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Players, Pt. 1 GENDER COM 427 September 17

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Players, Pt. 1 GENDER. COM 427 September 17. QUIZ!. 1. Bryce & Rutter : “Although the well-worn, and empirically unsustained , stereotype of _________ gamers continues to be prevalent, available figures on gamer demographics do not support this stereotypical view.” - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Players, Pt. 1 GENDER

Players, Pt. 1GENDER

COM 427September 17

Page 2: Players, Pt. 1 GENDER

QUIZ!

Page 3: Players, Pt. 1 GENDER

1. Bryce & Rutter: “Although the well-worn, and empirically unsustained, stereotype of _________ gamers continues to be prevalent, available figures on gamer demographics do not support this stereotypical view.”

A) female B) solitary, maleC) acne-covered D) immature

Page 4: Players, Pt. 1 GENDER

2. Bryce & Rutter:“Though there is a high level of invisibility of female gamers at __________, it is our contention that this does not truly reflect females’ domestic participation in computer gaming.”

A) public gaming eventsB) all levels of governmentC) post-secondary schoolsD) industry trade shows

Page 5: Players, Pt. 1 GENDER

3. According to Carr, the gaming preferences of the young female students participating in her study were shaped by:

A) their previous familiarity with the game/sB) hormonesC) the physical location & availability of gaming systems during play sessionsD) A & C

Page 6: Players, Pt. 1 GENDER

4. Carr: “The association of masculinity with computer games is ________, the result of a series of inventions, trends, practices, and commercial decisions that have settled into a particular pattern.”

A) only naturalB) a constructC) a mystery wrapped in an enigmaD) phony baloney

Page 7: Players, Pt. 1 GENDER

BONUS. Carr uses Salen & Zimmerman’s three “conceptual frames” for her analysis of gender and video game preference: these are rules, play, and ________.

A) more rulesB) productionC) cultureD) design

Page 8: Players, Pt. 1 GENDER

Exploration of a Toolset1. Send copy electronically by 11:59 PM tonight, Eastern Standard Time

2. We will assemble all the SUMMARIES into one Google document by noon tomorrow and share the document with you

3. READ THE GOOGLE DOCUMENT FOR THURSDAY. Get a sense of what you would like to use for a project.

For the assignment itself:- Use section headings- We want to see evidence that you looked through several

different i) games and ii) tutorial sites relating to your toolset

Page 9: Players, Pt. 1 GENDER

What is gender?1. There is more variability WITHIN “male” and WITHIN “female” than BETWEEN them

2. There is nothing natural about gender.

3. We “do” gender. Every day, all the time. Games are part of this performance.

4. There are multiple masculinities” and multiple “femininities”

Page 10: Players, Pt. 1 GENDER
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Group work• Groups of 4• Each person shares the following about their gaming history:

– When did you start playing?– On what system? Which games?– Did your household own system(s)? If yes, where was it? If no, where

did you go to play?– Who did you play with?– How many of your friends played?– What are your current gaming preferences?

• Write down commonalities & differences between group members

“preferences are not static, nor do they emerge in a vacuum, nor can they be directly or solely ascribed to any one aspect of a player’s identity. Preferences reflect previous access, and they alter” (Carr, p. 2005).

Page 12: Players, Pt. 1 GENDER

Gender & gaming culture: What’s changed since 2003/2005?

Page 13: Players, Pt. 1 GENDER

Gender & gaming culture: What’s changed since 2003/2005?

Page 14: Players, Pt. 1 GENDER

Game production: 2005“produced by males, for a male audience, and incorporate themes recognisably ‘male’”

http://www.igda.org/sites/default/files/IGDA_DeveloperDemographics_Oct05.pdf

Page 15: Players, Pt. 1 GENDER

Game production: 2013

Game Developer Magazine, April 2013

Producers: 77% m 23% f

Programmers: 96% m 4% f

Artists: 84% m 16% f

Audio engineers: 96% m 4% f

Page 16: Players, Pt. 1 GENDER

Online gaming

Bryce & Rutter:“There is evidence that online gaming is becoming particularly popular with female gamers as the anonymity of online gaming provides a context for competitive gaming against male opponents free from the constraints of stereotypical attitudes and assessments of the abilities of female gamers which are often reported in face to face gaming contexts”

Page 17: Players, Pt. 1 GENDER

fatuglyorslutty.com

Online gaming

Page 18: Players, Pt. 1 GENDER

Games made by teams involving female design leads:

Assassin’s Creed (Jade Raymond, Lead Producer)

Portal (Kim Swift, Lead Designer)

Bioshock (Alyssa Finley, Producer) Journey (Kellee Santiago, founder)

Page 19: Players, Pt. 1 GENDER

Representation

Resident Evil 4 (2005)

Page 20: Players, Pt. 1 GENDER

More game characters are female…

Page 21: Players, Pt. 1 GENDER

For every non-sexualized female character, there are dozens of other hyper-sexualized ones

“Quiet”, the mute female sniper from Metal Gear Solid V

Hideo Kajima:“The initial target is to make u want to do cosplay or its figurine to sell well…

…this one may not be cosplayable”

Page 22: Players, Pt. 1 GENDER

Male & female characters are sexualized in different ways

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What if male characters were sexualized the same ways (some) female characters are?

Page 24: Players, Pt. 1 GENDER

How a character is represented doesn’t determine how they’ll be ‘read’ or played

Are we playing with?

Or playing as?

Is this someone we want to be?

Someone we want to be with?

A means to an end?

A pleasure to play?

“Perhaps it was because the pleasures of “identification” are overrated. Or, perhaps such pleasures are dependent on the contexts of play: the girls were playing in public, and as a result, they orientated toward functional rather than fantastical relationships with their avatars”