tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-187037042024-03-14T09:09:12.829-07:00One Hundred Little DollsMade from beautiful high-impact styrene plastic and hard synthetic rubber.100LittleDollshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08149407280133225570noreply@blogger.comBlogger148125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18703704.post-26720271571196464912015-05-13T12:51:00.000-07:002015-05-14T11:29:19.811-07:00Response to the Offworld Article: Why are the stories in video games so bad?<div>
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I wanted to write a response to an(other) excellent article from <a href="http://boingboing.net/2015/05/11/why-are-the-stories-in-video-g.html">Offworld</a> about writing in games. The article discusses why video game writing is so bad. Obviously, not every game has bad writing, but we've all played a large number of games that feel lost in their own storytelling. <br />
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I love how the article points out how “writing” doesn't equate to “dialogue” or even some sort of written text. Writing, or authorship extends to the entirety of an artwork, from the box art, the opening screen, the costume design, the color scheme, all the way to the end credits. How each element of an artwork is presented to a viewer is a choice on the creators part and communicates a message to the viewer/player. <br />
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This might be a key factor that determines creators that write great games and those who don’t. Silent Hill Shattered Memories comes to mind as a perfect example. The box art is uninspired, but as soon as you turn the game on, you are a part of the story. TV “snow” prepares us for metaphorical polygon snowscapes. We see a grainy home video of a little girl expressing, “I love my Daddy.” This moment defines the game’s thesis, and connects brilliantly with the ending, and is presented to us before we even Press Start. It's a really meaningful moment that grows in intensity based on the players advancement in the story.<br />
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(Shattered Memories overall is a great example of a well written game, one of the best I’ve played.)<br />
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The part of the article that struck me to dust off this old blog was when they mentioned theater. I make theater in Chicago and have been fascinated with the artistic connections between games and theater for years. <br />
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Video Games and theater share a key aspect that other art forms lack: gesture. The concept that every night a play will be unique. Each performance will be unique to the actor and each member of an audience will have a unique, but shared experience. This is exactly how games are designed. Each game will be played in a manner unique to the player and create a unique but shared experience with the gaming community at large. They are both art forms fixed in the present.<br />
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Good playwrights write audience experiences, they craft an event. The article points out: “Well-written games are a dialogue with the player, creating opportunities for behavior.”<br />
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I love that phrase, “creating opportunities for behavior.” This perfectly describes what great theater looks like. A good writer will craft opportunities for the actors on stage as well as opportunities for the audience. The idea of a binary division between actor and audience is simply a construct. The binary can be blurred as much as the playwright prefers. <br />
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Theater can learn from games. The game player is both actor and audience. The role of the player shifts throughout a game, and the degrees of that shift varies from game to game, and scene to scene. We watch Solid Snake confront Olga on a rainy oil tanker, soaked in the drama and pulp mysteries. But we have a say in how we see it, wiggling and zooming the camera, discovering unshaven underarms in the process. Then we directly control the fight against her, shooting (traq darts or bullets) at either her, or the shifting environment around her, crafting the battle as it happens. Winning earns us another cut scene, where we learn Snake was being recorded by a UAV. The story was watching us act out Snakes actions, while we were watching the story through our own actions. Audience and actor shift and flow into one another. <br />
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In Dragon Age Inquisition, the binary is shaved razor thin and we are both active actor and active audience during the majority of plot advancements. We not only control the fight, but the discussion before and after. We pick which lines we want to hear, not the actual line, but just the essence of one. The line itself is a surprise, and we are forced to hope our intentions are conveyed correctly. The promise of power, this hope to influence is a brilliant mechanic that replicates an actor’s objectives onstage. An actor will act in hopes to emotionally influence another actor as well as to emotionally influence the audience that is watching. The energy is sent in two directions, toward the story and toward reality. Both the story and the audience are connected, present, and necessary. Existing in the same time and place, they hold equal importance and power within the artistic event.<br />
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Games make us send our own energy into the game, and then the game sends it back at us. We are affecting ourselves, in real time, getting (hopefully) everything back that we put in. This feedback loop is rare in art, and must be respected for effective game or theater making. <br />
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The Offworld article quotes advice Will O'Neill gives in a cool piece titled <a href="http://indiemegabooth.com/writing-compelling-game-narrative/">Writing Compelling Game Narrative</a>:<br />
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<i>Read plays. They often focus on dialogue and monologues in a stylish-yet-realistic way that I think dovetails beautifully with the way that stories are typically well-told in games. To an extent, I even think theater can help you grapple with the limitations that you may face as an indie. For the sake of an audience in the distance, theater is broadly emotive in the way that your simple, non-facially-intensive character animations might also be. Sets and props are often static, simple or merely suggestive in the same way that yours probably are.</i><br />
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Awesome! He admits it’s a surface level examination, but I fully agree with his sentiment. I believe what he is trying to say is video game creators need to embrace an artistic style. He is recognizing that all art is metaphor, and that there is an artistic history and precedence to effectively use style in crafting event based art like video games. <br />
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When auteurs embrace style, their work shines. Theater is the perfect realm for video game developers to look for influence in developing and enhancing their own work and style. I would argue this influence already exists and is being used in some of the most acclaimed games. Silent Hill uses many elements as Antonin Artaud’s Theater of Cruelty, Kojima’s Metal Gear series consistently uses Bertolt Brecht’s alienation techniques, and Hidetaka Suehiro or SWERY games are in the same tradition as the Absurdist playwrights.<br />
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His examples of The Stanely Parable is also very Absurdist/Existentialist, Papers, Please borrows from an Expressionist aesthetic, and This War of Mine is like a tamer version of Sarah Kane’s Blasted. <br />
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All artists should have their own style, and there is never a one to one connection between one style or another. No artist should be stuck in the past and should always strive to break our current culture, but using artistic precedents can form a strong base and enhance the effectiveness of art. I believe that studying and seeing theater, above all other art forms, would help video game developers tremendously. </div>
Shions_Glasseshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03559248165573534759noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18703704.post-35654491252810220952008-01-11T17:34:00.000-08:002008-01-11T17:57:23.358-08:00Daily GrindingLately I've been thinking a lot about why I've been so silent. It just sort of happened that all of the sudden I couldn't get any inclination to blog, to write, to do any sort of productive thought processing. When I started working in the clinic I thought that I'd have a lot of things to jot down, specifically about my education in college in regards to women's health versus working in the middle of it. Certainly I didn't know exactly what to expect when I started my job, and now I've learned that I can't have any expectation as to what any day is going to be like. I guess what I'm trying to say is that I've come across some shocking and difficult situations and I'm trying to learn how to deal with it. In the past I was able to write about it, but right now it's too soon.<br /><br />And it feels stupid to write it, but I'm going to anyway. I just had no idea. Studying and learning about domestic violence in college and job training is completely different from when you actually find yourself taking the blood pressure of a woman who lies to you about the bruises on her body. <br /><br />One of the best things about feminism for me has always been that it has given me a sense of hope. It has always been a revolution to me. My job and feminism intertwine and I relish that. Yet I am amazed at how far I've come down to where I only feel and notice burden--the weight of it in the lives of the women I meet, and my own that I carry with me.100LittleDollshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08149407280133225570noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18703704.post-72142523484303131742008-01-02T07:10:00.000-08:002008-01-02T07:16:45.941-08:00It's the New Year and damn if this blog needs an updateIt's been months since I've posted. I never even considered in the past how office jobs and school fueled my internet hobby, as now when I get home I don't even want to check my email or look at my computer. <br /><br />But it's a new year and I made new resolutions and I'm typing this post on a new computer. I plan, starting now, to try to update this blog at least every other week and I'm dedicating at least one night a week to the poor (yet determined!) and important <a href="http://jadereporting.theirisnetwork.org">Jade Reporting</a>. I pinky swear.100LittleDollshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08149407280133225570noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18703704.post-81361383981149425792007-10-16T07:51:00.000-07:002008-11-13T18:08:10.615-08:00Pitfalls<div>Apologies for being away for so long. With the new job comes new stress due to a steep learning curve and I’m adjusting to an environment that is completely unlike anything I’ve been in before. Whereas I used to sit in a cubicle staring at the clock, I am now running around, arranging charts, answering phones and grabbing a quick sip of water or bite to eat when there’s a small break in the rush of patients. It’s definitely challenging, and I’m hoping to hit my stride soon.<br /><br />To deal with the stress I’ve broken out my used copy of Dreamfall: The Longest Journey for the X-Box. I bought it for under 20 bucks on the suggestion of my visiting and adorable younger gamer cousin. It didn’t really bother me that I didn’t first play The Longest Journey, as I’ve started a lot of series playing sequels first.<br /><br />I immediately felt that I could identify with Zoë (though not because she first appears in her underwear!). The first things that you find out about her is that she dropped out of school, broke up with her boyfriend, and moved back in with her dad. She’s lost and disillusioned, which is, I’ve found, a common emotional domain of many 20-somethings. The story of Dreamfall is excellent: it’s filled with cross-dimensional political conspiracy. While not all characters were completely developed, I noticed that there was a definite effort to give specific attitude and background to many of the NPCs—something that is usually ignored in many other games.<br /><img id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5121948914053997730" style="DISPLAY: block; MARGIN: 0px auto 10px; CURSOR: hand; TEXT-ALIGN: center" alt="" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhUartBp3LoCzlY-bgmVi6t_vrJo-Me8SvDosBA3TR26ctYJ167Fh-9r5Zng9k7cjee46PaJJfi05GYrkRCFllEcdhbwtet3vZ6eZngD-ruZs0j-0FTfCGq-lT8yNyimLo5jExq/s400/stereotype.jpg" border="0" />That doesn’t save it, however, from some huge complaints that I have. In a game that features so much diversity in its characters, I was appalled that the developers relied on some pretty insensitive and stereotypical portrayal of Chinese people. How many games do I have to play that feature a Chinese NPC wearing ancient-China style robes and hair, sporting extremely slanty eyes and speaking with a mouth full of buck teeth high-pitched and quivering English? Another aspect that confused me was how the very beginning of the game, which takes place in Tibet, features NPCs talking in their native tongue. I liked hearing an unfamiliar language. I initially thought it cool that a game that travels the world would feature different languages instead of just pretending that everyone speaks English. Yet after the first chapter in the game that completely vanished.<br /><br />There was a lot of good in Dreamfall: specially the complex story, the game’s focus on women characters, and it’s genuine diversity. While playing the game, I kept comparing it to Indigo Prophecy, and found Dreamfall much more satisfying. However, there was a lot lacking too. Despite two of the main characters being women, the game didn’t lack sexism. Despite the game’s push towards multiculturalism, it had racist elements and was specifically grounded in white privilege. While these aspects really did turn me off to the game in a lot of ways, I have to admit that I’m hooked. I ordered The Longest Journey (soon to come in the mail) and am awaiting the next installment(s) of the series. I’m anxious to continue the narrative and see if it’s shortcomings continue or are improved upon.</div>100LittleDollshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08149407280133225570noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18703704.post-89384970277805302312007-09-19T20:05:00.000-07:002007-09-19T20:12:17.920-07:00Full-timeThe job search is over. I'm officially gainfully employed, with health benefits and everything. My official title is that of a reproductive health assistant, which means I do a little bit of a lot of things at a women's health clinic. <br /><br />I feel lucky to get the position and damn lucky to have to opportunity to work a feminist job, doing something I'm passionate about, for a company with a mission statement I agree with.100LittleDollshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08149407280133225570noreply@blogger.com7tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18703704.post-29556910523156821792007-09-14T07:43:00.000-07:002007-09-14T07:46:25.069-07:00Some of the SameYesterday my brother let me come over to do some (free!) laundry. So in the midst of suds and folding I checked out a couple of demos on his 360.<br /><br />Beautiful Katamari was first. I really like the controller for the 360 and think it’s a vast improvement over both controller models for the original Xbox. But in the context of Katamari, it was a bit awkward to play on a controller where the analog sticks aren’t side by side. I realize I’m being picky—it’s something I’m sure most people won’t have any problems with.<br /><br />It was also disappointing to see that in Katamari’s third console incarnation that the camera is still wonky. And even though the graphics are bit brighter and a bit shinier, Beautiful Katamari is the same game as the first two. I don’t think online capabilities will do much in revolutionizing the formula either. It’s sure to be some fun, but there’s no way I’d shell out sixty bucks to play a game I essentially already own.<br /><br />The demo I was truly excited to play was Eternal Sonata. This is the game I’d own a 360 for. Made by Tri-Crescendo (one of the two companies behind the Baten Kaitos games), I expect a ton out of it and its original premise of Chopin having delirious deathbed dreams. It. Is. Gorgeous. The visuals are dreamy and colorful. The music swirls and bends. The battles are fast-paced and genuinely fun. You only have a specific amount of time for your turn, so it’s similar to the Baten Kaitos series except it doesn’t feature cards. (People interested in the game probably already know about the light/dark features of battles as well.)<br /><br />Yet I was crushed by what I gleaned from the gender roles of Eternal Sonata. The demo features no story, but it’s easy to tell what the prescribed roles are for the three characters that you control. The leader of the group is Allegretto, a pretty boy with a sword. We then have Polka, our cute and weak heroine who heals and whacks foes with an umbrella. Finally, there’s Beat, an eager and adorable young boy with an oversized gun. I love me my JRPGs and am not surprised with the common gender clichés that are often presented. But seriously, I’d like to see more. That said, I don’t know if there will be other characters that might push the gender envelope, but as of this moment, I’m doubting it.<br /><br />After playing the Eternal Sonata demo, I’m left having to make a compromise that I always have to make. I know that when I do get a 360 down the line, I’ll most likely pick this game up. It has so much else going for it that I know I’ll enjoy, but I’m going to have to end up pushing the gender issues present in the game to the back of my mind. This has happened before with games that I’ve particularly enjoyed--Dragon Quest 8 and Tales of Symphonia, I’m looking at you.<br /><br />While it’s true that I’m fully capable of enjoying a game despite problematic gender presentations, I’m tired of having to make so many compromises. And I know that I’m not alone—other gamers that are queer, identify as female and aren’t white often have to make the same type of aggravating decision when it comes to choosing a game to play.100LittleDollshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08149407280133225570noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18703704.post-72110876040559399372007-09-07T23:57:00.000-07:002007-09-07T22:03:45.110-07:00*Shudder*Scrolling through my RSS Feeds I come across some <a href="http://blog.newsarama.com/2007/09/07/wb-and-maguire-team-up-for-robotech-movie/">potentially upsetting news</a>:<br /><blockquote>Warner Bros. Pictures has acquired the film rights to the anime classic Robotech, with Tobey Maguire producing through his Maguire Entertainment.<br /><br />According to The Hollywood Reporter, the actor is considering the lead role in the futuristic tale of giant robots and alien invaders. The studio plans on the sci-fi epic becoming a tentpole franchise.</blockquote>Warner Brothers? Tobey Maguire? <i>Tobey Maguire as Rick? </i>And I can just see Minmei being cast as not-Chinese. This screams bad idea.<br /><br />And in non-nerd news, I quit my temp job this week. Here's to some self-dignity, an empty wallet, and a stack of resumes.100LittleDollshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08149407280133225570noreply@blogger.com7tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18703704.post-65480401788658453622007-08-23T12:01:00.000-07:002007-08-23T12:36:12.240-07:00Rat RacingWarning: I'm about to launch into some post-grad, <span class="blsp-spelling-error" id="SPELLING_ERROR_0">twentysomething</span>-crisis whining. <br /><br />In <span class="blsp-spelling-corrected" id="SPELLING_ERROR_1">February</span>, I was hired on as a temp-to-perm at a big corporate company. I was damn happy because a steady job with benefits seemed just out of my reach. When I started, I found that there was another temp in my department. I was a bit deflated to learn that he'd already been working for 7 months as a temp to perm, but I pushed some of my doubts aside--I sat near the HR department and saw that new people were being hired all the time. I <span class="blsp-spelling-corrected" id="SPELLING_ERROR_2">figured</span> I just had to wait my turn. <br /><br />Months have gone by and I've become incredibly disillusioned and bored. I'm no fan of corporate culture, and I'm continuously stressed out because I never know which project I'm given is going to be my last. But I've been sticking with it because no matter how shitty I feel, the job is paying the bills. I have been applying to other jobs, as I want some stability and need insurance hardcore, but noting is panning out. The internship is the exact thing I've been looking for, but the organization is new and has no money as of yet to hire me on full time, though they've expressed <span class="blsp-spelling-corrected" id="SPELLING_ERROR_3">interest</span>. <br /><br />Recently the other temp in my department quit--he was simply sick of doing the same job for a year straight that is obviously integral to the operation of the department. He would inquire every once and awhile to see if the company would be interested in hiring him permanently, but they'd also turn him down. After he left, I found myself sitting in a situation where maybe, just maybe, I could move into his <span class="blsp-spelling-corrected" id="SPELLING_ERROR_4">position</span>, where the temping would be more stable, or perhaps I'd even get hired full time. <br /><br />It's not going to happen. I found out today that they already hired someone new. Not as a temp, but as a full-time, fully benefited, employee. It doesn't matter that I'm already familiar with the work or that I've been here for six months. They're not going to hire me. I asked about my job performance, and I was told that I'm doing excellent work. So I don't know what it is--maybe they think I'm too young and am therefore more likely to move on sooner than someone else? Or is it something else?<br /><br />Either way, I feel like crap. I check the job listings and nothing seems promising. My self-esteem has hit the rocks. I've developed some chronic health conditions since graduating, but have put off going to the doctor because I can't afford it, and I'm going to need to keep putting it off. Plus, I'm still endlessly stuck in temp limbo--who knows when they'll not need me here any longer?100LittleDollshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08149407280133225570noreply@blogger.com7tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18703704.post-5302903566353943062007-08-15T19:51:00.000-07:002008-11-13T18:08:11.905-08:00That was three days ago? A Rundown of Wizard World Chicago<div><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhmYEXLsf2keCueiWTgf_2va6dx87fJzhzhC_CJhf_DF9kUYTZdW0amaeZl9fpYlerDm9R80E5NJkNRV-ypedYjI_9oBrKjZI3smOQSUB641rJ-kwVczz0lObwGyHGxX5JaqOfJ/s1600-h/man+drawing+on+ground.jpg"><img id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5099128518862034290" style="DISPLAY: block; MARGIN: 0px auto 10px; CURSOR: hand; TEXT-ALIGN: center" alt="" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhmYEXLsf2keCueiWTgf_2va6dx87fJzhzhC_CJhf_DF9kUYTZdW0amaeZl9fpYlerDm9R80E5NJkNRV-ypedYjI_9oBrKjZI3smOQSUB641rJ-kwVczz0lObwGyHGxX5JaqOfJ/s400/man+drawing+on+ground.jpg" border="0" /></a> This past weekend I set aside my internship and other responsibilities to attend yet another year of Wizard World Chicago with Shions_Glasses. It’s awesome to see every year more and more women and girls attending the con—the first year I went there didn’t seem to be a lot of us, but this year there was lots. It’s a good time to be a fan girl.<br /><br /><div><div><div><div>I don’t know if it was just me, but Wizard World seemed tiny this year. There just didn’t seem to be as many panels or booths. Hell, the Nintendo booth wasn’t even there. A shame because I was looking forward to getting some more free Pokemon cards and downloading a rare Pokemon or mystic ticket for my copy of Diamond.<br /><br />Marvel’s booth had me a bit disappointed. I’m always impressed with free swag, even if it’s just DC’s Countdown pins and Batman temporary tattoos. I was crossing my fingers for a John Cassidy X-Men poster or something like that. There was a glossy poster for Anita Blake: Vampire Hunter that was definitely cheesecakey, but a little outside my taste.<br /><br /><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh1I2t76u2kakig2l3K9e2G0ulaYVrO_qs5_NKOlbo6cS8R8KQWWNAEIFm4_jkfNVWJVYOSk_p-UU_NYwqIoGbYxCIyO_6P01qZ_yw8aZyqaV0RUHeR10-eHVzeAJl_p8nSpNzz/s1600-h/parappa.jpg"><img id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5099127556789359954" style="FLOAT: left; MARGIN: 0px 10px 10px 0px; CURSOR: hand" alt="" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh1I2t76u2kakig2l3K9e2G0ulaYVrO_qs5_NKOlbo6cS8R8KQWWNAEIFm4_jkfNVWJVYOSk_p-UU_NYwqIoGbYxCIyO_6P01qZ_yw8aZyqaV0RUHeR10-eHVzeAJl_p8nSpNzz/s320/parappa.jpg" border="0" /></a>I was surprisingly impressed with Sony’s booth. They seemed to aiming for some accessibility by being kid friendly. The PaRappa the Rapper port for the PSP was getting a strong push, as was the strategy-RPG Jeanne D’Arc. I grabbed a gorgeous poster for Jeanne D’Arc, and Shions_Glasses was given a PaRappa t-shirt that’s about five times too large just for posing for a few pictures with the PaRappa mascot.<br /><br />On Saturday afternoon we made sure to stop by the DC booth to get Will Pfeifer’s signature. Other than that, we didn’t have too much to do with the big two. Instead of going to any of the panels we spent our time flipping through back issues and wandering around Artist Alley. We picked up about 20 issues of Gotham Cental (all for $1.50!) and grabbed Spider-Woman: Origin and the Metal Gear Solid TPB for half-off. In the Artist Alley I searched out David Mack (as I do every year) and bought the second and third volumes of Kabuki. Before we left for the evening we caught some Beck (dubbed, yuck) in the anime screening room. I’m a bit annoyed that they were only showing Funimation licensed anime this year. What about Manga and Bandai? They were there too.<br /><br />Saturday night was probably my favorite part of the convention, though it wasn’t specifically Wizard World-related. In my part of Chicago they were having a neighborhood festival, and in celebration my local comic book shop invited their regulars to come hang out and drink some beers. There wasn’t too many of us there, which was more than alright with me. I was content with talking the whole while with a woman who didn’t even stop at home to change out of her Catwoman costume. The whole experience was a bit surreal: where I grew up I bought my comics from a video rental store, so there was never a place for me to go and hang out and talk geek. <a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhs7IFogP9bwQgWYswhM2_KxJPaqpBwkDlRIW1_AYSQjsc0ADKW0qN8rpdkUCodF9f0nBeOVt28Lgic4ajVI-H4OSCY_ZcqcRttAguL4I-DyDTZKI7KymQAlCNrx1-qQLHn2fKA/s1600-h/chibi+aquaman.jpg"><img id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5099128690660726146" style="FLOAT: right; MARGIN: 0px 0px 10px 10px; CURSOR: hand" alt="" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhs7IFogP9bwQgWYswhM2_KxJPaqpBwkDlRIW1_AYSQjsc0ADKW0qN8rpdkUCodF9f0nBeOVt28Lgic4ajVI-H4OSCY_ZcqcRttAguL4I-DyDTZKI7KymQAlCNrx1-qQLHn2fKA/s200/chibi+aquaman.jpg" border="0" /></a><br /><br />Sunday was more of buying. For 35% off we picked up the first volume of Monster (manga is always seriously lacking at WW), Coward, the three TPB volumes of Bruce Wayne: Fugitive and Tales of the Slayers. We also stopped by Artist Alley and grabbed a copy of Winter Beard by Cathy Hannah and The Exploits of Aimless Boy by John Aston Golden, who is actually a regular at my comic book store. We waited in line for the Wheel of Doom and I won my cat a rubber band to play with (the topic I chose was Lunar: The Silver Star and they unfortunately didn’t know what the hell I was talking about) and Shions_Glasses won a hardcover book of Wizard covers, which he promptly gave away.<br /><br />It was after this point that the con went sour. We stopped one last time at the Sony booth to check out the Heavenly Sword demo. Some guys came up behind us, and one of them decided that it’d be a ton of fun to verbally harass me. I don’t feel like going into too much detail, but his comments involved such things as upskirt shots, masturbation, and rape. Unable to contain my anger, I told him to please shut the hell up, and went on to furiously explain that rape is not a joke, it’s a hate crime, etc. but as he only seemed to get more belligerent with my every response. So I went to security and he disappeared into the milling crowd. At least I can say that security did take me seriously and even profusely apologized.<br /><br />Yet getting harassed sucked any fun that was left out of the con. We did go afterward to check out the Fullmetal Alchemist movie, but it was difficult to enjoy.<br /><br />With all the internet harassment that’s been going on lately in the game and comics community—the avalanche of racist comments regarding Resident Evil 5, the hijacking of GayGamer.com, and Girl-Wonder.org getting hacked— <a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg_KDgatPCNzHkbdgXlaIxXh4jW40GOAXBkxy_hXsNGixn9Z2EikW4OGOqzlInkL8BE_6xpF_6CCPfnxjzWCzZ0Ryj64xiG_r2zyfoImhZ3wMz3goTWEk14XJ10DuGv2DqxuuZ3/s1600-h/chibi+aquaman.jpg"></a>being harassed at the con just fit in too perfectly.</div></div></div></div></div>100LittleDollshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08149407280133225570noreply@blogger.com7tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18703704.post-76593116918113341492007-08-01T12:11:00.000-07:002008-11-13T18:08:12.436-08:00Shame on you internet, I thought you were cool<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj_vDXQ9nDdJOa_Ka0yep-nSUHejhyphenhyphenWJbQJRMasCfcWf2er8Fo5cz5eEKpxYukwR3QhC3ttYCYPEY5o-dlZ9TM1W3lDq2pBPoomLy1eEoecoyYTtlgY9JyotYnAtfugJZME-ftFeQ/s1600-h/shame.bmp"><img id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5093834533749404978" style="DISPLAY: block; MARGIN: 0px auto 10px; CURSOR: hand; TEXT-ALIGN: center" alt="" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj_vDXQ9nDdJOa_Ka0yep-nSUHejhyphenhyphenWJbQJRMasCfcWf2er8Fo5cz5eEKpxYukwR3QhC3ttYCYPEY5o-dlZ9TM1W3lDq2pBPoomLy1eEoecoyYTtlgY9JyotYnAtfugJZME-ftFeQ/s320/shame.bmp" border="0" /></a><br /><div>I found a great blog today as I was reading up on Resident Evil 5 reactions. It's called <a href="http://microscopiq.com/">microscopiq</a>, and combines my two favorite things: art and video games into one cool blog. The <a href="http://microscopiq.com/2007/07/blackface-goes-hd/">article</a> on RE5 is also stellar, as he points out many of the issues inherent with the concept of the game. The best point against the game is how the characteristics of the super zombies of RE4, transferred to a black person, creates a zombie that resembles many of the negative black stereotypes.<br />"With bulging eyes, simian super strength, and a room temperature IQ, we’ve been portrayed as savages beyond redemption."<br />What is not so cool, and that has made me as angry as a space banished Hulk, are the comments on that post. This post has gotten waaaay more attention than any of the other posts on the blog, and the majority of the comments are telling him how wrong he is. All I can think is "How dare they." What gives these people the right, to come to his blog and tell him that he is wrong; that he shouldn't be offended by obvious racist imagery. Most of the comments boil down to, "No. You don't/shouldn't feel the affects of racism, shut up!" It's inconceivable. Who else would feel the affects of the imagery in this game if not an African American. Commenter after commenter kept admitting to being white and claiming that they have never know anyone to be racist, that racism doesn't exist, and that these images of a race that they don't belong to aren't racist. Well of course you don't feel it if you're white, but it exists. It exists when you go onto an African American blog throwing your whiteness all over the place and saying not to talk about things like racism and be a good boy. Does anyone else see the absurdity in someone defending a game where a white person goes into a black space and starts wrecking havoc, when they themselves are going into a black space and wrecking havoc. This sounds like the perfect game for these people, right up their ally. It's pretty clever of the power structure to admit that racism is bad, but then also claim that it doesn't exist. This leaves those who are affected by racism without even a voice to speak out against it, because, according to the power structure, there's nothing to speak out against. A good rule to follow from now on is that if any marginalized person calls out some sort of oppression of their group, maybe everyone else should just shut up, listen, and at least consider the possibility.</div>Shions_Glasseshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03559248165573534759noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18703704.post-54768347113425553622007-07-27T08:32:00.000-07:002008-11-13T18:08:12.701-08:00Didn't I Already write this post?<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhZZ33XyBeSnyqTVSf4H90g8k_wnAEjBtrpZXSDmyvBwbbdOZ0qtvaZaVkyOGEi7SDg1W8Ue0aI4E8XNvo0wqs5KaFU6tk9uXzuuDvvaAR5ObM0BVuarBC8wsS9lXOmtMSKWe9EkQ/s1600-h/929240_20070530_screen046.jpg"><img id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5091921989107463458" style="FLOAT: left; MARGIN: 0px 10px 10px 0px; CURSOR: hand" alt="" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhZZ33XyBeSnyqTVSf4H90g8k_wnAEjBtrpZXSDmyvBwbbdOZ0qtvaZaVkyOGEi7SDg1W8Ue0aI4E8XNvo0wqs5KaFU6tk9uXzuuDvvaAR5ObM0BVuarBC8wsS9lXOmtMSKWe9EkQ/s320/929240_20070530_screen046.jpg" border="0" /></a> I was very excited about Rogue Galaxy when I first heard about it. Level 5 left me in love after Dark Cloud 2 so my hopes were high. However, Rogue Galaxy did not turn out how I envisioned. It falls short of Dark Cloud 2 in gameplay, story, and most importantly: feminist stuff. Dark Cloud 2 did a great job of balancing between its girl and boy characters. Max and Monica were given equal attention in both story and gameplay, thus creating a gender equality which went to defy some game conventions. Monica was fully clothed, (not counting secret cat outfit) and fought with a sword, a rarity in video games. While Max was the brains compared to her brawn, and he fought with a nontraditional weapon, an honor usually assigned to a women. Developer: "Girls can't handle anything as phallic as a sword, we better give her an umbrella."<br /><div>Because of these and other great elements that seemed to intentionally defy conventional roles, their follow up game seemed to be a sure hit. How wrong I was.<br /></div><div>[spoiler warning]<br /></div><div></div><div>Meet Lilika. The sexualized, exoticised only woman of color within your party, and one of two women out of 8 playable characters. Her origin story isn't much better. Of course the only woman of color in the game has to hail from a "backwards" tribal jungle planet. A planet that the white skinned offworlders end up saving. Jaster and friends expose to the poor savages that the god they worshiped was none other than a vile monster causing many problems in the village. So using the power of an almighty gun, Jaster helps the silly silly savages by killing their god. I've found that Imperialism leaves quite a bad aftertaste. </div><div>The character of Lilika is fairly interesting, but how can she be taken seriously while looking the way she does. I mean a tiger skin bra? Really? How can the game itself, nay, all of video games be taken seriously when characters are portrayed in this manner. This is why I get embarrassed to tell people I'm a gamer.</div><div>I had a possible ray of hope in acquiring her alternative outfits, but I should have known better. I have to say that giving the only woman of color in the game an outfit called "Royal Servant Clothes" is pretty insulting. On top of that, her bow is pretty worthless in combat. The one saving grace is that she doesn't have <a href="http://www.gamespot.com/pages/image_viewer/frame_lead.php?pid=459841&img=197&sid=undefined">bunny ears</a>. Shame on you Level 5, I thought you were better than this. </div><div></div>Shions_Glasseshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03559248165573534759noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18703704.post-6838569456345028452007-07-19T08:32:00.000-07:002008-11-13T18:08:12.810-08:00Elebits are cute and creepy.<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh4DEwTuZX0FEeI7c-XcCvB_fvTF32p6rRzJAVyqxE7Qb8aT5qgZLFlrxeCwUtEZC2WqLtwoOTW0UL3H-hdC3rs8pQ3BZ0DKvpzDyg1OChZ5eOBT-9MxAG08yae8YGHxBRZ5aeX/s1600-h/elebits2.jpg"><img id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5088932720331924066" style="DISPLAY: block; MARGIN: 0px auto 10px; CURSOR: hand; TEXT-ALIGN: center" alt="" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh4DEwTuZX0FEeI7c-XcCvB_fvTF32p6rRzJAVyqxE7Qb8aT5qgZLFlrxeCwUtEZC2WqLtwoOTW0UL3H-hdC3rs8pQ3BZ0DKvpzDyg1OChZ5eOBT-9MxAG08yae8YGHxBRZ5aeX/s320/elebits2.jpg" border="0" /></a><br /><div>It’s been a harried week of trying to get used to my new work load, and trying to stay optimistic in light of learning about the sad state of women’s reproductive rights and health care are in this country.<br /><br />In an attempt to either cheer me up (or to distract me from doing my work) Shions_glasses rented Elebits. I haven’t had the chance to play many Wii games. Sure, I’ve put some hours in on Wii Sports, played a bit of Twilight Princess and beat Trauma Center, but that’s been about it. I can’t afford the prince of new games, and the price of used games for the Wii hasn’t been much better.<br /><br />Elebits has a lot for me to love, namely its cuteness and penchant for making messes. It seems to borrow a lot of its atmosphere from Katamari and Pikmin. I was a bit worried about the controls, seeing that I dislike first person perspective in video games (ack, tunnel vision) and therefore suck at FPSs, but it’s actually easy to get the hang of. I still feel limited by the perspective, and probably would still prefer a behind the shoulder camera angle, but it doesn’t really impede my enjoyment.<br /><br />One complaint I do have is the voice acting. It’s worse than the first Baten Kaitos game. Hell, its worse then those budget kids’ shows on PBS. Everyone sounds creepy. And the story? Basically, a kid feels neglected by his parents and is understandably pissed about it. What better way to get back at Mom and Dad than by tearing the house apart? However, it’s not all innocent revenge. The game has been hinting that Elebits are acting strangely--dear god, are these hunks of pastel cuteness going to attack me?<br /><br />I may not be able to answer that, as we have to return the game Saturday, but I’m pretty sure that if I ever find Elebits in the bargain bin, I’m gonna snap it up. </div>100LittleDollshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08149407280133225570noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18703704.post-63286801841953550862007-07-16T08:40:00.000-07:002007-07-16T12:12:26.455-07:00E3 Reactions: We are PRI’ve never been happier with my cable TV and my unemployment than this last week. Those two factors allowed me to watch G4’s live coverage of E3. It has been a fantasy of mine to attend E3--a fantasy that hatched many intricate yet unfulfilled plans and schemes by me and my comrades. So it was a real treat to watch the big press conferences live. It was also an eye opening look into the companies that produce video games. <br /><br />Nintendo was amazing. I completely understand that Nintendo is a corporation that is out for making money and all those things that the communist in me should hate. But man oh man, if sci-fi ever comes true and corporations start ruling the world, I would totally enlist in Nintendo’s army. It was delightful to listen to corporate talking heads spouting rhetoric about inclusion. Sure, they had the required “our company is the best company in the world and invest in us” speak, but the majority of their corporate message was about the inclusion of everyone in video games. “Everyone is a gamer” was the catch phrase pushed by Reggie, Miyamoto and Iwata. I wish every billion dollar company had that motto and pursued, researched, and most importantly respected all demographics. I think respect is the main difference I felt between Nintendo’s and Sony’s presentations. Sony’s press conference was terrible. Beyond all the ho hum games (except MGS4: war commentary with vampires and cyborgs, yum) Sony had what I’d like to call a bad attitude. The conference started with the worst speaker I’ve ever seen, Jack Tretton, as his Home avatar checking out some “hot chicks.” Yep, Sony started the biggest news event of the year with some good ol’ fashion cat calling. As Jack walked outside to Home’s hub, three female avatars were standing in a line all dancing, and he proceeded to “hello ladies” them. Throughout the presentation he kept referencing the “hot chicks,” and mentioned that he hoped they would stop by his hip Home pad, which was decked out in the finest of yuppie fashion. The main message I received from Sony is that they don’t regard women as serious consumers of their products and that they love materialism. It was jarring to move from watching a woman play Metroid Prime 3 on stage to Sony’s boy’s club attitude. My assumption is that Sony was upset at the record low levels of misogyny at this year’s E3, with the lack of booth babes and Nintendo’s radical ideas. Sony just needed to make up for it.<br /><br />I am so disappointed in Sony. I used to be a huge fan of the Playstation and Playstation 2. I’ve said awful things about the N64 in my day, and only respected the Gamecube from afar. But now, I can’t see myself ever buying a PS3, and feeling a little ashamed of my past loves. Nintendo is a company I can feel alright giving money to, based on their mature look at the industry. We used to have a good thing Sony, why did you have to go and ruin it.Shions_Glasseshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03559248165573534759noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18703704.post-57000294828902516052007-07-12T18:52:00.000-07:002007-07-12T19:17:48.761-07:00More on Sony hating meAlice at <a href="http://www.wonderlandblog.com/">Wonderland</a> <a href="http://www.wonderlandblog.com/wonderland/2007/07/misogynist-ps2-.html">commented the other day</a> on Sony's "Because your Girlfriend bores you shitless" ad. She also points out that there's a possibility that the ad may not be official:<br /><br /><blockquote>Beenabadbunny says, while the ads are real, they possibly don't belong to<br />Sony. A <a href="http://threespeech.com/blog/?p=446">Sony hired-blogger</a> is denying they're official... going from N'Gai's original post, the ads are posted on AdsoftheWorld.com, which claims to showcase worldwide work; however, any user can upload an example.</blockquote><br />The blog in question, <a href="http://threespeech.com/blog/">Three Speech</a>, only says that "we’re reliably informed, however, it’s not a bona fide PlayStation advert."<br /><br />No names, no official press release--why am I going to believe that the ads are a fake? We all remember <a href="http://adweek.blogs.com/adfreak/2006/12/sony_gets_rippe.html">Sony's so-called "hip hop" fan site</a>, right?<br /><br />Besides, even if the ads aren't official, I'm concerned that Sony isn't concerned about their image. I'd like to think that that Sony would see these ads as offensive enough to their consumers to say something, instead of releasing word on a "semi-official" blog.100LittleDollshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08149407280133225570noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18703704.post-6694406616424335302007-07-08T07:23:00.001-07:002007-07-08T07:51:26.796-07:00Good News EveryoneI’ve landed an internship that starts next week at a brand new organization that aims to train health care workers so that they can provide reproductive health care to underserved women who desperately need it. This includes providing abortions, for access is extremely limited in the Midwest, especially for rural women and women in poverty. The organization will also provide lectures, workshops, classes, counseling and other activities. I’m ecstatic to be a part of this organization—women’s health and reproductive rights has always been an important issue to me and one that I intensely studied in college.<br /><br />For the time being I’ll still be temping 40 hours a week in addition to my internship, but as time goes on the organization that I’ll be working for may be able to take me on full time. (Fingers crossed.) I still plan to keep my fan girl fire burning—I’ll try to keep on posting here once a week, hanging out at the <a href="http://forums.theirisnetwork.org/">Iris boards</a> and will still be updating Jade Reporting. (You know we’re<a href="http://jadereporting.theirisnetwork.org/?page_id=123"> looking for volunteers</a>, right?)100LittleDollshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08149407280133225570noreply@blogger.com6tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18703704.post-54775954664034929452007-06-29T20:34:00.000-07:002008-11-13T18:08:13.226-08:00Why do you hate me Sony?A quick run down of some of Sony's advertising includes: <div><br /><div>-an American ad campaign for the PSP which <a href="http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=7827891928347998474">featured dust balls</a> that can be easily interpreted as racist caricatures of Mexican people. </div><div>-the UK's various sex-based ads on buses with slogans such as <a href="http://crystaltips.typepad.com/wonderland/2006/02/new_psp_adverts.html">“Your girlfriend’s white bits here.”</a> </div><div>-the objectifying and race-based <a href="http://100littledolls.blogspot.com/2006/07/and-award-for-most-offensive-ad.html">Black vs. White PSP ad</a> in the Netherlands </div><div>-not to mention the topless waitresses featured at the <a href="http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/news.html?in_article_id=451414&in_page_id=1770&ct=5">God of War II release party</a></div><br /><div>And now there's this running in India, complete with a tagline that reads"Because your girlfriend bores you shitless."</div><img id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5081663977671729442" style="DISPLAY: block; MARGIN: 0px auto 10px; CURSOR: hand; TEXT-ALIGN: center" alt="" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh52L-sbCz5z-pGyIqdAb4pOj8Jg7yL-0K74Mccb5uzMn6ZeBM3dQFuC4wZ3fENrmdGzZb-Em8W1HHHoza4UmThnY5ndbxFHOt0W8ls8iL5DdOhaP5xguoH6yP9AF3xxMOpT_T_/s400/PS2-ad1_0.jpg" border="0" /><br /><div>What. The. Hell. Sony. </div><br /><div>There's lots of great discussion over at the <a href="http://forums.theirisnetwork.org/index.php">Iris boards</a> about the ad, along with some plans to get a letter campaign going. I'll post more info about it here when it happens. </div><div></div></div><div><div>hat tip: <a href="http://www.thefword.org.uk/blog/2007/june#000949">the f-word</a></div></div>100LittleDollshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08149407280133225570noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18703704.post-7895939959807814192007-06-18T12:34:00.000-07:002007-06-29T17:57:03.482-07:00Changing of the Green GuardOne of my pet peeves in comic books is to fall in love with a character, book, and creative team, only to have it ripped from my overzealous heart. A few examples throughout my life: Rucka and Brubaker on the Batman comics, McDaniel on Nightwing, Lobdell and Bachelo on Generation X, and Vaughn on Ultimate X-Men. I understand that the changing of the guard on titles is the nature of comics and the price you pay for having superhero books that will never end. But what really gets me is when a stellar writer or team of writer and artist leave a book and are replaced by the crappiest comic book makers this side of Image. The worst case has to be Hama replacing Lobdell on Generation X. That was a shame.<br /><br />I can smell this happening again and soon to one of my favorite books out there. I was stunned about how good She-Hulk actually was and took it upon myself to pick up all of the back issues and danced when I found the trade paper backs. It wasn't a perfect run, but the comic was unique, refreshing and fun. It revitalised my love for comics after reading countless clones of over-the-top dramatic comics. But now Slott is leaving to write Spider-man, a character I like, yet I find She-Hulk to be much more interesting and in greater need of good writers.<br /><br />Slott's replacement is Peter David. I know that some might think having the guy who wrote He-Hulk for longer than I've been alive to be a good thing, but I just can't help but worry. I have my doubts that he can maintain the greatness of the book, and I know for a fact that the tone will be different. For instance, the postmodern jabs at comics and Marvel will be MIA. Marvel is lacking in great female super heroes--they need everyone they can get--and I feel that we're going to lose one more. (RIP Jean.)Shions_Glasseshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03559248165573534759noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18703704.post-30284365953420520282007-06-12T10:00:00.000-07:002008-11-13T18:08:13.464-08:00Paprika: Not just for Deviled Eggs<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhkPfHtw_kdTu-MdmZyjruppOC6FafWuqXNc2oKSfWPaPIe65JafBxXSgog662TwmHXIGmwbulz3MDX2qkxS8tsbV8TK98CVIo9nGLsvuz6QbDMneRh6B524jDrl0roUO21pfX1eQ/s1600-h/paprika2_web.jpg"><img id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5075251030885601730" style="FLOAT: left; MARGIN: 0px 10px 10px 0px; CURSOR: hand" alt="" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhkPfHtw_kdTu-MdmZyjruppOC6FafWuqXNc2oKSfWPaPIe65JafBxXSgog662TwmHXIGmwbulz3MDX2qkxS8tsbV8TK98CVIo9nGLsvuz6QbDMneRh6B524jDrl0roUO21pfX1eQ/s400/paprika2_web.jpg" border="0" /></a>If you ever watched the A-Team, you might remember the episode where Murdock becomes a chef and keeps asking for paprika. Because of this, it became the funniest and best spice in my mind. Now I have a new reason to love it that blows the A-Team reference out of the water, a feat that I would not have thought possible. The new <span class="blsp-spelling-error" id="SPELLING_ERROR_0">Sotoshi</span> <span class="blsp-spelling-error" id="SPELLING_ERROR_1">Kon</span> film, Paprika, was oh so yummy. I was able to see it in the theater this weekend and it was a dream come true. Paprika takes a wonderful, surrealist look into humanity's desires and the collective <span class="blsp-spelling-error" id="SPELLING_ERROR_2">unconcious</span>, but lacked any of <span class="blsp-spelling-error" id="SPELLING_ERROR_3">Breton's</span> misogyny.<br /><div></div><br /><div>Almost all of <span class="blsp-spelling-error" id="SPELLING_ERROR_4">Kon's</span> work, like surrealism, adds the fantastical into a realistic setting. The concept of Paprika allowed him to fully realize this idea. <span class="blsp-spelling-error" id="SPELLING_ERROR_5">Kon</span> understands the freedom animation allows and creates something truly unique. I found it bizarre how the morphing images and situations of the dreams made as much sense to me as the "real world" scenes of the movie. That dichotomy was questioned, and subsequently became very unstable. This continued with the characters. They straddled the line between being both archetype and fully humans. There were a definite struggle between the characters in achieving the ideal role for their gender or place in the world.</div><br /><div></div><br /><div><strong>*Spoilers Below*</strong></div><br /><div></div><br /><div>In Paprika, <span class="blsp-spelling-error" id="SPELLING_ERROR_6">Kon</span> gives us another strong female protagonist, and in this case, a superhero as well. The character known as Paprika exists to help people deal with their desires and guides them to think outside of archetypal roles. In this way she comes to represent the concept of the "woman of your dreams,"and in the sense of a super hero, she seems to be perfect. However, Paprika and her real life counterpart, Dr. Chiba, struggle with a Clark Kent/Superman relationship throughout the film. Paprika is everything Chiba isn't, which includes being in full control of her life. By the end, Chiba faces this, and the chief issues of film--which also includes many archetypes, such as technology vs. nature--are resolved by the creation of a new order, where the male archetype of aggression and dominance is defeated by the female archetype of growth and peace. Or to speak in other elements, light conquered shadow by consuming it. </div><br /><div>There is one disturbing scene that needs to be addressed. Not to spoil too much, but at one point Paprika is captured and is symbolically raped. A <span class="blsp-spelling-corrected" id="SPELLING_ERROR_7">colleague</span> tears off her Paprika form and reveals her true identity beneath. Personally, I'm weary of rape scenes, and feel that popular entertainment is too quick to feature it, often without giving thought to the consequences. This was far from my favorite scene in the movie, but I feel the key word is that it is symbolic. By having the act be represented by something else, it leaves the action in the realm of thought, and forces us to think about rape. I'm not saying that this is any less powerful, or less potentially offensive and dangerous. I just feel in this context that the scene was meant for us to look at rape as a tool of the male aggressive, violent, and controlling mind set. It was not glorified or glamorized, but rather focused on the thought behind the act. The character responsible for the act pins Paprika like a butterfly in a room full of pinned butterflies. This speaks of the "male" desire to control and tame, and how patriarchy places women on the same level as an inset, or an animal that is easily manipulated and controlled. He does not think of her as human but as an object that should be displayed. The archetypal male mind set is further explored when Paprika is rescued by another colleague that is in the process of dreaming about being a male action hero. To him, Paprika is a precious commodity that needs his protection. His view of her is still in the same vein as the rapist's--she is still an object, the two men just disagree on her use. His parody is complete when he take Paprika to the ending scene of his dream that is complete with him posing before the setting sun, as he, the quintessential hero, cradles her in one arm and a smoking gun in the other. He then <span class="blsp-spelling-corrected" id="SPELLING_ERROR_8">proceeds</span> to claim his prize by kissing her as she droops unconsciously. This was received by a "how dare you" slap on the face, and the scene ends. After this interlude, Paprika <span class="blsp-spelling-corrected" id="SPELLING_ERROR_9">reclaims the</span> movie. Overall, it was a scene that I would have been happier without, no one likes to see a superhero, specifically female superheros, debased in such a way. However, I also don't think the scene was there for shock value or as a form of punishment, which are some of the reasons why rape scenes are told in popular entertainment. Rather, I feel it's <span class="blsp-spelling-corrected" id="SPELLING_ERROR_10">purpose</span> was as a tool of discussion. The way that it was produced confirms that. It forces us to confront the mind set that causes rape, and that is one of the first steps in preventing rape. </div>Shions_Glasseshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03559248165573534759noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18703704.post-91726063845015165992007-06-11T08:27:00.000-07:002007-06-11T08:29:44.074-07:00Whaddya mean there’s no She-Hulk?Thanks to a close friend, I managed to play through some of the Xbox 360 version of Marvel Ultimate Alliance. We had fun—some of the best parts were smashing our way through and listening to the throaty calls of the Hulk: “Hulk always wins!”<br /><br />I was petty happy with the variety of characters—the most comical team that we put together consisted of Venom, The Thing, Hulk, and Ms. Marvel. But I do have some nitpicks:<br /><br />--First of all, why were the starter characters specifically chosen? I understand the need to keep the pool small in the beginning as there is a slight learning curve, but I still think they could have given some leeway. I really wasn’t feeling it with the Thor, Spidey, Captain America and Wolverine team up.<br /><br />--I’ve said this before with X-Men Legends II and I’m saying it again. I think there could be more female characters. I don’t see why there can’t be some gender parity. Moon Knight is in there, but no She-Hulk? Raven, you break my heart. (We <a href="http://100littledolls.blogspot.com/2006/04/my-genitalia-has-nothing-to-do-with.html">have</a> <a href="http://100littledolls.blogspot.com/2006/05/focus-on-women-please-update-on.html">history</a>.) With characters such as the ones I mentioned above, it’s not like they’re hurting for some character recognition. And I say this because it’s often argued that women characters are not used because they’re not as well known by the general public.<br /><br />--That said, I think it would be fun to have some more B-List and obscure characters. Perhaps as unlockables? <br /><br />--The storyline, though specifically different from X-Men Legends II, felt exactly like X-Men Legends II. I enjoyed the first X-Men Legends because it focused on a specific character; it didn’t feel too large or generic. <br /><br />--The character animations are still awkward, and this same problem has plagued this franchise since the beginning. Though small, and not integral to the overall enjoyment factor of the game, I thought it’d be addressed, seeing that I was playing this on a 360.<br /><br />--Last but not least, for whatever reason, I had trouble distinguishing between friend and foe while fighting. I might need to sit closer to the TV screen.100LittleDollshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08149407280133225570noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18703704.post-63849218291949138512007-06-05T06:41:00.000-07:002007-06-05T06:44:28.188-07:00MiPOesias: The David Trinidad Issue #2For those of you interested, MiPOesias, an online literary magazine, has published <a href="http://www.mipoesias.com/DAVIDTRINIDAD2/hill_n.htm">some of my poems</a>. For you geeks out there, two of the three published poems consider super heroics, identity and feminism.100LittleDollshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08149407280133225570noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18703704.post-77239580533692686972007-05-31T17:58:00.000-07:002007-05-31T18:29:02.167-07:00A Response to Virtual Rape in GamesA couple of weeks back I came across a post from Bonnie over at Heroine Sheik. Bonnie’s great—she writes intriguing feminist articles about video games and is all about promoting acceptance and tolerance for all things sexy, wacky and weird. Yet I just couldn’t get on board with <a href="http://www.heroine-sheik.com/2007/05/16/a-thumbs-down-for-hentai-games/">this post</a>. <br /><br />An excerpt:<br /><br /><blockquote>It’s an interesting debate, especially since we don’t often run across games that let us rape (exceptions that come to mind include Sociolotron and Custer’s Revenge) and since we were just talking about <a href="http://www.heroine-sheik.com/2007/05/09/regina-lynn-on-virtual-rape/">virtual rape</a> (raping another player, as opposed to a character). Still, drawing a link between game rape and real-life rape is like drawing a link between game violence and real-life violence, and we all know how we feel about that. Thumbs down. </blockquote>I do understand where she’s coming from—we brandish swords, guns and fists, strategize war tatics and take down the bad guys in virtual worlds, yet these actions don’t translate to real and everyday life. We’re not going to beat up our boss or take out the President in the name of social justice. And I’m never going to say that the guy down the street playing H-games will someday rape. But there’s something about virtual rape that I don’t think can be shoved aside for the sake of fantasy. Virtual rape games are a symptom of our society, where women are systematically devalued and rape isn’t about sex but about power and privilege. <br /> <br />BetaCandy writes about some of the issues that come from rape in fictional settings in her post <a href="http://thehathorlegacy.info/inherent-problems-in-writing-rape-storylines/">Inherent problems in writing rape storylines</a>:<br /><br /><blockquote>With rape, however, we don't have a cultural consensus that "forced sex" is always wrong. A lot of people don't fully comprehend what constitutes rape or consent. A lot of people still think it can't be rape if the rapist is known to the victim. A lot of people still think women can owe men sex, and men are entitled to take the sex they've earned if it's not forthcoming. And they apply this thinking in their daily lives. To women they know. To victims when they serve on juries (or as judges). To themselves, when they internalize the blame for violations others visited upon them.</blockquote><br /> To just say that virtual rape in hentai games is sexual fantasy in pixilated form is to ignore a whole heap of troublesome and problematic issues. Rape in H-games is not real rape, but it is representative of our misogynistic culture that hurts real live women everyday.100LittleDollshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08149407280133225570noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18703704.post-51272829455389822662007-05-29T09:55:00.000-07:002007-06-29T18:39:18.615-07:00Giant PlayThroughout my game culture class I wanted to focus on different ways I could prove that video games were an art form. It was the underlying theme behind all of my work. For my the other part in my final paper, I wanted to look at the choices made within Shadow of the <span class="blsp-spelling-corrected" id="SPELLING_ERROR_0">Colossus</span>. I only focused on two terms from class, but i want to look further into this game.<br /><br />The Use of <span class="blsp-spelling-error" id="SPELLING_ERROR_1">Ludus</span> and <span class="blsp-spelling-error" id="SPELLING_ERROR_2">Paida</span> Play (in Shadow of the Colossus)<br /><br />The narration of Shadow of the Colossus is told not only through traditional cut scenes, but through elements of game play as well. Video games have a unique ability to place the audience in the role of the "actor". Within Shadow of the Colossus, the player participates with the unfolding of the narrative. In order to successfully convey the story and themes of the narration, the game considers the different ways that people play video games. Shadow of the Colossus so fully incorporates the main theme of "respect for nature" that regardless of the person in control of the game, the story is revealed. Bernard <span class="blsp-spelling-error" id="SPELLING_ERROR_3">Perron</span> defines the difference between "player" and "gamer" in his article From Gamers to Players and <span class="blsp-spelling-error" id="SPELLING_ERROR_4">Gameplayers</span>. Players participate in <span class="blsp-spelling-error" id="SPELLING_ERROR_5">Ludus</span> play, or rule bound <span class="blsp-spelling-corrected" id="SPELLING_ERROR_6">linear</span> play, while gamers participate in <span class="blsp-spelling-error" id="SPELLING_ERROR_7">paidia</span> play or free play.<br /><br />Anyone can be a gamer or a player at anytime while playing a game. To compensate for this, Shadow of the Colossus integrates elements of both within its main theme. The world of Shadow of the Colossus is vast and regardless of how much time a person spends outside of the main quest, the design of the world reflects the main theme. There are many distinctive areas to explore that are heavily detailed and full of rewards. An example are the white tailed lizards and fruit that increase both grip and health gauges respectively. The player's bond with the horse, <span class="blsp-spelling-error" id="SPELLING_ERROR_8">Agro</span>, can also grow by riding, petting, and playing with her. This environment is ideal for <span class="blsp-spelling-error" id="SPELLING_ERROR_9">paidia</span>/sandbox play. A player can explore nature on their own and discover its beauty, rewards, and friendships. In this way, it is possible for a person to learn of nature's value through simulation.<br /><br /><span class="blsp-spelling-error" id="SPELLING_ERROR_10">Ludus</span> play of the game yields a slightly different result. As you actively kill the massive Colossi with only a sword and bow, the fragility of nature becomes apparent. It shows how the simulated world that you fell in love with in <span class="blsp-spelling-error" id="SPELLING_ERROR_11">paidia</span> play, can be easily torn apart by your actions. The main game endows respect by displaying the results of nature’s destruction. It warns of the dangers of destroying nature for one’s own purposes by showcasing the pain felt by the wanderer, <span class="blsp-spelling-error" id="SPELLING_ERROR_12">Agro</span>, and the world itself. The game therefore, uses both play styles as different chapters of the narrative. The narrative requires both <span class="blsp-spelling-error" id="SPELLING_ERROR_13">ludus</span> and <span class="blsp-spelling-error" id="SPELLING_ERROR_14">paidia</span> play to be fully realized, which is uncommon in videos games, but the ultimate message of the game is obtainable through either.Shions_Glasseshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03559248165573534759noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18703704.post-36850481082883125922007-05-25T08:07:00.000-07:002007-05-25T08:08:47.906-07:00Portable PlayingI’m once again addicted to my DS, though for awhile it was collecting an admirable amount of dust. Over the winter, I had bought a copy of Contact, but became frustrated with the game after infiltrating the military complex and put it down. (Can I just complain about my HP dropping when fighting weaker enemies? How the heck can this game just not let you build up?) When I came down with a bad case of cabin fever, I started playing some long neglected Animal Crossing: Wild World, but stopped after the Acorn Festival. (I think some unconscious goal was realized.)<br /><br />So my DS sat, ignored, until one fateful day I went to Gamestop and grabbed a used copy of Phoenix Wright: Justice for All. And then a week later, on an auspicious and bright day, I was given the gift of Osu! Tatakae! Ouendan.<br /><br />I know I don’t need to go into great detail with both these games, because I the general consensus is that they’re both awesome. I don’t mind that Phoenix Wright is text-heavy, and though at times I don’t quite follow the logic as the case--some stuff seems to come out of left field--I enjoy the mystery, leg work and trials. Much better than Law & Order. <br /><br />I knew I wouldn’t be able to stand the music selection of Elite Beat Agents, yet I still wanted to play it. Therefore, for the longest time I pined after Ouendan, not being able to justify the price of importing it. (I saw copies of it in Japan when I was there last summer, but wasn’t able to find any good deals.) I don’t know if I’m driving my roommates crazy, but I’m addicted. It’s hilarious, catchy, and original.<br /><br />I still have plans for my DS after I finish off these two. A copy of Pokemon Diamond or Pearl will be mine, not to mention that I have my eye on Hotel Dusk and Lunar Knights.100LittleDollshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08149407280133225570noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18703704.post-4315082409690544232007-05-24T11:23:00.000-07:002007-05-24T09:25:47.139-07:00Metal HeartI would like to admitt something to the internet: I love Metal Gear. I've recently accepted my feelings towards it after a long period of denial. It's not perfect, but who is right? Like the Metal Gears themselves, the series has its share of weak points, or as Otacon puts it, "character flaws." Yet I stil find great value and artistry within it as a whole. This love was reaffirmed by my Game Culture class. For my final assignment, I looked at James Gee's concept of cultural models within Metal Gear Solid 3. Gee's book, <em>What Video Games Have to Teach Us About Learning and Literacy</em> was the primary text for my class and was very insightful. One part that really stuck out to me was his Cultural Models, otherwise known as the ideas that a game operates around. It is what the game presents as normal or right and its message and concept of the world. This struck a cord with me because I feel that he described what this blog examines, along with much of the feminist writings on pop culture. What do games tell us? Is a game producing the model that women are mere sexual objects (DOA), or is it telling us how gender does not effect ability, skill, or heroism (Metriod Prime)?<br /><br /><br /><br />Since I have not played through the Metal Gear series in a while, I wanted to replay them and fully look at what these games are telling us. I feel that it provides a far more productive message than what most triple A titles being produced at this time offer, but we'll see. Here is the section of my final paper dealing with MGS3. The orginal plan for the assignment was to post it on Wikipedia, but that proved too difficult, so I figure this blog was just as good. ;)<br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />Cultural Models (in Metal Gear Solid 3: Snake Eater)<br /><br />James Paul Gee’s concept of cultural models (the different hypothesises that humans form on what is normal or typical) can be examined within Metal Gear Solid 3. The game presents with its gameplay and narration cultural models of war that is unique when compared to most video games. Snake Eater provides motivation for the player to strive for peace within a seemingly violent game. The main element of gameplay is stealth, or what can be seen as the avoidance of conflict. The main goal of the game is to proceed from one area to the next without getting caught. You do not have to kill any of the guards in order to “win.” The game only provides for you a non-lethal tranquilizer gun, and Close Quarters Combat abilities (CQC). You have to seek out the lethal weapons yourself. Also, every enemy can be defeated by non-lethal means, and when CQC is deployed, it is just as simple to incapacitate the enemy, as it is to kill them. So essentially it is your choice to kill or not. A cultural model that violence is never a necessity is presented by giving the player the autonomy over the level of violence within their actions. The model states that violence is an option that people actively choose.<br /><br />The game goes further to actually reward the player for not taking the most violent option. If bosses are defeated with the tranquilizer gun, the player unlocks special camouflage items that can not be acquired anywhere else in the game. There are also more consequences when a dead guard is discovered compared to when a sleeping guard is discovered. Defeating the bosses without lethal weapons is no easy task, and if guards are incapacitated rather than killed, they will become an obstacle again as soon as they wake up. Therefore, using non-lethal methods adds more difficulty. This presents the cultural model that violence is not the easier option, but peace will garner greater rewards.<br /><br />The strongest example of the game’s peaceful intentions is the finally battle with The Boss. She is the only person the player is required to kill. The game forces you to press the button that causes Snake to shoot her. There is no other option that will finish the game. Afterwards, the story clearly maps out the effects of her death on Snake and his world. The consequences of the violence are fully explored thereby presenting the cultural model that violence will bring pain, and has an extensive impact on people. Therefore the player may look back on the different acts of violence they might have been committing throughout the game, and see them in a new light.Shions_Glasseshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03559248165573534759noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18703704.post-48005096502237862282007-05-23T07:36:00.000-07:002007-05-23T07:39:00.903-07:00Reminder for Upcoming CarnivalsThe 14th Carnival of Feminist Science Fiction and Fantasy Fans will be hosted by <a href="http://www.heroinecontent.net/">Heroine Content</a> on May 30th. The deadline for submissions is May 27th! Please submit via email to skyekilaen[at]gmail[dot]com. They are looking for posts, web comics, and art with a feminist perspective on science fiction and fantasy. This can include TV, Movies, Books, Comics, Games, etc. For more information, see the <a href="http://carnival.feministsf.net/?cat=3">Guidelines</a>.<br /><br />Make sure to check out the new <a href="http://ofcolour.blogspot.com/">People of Colour SF Carnival</a>. The first edition is scheduled for June 15th. See their site for more details.100LittleDollshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08149407280133225570noreply@blogger.com0