But it's still a very small portion of the entire market
Yep, it is and I'm certainly not arguing that.
I like attention being drawn to it, I like that people are showing that there's a market for "minority-character" games. I think it's a good thing that people make aware their feelings and emphasise that they want to be represented in media and to see characters they can relate with.
What I am against is people throwing their toys out of the cot and taking offence at anything and everything that doesn't subscribe to their narrow view of the world and
demanding that developers/artists/authors/whatever all change/alter their work to accommodate them.
I
like being able to play characters that can have same-sex relationships because I can relate to it and I find it immersive. However, I don't want Geralt of Rivia or Jim Raynor to be gay. Prior to this article, I would have thought nobody would imagine Kerrigan dressed in jeans and a T-shirt because GO FEMINISM. I just don't understand why people feel like playing games, reading books or watching movies and then bitching about a fictitious (and often grossly exaggerated) character not being "realistic." I mean really, wtf.
I can completely appreciate that in many instances sexualisation of women in gaming is utterly ridiculous and blatantly aimed at horny teenagers:
The Command & Conquer games are my favourite example of this... The women all have their cleavage wide open. Why? In what professional instance would a news anchor or a commander have their breasts all but completely exposed? It's blatant (and nonsensical) sexualisation. But hey, if that's how they want their games then fine, go for it. But it's
stupid (and this is the only argument I have against it).
Yes, show that there is a market for minorities being represented (and accurately represented at that) in media but for the love of sanity, why demand it? Where does this overblown sense of entitlement come from that you MUST be represented in all media? Or that characters that don't look the way YOU want them to is somehow offensive?