am tagging along. I’m the default setting, and frankly it’s awesome.
Why most guys don't really get it, according to a guy.
The most important bit:
Check your privilege, guys.
friend zoned
Oh, and I'm sure that has nothing to do with the fact that gaming is marketed almost exclusively to straight males, and consequently alienating to most women.
Also:
I can't take anybody who actually uses this phrase seriously.
Oh, and I'm sure that has nothing to do with the fact that gaming is marketed almost exclusively to straight males, and consequently alienating to most women.
You don't see the forest for the trees, OmegaFenix.
Also:
I can't take anybody who actually uses this phrase seriously.
Well now is your chance, go tell them how to make the game equally appealing for ALL woman.
Statistically, of course, straight males do make up the majority of the gamer demographic...
WARNING: This post contains opinions.
WARNING: This post contains nothing new.
"There are three kinds of lies - lies, damned lies, and statistics." - Mark Twain
That said, though, I think it's reasonable to assume that males make up the majority of gamers. I don't think it's a particularly large majority, though. There are plenty of female gamers out there, and the perception that there aren't is just another aspect of that 15-year old "no girls on the internet" meme that persists (no) thanks to the same people who still think Chuck Norris jokes are funny.
Not only that, but it's common sense that all statistics are not necessarily accurate. In this case, however, the statistics will be based on not only surveys, but actual, hard data like how many of the people who show up to gaming expos are male, etc. It will come from more than a simple survey.
University can teach you a lot of things, but common sense is not necessarily one of them.![]()
Wow.
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